Villagers might look like big-nosed mobs who’d trade their soul for a handful of emeralds, but underneath that clunky exterior is one of Minecraft’s most powerful systems: trading. Once you figure out how it works, every villager job opens up a shortcut to gear you’d otherwise grind for hours to get. Enchanted books, diamond armor, rare potions, treasure maps, you name it.
This guide breaks down all the Minecraft villager jobs in plain language, covers every job site block, what each profession actually trades, and how to get the most out of your village. Whether you’re new to the game or just never bothered learning the trading system, by the end of this you’ll know exactly which villager to seek out and why.
Let’s get into it.
All 15 Villager Professions & Their Job Site Blocks at a Glance
Here’s a quick overview of all the villager professions, their job site blocks, and the most valuable trades they offer. We’ll go deeper on each one below.
| Villager Profession | Work Station | Key Trades |
| Librarian | Lectern | Bookshelves, enchanted books, lantern, glass, clock, compass, name tag |
| Armorer | Blast Furnace | Iron armor, diamond armor, shield, bell |
| Toolsmith | Smithing Table | Stone tools, iron tools, diamond tools, bell |
| Weaponsmith | Grindstone | Iron weapons, diamond weapons |
| Butcher | Smoker | Raw chicken, porkchops, stews |
| Cartographer | Cartography Table | Treasure maps, item frames |
| Cleric | Brewing Stand | Redstone powder, lapis lazuli, ender pearls, bottle o’ enchanting |
| Farmer | Composter | Bread, apple, pie, cake, golden carrot, glistering melon slice |
| Fisherman | Barrel | Campfire, raw cod, salmon, fishing rods |
| Fletcher | Fletching Table | Arrows, flint, bows, crossbows |
| Leatherworker | Cauldron | Leather armor, horse armor, and more |
| Mason / Stone Mason | Stonecutter | Bricks, stone, terracotta blocks |
| Shepherd | Loom | Shears, paintings, carpets, wool |
| Nitwit | None | None |
| Unemployed | Any job site block | None |
A Deep Dive Into Every Villager Job
One of the most underrated mechanics in Minecraft is how effortlessly you can shape your village economy. Place a job site block near an unemployed villager, and they’ll claim it automatically. That one simple action unlocks a whole trade tree worth exploring. Here’s a look at every villager job and what makes each one worth your time.
1. Librarian: The Best Source of Enchanted Books in the Game

Job Site Block: Lectern Best For: Enchanted books, name tags, compass, clock
If there’s one villager job that veteran players swear by, it’s the librarian. Getting the right enchanted books through the enchanting table is largely luck-based, but a librarian takes that randomness out of the equation. You can target specific enchantments, trade for them directly, and walk away with Mending, Silk Touch, or whatever else your build needs.
Beyond enchanted books, librarians also sell bookshelves, lanterns, glass blocks, clocks, compasses, and eventually name tags at the master level. Not a bad deal for a villager standing next to a lectern.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Bookshelf, Enchanted Books |
| Apprentice | Lantern |
| Journeyman | Glass |
| Expert | Clock, Compass |
| Master | Name Tag |
The lectern itself has a secondary function too, especially in multiplayer. You can place a written book on it and let multiple players read it at once, and it also works as a redstone component.
2. Armorer: Your Go-To for Iron and Diamond Armor

Job Site Block: Blast Furnace Best For: Full armor sets, shields, enchanted diamond armor
The armorer is one of the most straightforward villager jobs in Minecraft. It does exactly what the name says: sells armor. Starting from iron at the novice level, the trades gradually improve until you’re looking at enchanted diamond chest pieces and helmets at expert and master tiers.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Iron armor |
| Apprentice | Chainmail armor |
| Journeyman | Shield |
| Expert | Enchanted armor (bottom half) |
| Master | Enchanted armor (top half) |
You can also pick up a bell from them, which comes in handy for signaling raids. The job site block, the blast furnace, smelts ores at twice the speed of a regular furnace, making it a useful workstation in its own right.
3. Toolsmith: Pickaxes, Shovels, and More Without the Grind

Job Site Block: Smithing Table Best For: Enchanted iron and diamond tools, bells
If your tools keep breaking and you’d rather not spend another hour strip mining for materials, the toolsmith is your friend. They trade axes, pickaxes, shovels, and hoes starting at the novice level, and at higher tiers, those tools come enchanted.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Stone tools |
| Apprentice | Bell |
| Journeyman | Enchanted iron tools |
| Expert | Enchanted diamond tools |
| Master | Enchanted diamond pickaxe |
The smithing table doubles as a crafting station for upgrading diamond gear to netherite, which makes it one of the most valuable workstations in the game. If you’re working toward netherite tools or armor, you’ll want one nearby regardless of the villager trade.
4. Weaponsmith: Swords, Axes, and Speedrun-Worthy Loot

Job Site Block: Grindstone Best For: Enchanted swords and axes, early-game minerals
Speedrunners already know the value of a weaponsmith chest, and for good reason. These chests often contain obsidian, iron, and weapons that can carry you through the early game without much effort. Even in a normal playthrough, the weaponsmith is one of the most desirable villager professions to have nearby.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Enchanted iron sword |
| Apprentice | Bell |
| Journeyman | Emerald |
| Expert | Enchanted diamond axe |
| Master | Enchanted diamond sword |
The grindstone, their job site block, is also the most reliable way to remove enchantments in Minecraft. It strips enchantments and returns some of the experience, which makes it a useful tool for managing gear.
5. Butcher: Simple, Reliable, and Underappreciated

Job Site Block: Smoker Best For: Cooked meat, rabbit stew, easy emeralds
Nobody puts the butcher first on their list, but when you’re in the middle of a long session and running low on food, you’ll be glad one’s nearby. They trade cooked chicken, porkchops, and rabbit stew, and at the right level, you can grab eight cooked chicken pieces for a single emerald. That’s hard to beat.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Emerald |
| Apprentice | Cooked chicken, porkchop |
| Journeyman | Emerald |
| Expert | Emerald |
| Master | Emerald |
Their utility block, the smoker, cooks food at double the speed of a regular furnace. If you’re setting up a base kitchen area, placing a smoker for faster cooking is always a good idea regardless of the villager trade.
6. Cartographer: Treasure Hunting Made Easy

Job Site Block: Cartography Table Best For: Ocean explorer maps, treasure maps, item frames, banner patterns
The cartographer isn’t cheap, but the trades are uniquely useful. You can’t get ocean monument locations or woodland mansion coordinates anywhere else without manually exploring for hours. The cartographer sells specialized explorer maps that lead you straight to them, which makes those trades genuinely worth the emerald investment.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Empty map |
| Apprentice | Ocean explorer map |
| Journeyman | Trial explorer map |
| Expert | Item frames |
| Master | Globe banner pattern |
The cartography table, their job site block, is used for creating and copying maps. It’s not the flashiest workstation, but if you’re a player who likes fully explored territory, it earns its place.
7. Cleric: Rare Magical Items You Won’t Find Easily Elsewhere

Job Site Block: Brewing Stand Best For: Ender pearls, lapis lazuli, bottle o’ enchanting, glowstone
Out of all the Minecraft villager jobs, the cleric offers some of the most interesting trades in the game. Redstone dust and lapis lazuli at the lower levels are nice, but the real prizes come later: ender pearls and the bottle o’ enchanting at the master level. Farming ender pearls from endermen is tedious. Getting them from a cleric is much cleaner.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Redstone dust |
| Apprentice | Lapis lazuli |
| Journeyman | Glowstone |
| Expert | Ender pearl |
| Master | Bottle o’ Enchanting |
If there’s no cleric in your village, just place a brewing stand nearby and an unemployed villager will claim it. The brewing stand itself is also one of the most useful utility blocks in the game for potion-making.
8. Farmer: The Most Common Villager, and One of the Most Useful

Job Site Block: Composter Best For: Golden carrots, glistering melon slices, suspicious stew
When people picture a Minecraft village, the farmer is usually the first villager job that comes to mind, and for good reason. Farmers are everywhere, they spawn naturally next to composters, and their trades cover a wide range of food items. What makes them especially valuable at higher levels is the golden carrot and glistering melon slice, both of which are potion ingredients that can be annoying to farm yourself.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Bread |
| Apprentice | Pumpkin pie |
| Journeyman | Cookie |
| Expert | Suspicious stew, Cake |
| Master | Golden carrot, Glistering melon |
The composter is a great workstation to have around too. Throw in crops and plant matter and it generates bone meal, which speeds up crop growth significantly.
9. Fisherman: Better Than You Think for Emerald Farming

Job Site Block: Barrel Best For: Enchanted fishing rod, cooked fish, emerald generation
The fisherman doesn’t get much attention, but experienced players know how useful this villager job can be for generating emeralds. You can sell raw fish to them in bulk and collect emeralds quickly, which you can then spend across every other trade in your village. On top of that, they sell an enchanted fishing rod, which makes actually fishing much more rewarding.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Cooked cod |
| Apprentice | Cooked salmon |
| Journeyman | Enchanted fishing rod |
| Expert | Emerald |
| Master | Emerald |
Their job site block is the barrel, a compact storage option that works like a chest but opens even with blocks placed directly above it.
10. Fletcher: The Best Friend of Every Archer Build

Job Site Block: Fletching Table Best For: Tipped arrows, enchanted bows and crossbows, flint
Fletcher is one of the more overlooked villager jobs in Minecraft, but if you play with a bow or crossbow, this changes everything. Low-level fletchers sell flint, regular bows, and crossbows. Level them up and you get enchanted bows, enchanted crossbows, and tipped arrows at the master tier.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Flint |
| Apprentice | Bow |
| Journeyman | Crossbow |
| Expert | Enchanted bow |
| Master | Enchanted crossbow |
The only downside is the fletching table, which currently has no crafting function beyond giving the villager their profession. Hopefully Mojang adds some utility to it down the line.
11. Leatherworker: Mostly Niche, But One Trick Worth Knowing

Job Site Block: Cauldron Best For: Horse saddles, leather armor for beginners, emerald trades
Leatherworkers have faded in relevance as the game has evolved. Most players skip leather armor entirely and head straight for iron or diamonds, which makes a large chunk of this villager’s trade list feel redundant. That said, the horse saddle from a master-level leatherworker is genuinely useful, and if you’re in the very early game, leather armor is better than nothing.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Leather armor |
| Apprentice | Leather armor |
| Journeyman | Leather armor, Emerald |
| Expert | Leather horse armor |
| Master | Leather armor |
The cauldron is where the real value lies here. It stores water, lava, and powder snow, and on Bedrock edition, you can even store dyed water and potions in it. That alone makes placing one worthwhile.
12. Mason or Stone Mason: A Builder’s Best Friend

Job Site Block: Stonecutter Best For: Terracotta, glazed terracotta, quartz blocks, polished stone variants
This is the only villager profession with two different names depending on your edition. Java players know them as masons, while Bedrock players see stone mason. Either way, if you build a lot, this villager job is quietly one of the best in the game. The variety of stone blocks, terracotta colors, and quartz options available through trades saves you enormous amounts of mining and crafting time.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Brick |
| Apprentice | Chiseled stone bricks |
| Journeyman | Polished stone variants |
| Expert | Colored terracotta blocks |
| Master | Block of quartz |
The stonecutter is their job site block, and it’s a fantastic crafting station for anyone who works with stone. It lets you cut stone into specific shapes and sizes far more efficiently than a crafting table, and it’s a staple for anyone serious about building.
13. Shepherd: Mostly Decorative, but Uniquely Useful for Builders

Job Site Block: Loom Best For: Paintings, colored wool, banners, shears
The shepherd is one of the few Minecraft villager jobs that isn’t really about survival at all. Their trades are almost entirely decorative, covering carpets, colored wool, banners, and paintings. Most players only seek them out when they want a specific painting for a base wall. That said, shears and beds are practical enough to make low-level shepherd trades worthwhile early on.
| Level | Key Trades |
| Novice | Shears |
| Apprentice | Wool |
| Journeyman | Beds |
| Expert | Banner |
| Master | Painting |
The loom is genuinely fun to use. It has an in-game editor that lets you layer patterns onto banners in creative combinations, and it’s one of the more expressive crafting tools in Minecraft.
14. Nitwit: The One Villager You Can’t Do Anything With

Job Site Block: None Trade Value: Zero
Nitwits are the odd ones out. You can’t assign them a job, you can’t trade with them, and placing a job site block near them does absolutely nothing. They exist purely as part of the village aesthetic. Their green robes make them easy to identify, but beyond that, they serve no mechanical purpose. Don’t confuse them with unemployed villagers, who look similar but can actually be assigned any profession you want.
15. Unemployed Villager: A Blank Slate Ready to Be Shaped

Job Site Block: Any job site block Trade Value: None until assigned
Every baby villager grows into an unemployed villager. They wander around without a profession until they find a nearby job site block to claim. As a player, you can use this to your advantage: place whichever job site block you need, and a nearby unemployed villager will take the job automatically.
One important note: if you break a villager’s job site block, they lose their profession and become unemployed again. This lets you reassign them and reset their trades, but only if you haven’t traded with them yet. Once you complete even a single trade, that villager’s trade list is locked permanently.
Bonus: The Wandering Trader

Wandering traders aren’t technically villagers since they don’t spawn in villages. But they look and act close enough to count, and you can trade with them for some genuinely unique items. Packed ice, exotic flowers, rare plants, the inventory rotates and tends to be random, but the unpredictability is part of the appeal.
They spawn on their own after at least one in-game day has passed, appearing within a 48-block radius around you, always accompanied by two trader llamas on leads. There’s no way to summon them or turn a regular villager into one. They also despawn after a while, so if you spot one with something useful, trade quickly.
How to Assign and Change Villager Jobs

Changing or assigning villager jobs is simpler than most players expect. Every profession is tied to a specific job site block. Place a composter near an unemployed villager and they become a farmer. Place a lectern and they become a librarian. That’s all there is to it.
If you want to reassign a villager, break their current job site block. They’ll lose their profession and revert to unemployed status. Place a different job site block nearby and they’ll pick up the new profession. Just remember: this only works if you haven’t traded with that villager yet. Once you trade, their inventory locks permanently.
Nitwits vs. Unemployed Villagers: What’s the Difference?
This is one of the most common points of confusion for newer players. Here’s the short version:
Nitwits wear green robes and are completely non-functional. No trades, no job assignment, no utility. You can interact with them but nothing happens. Placing any job site block near them makes zero difference.
Unemployed villagers, on the other hand, wear biome-appropriate robes and are fully functional once given a job. They’ll claim any nearby job site block you place and immediately begin developing their trade inventory. Think of them as a clean slate.
The 2026 Villager Trade Rebalance: What’s Changing
Mojang has been actively working on changes to how villager trades function, with a particular focus on making biomes matter more. Under the proposed rebalance, the biome a villager spawns in could affect what they trade, including exclusive map trades and adjusted pricing from wandering traders.
You can test these changes now by enabling the “Villager Trade Rebalance” experimental feature in Java Edition or “Villager Trade Rebalancing” in Bedrock when creating a new world. When these changes go live officially, this guide will be updated to reflect them.
Expert Tips to Get More Out of Every Trade
Knowing all the Minecraft villager jobs is one thing. Getting the best possible value from them is another. Here’s what actually moves the needle:
Demand affects pricing. If you buy out a villager’s entire stock of one item, the price goes up on the next restock. Leave something unsold and the price drops. Plan your trades accordingly.
Your reputation matters. Curing a zombie villager gives you a permanent discount with that specific villager. Saving a village from a raid by clearing the Bad Omen effect earns you the Hero of the Village achievement, which applies a discount across every villager in that village, not just one.
Emeralds are everywhere once you know where to look. You can mine emerald ore in mountain biomes, or you can just sell common items to villagers. Sticks to a fletcher, crops to a farmer, string to a fletcher, these low-effort trades add up fast.
Villager Trade Levels Explained
Every villager profession progresses through five levels, and the trades get significantly better as you level them up. Here’s how the system works:
| Trade Level | Badge | Experience Required | What It Unlocks |
| Novice | Stone | 0 (starting level) | Basic trades |
| Apprentice | Iron | 10 XP | Better trades |
| Journeyman | Gold | 70 XP | Mid-tier trades |
| Expert | Emerald | 150 XP | High-value trades |
| Master | Diamond | 250 XP | Best-in-class trades |
The gap between a novice and a master armorer, for example, is the difference between basic iron armor and enchanted diamond gear. It’s worth the investment to level up the villagers you use most often.
Can you reset a villager’s trades after leveling them up?
Yes, but only before you trade with them. Once you complete a single trade, their inventory locks permanently. To reset an untraded villager, simply break their job site block and replace it with a new one.
Which villager job gives the best value overall?
The librarian is widely considered the strongest for progression, since it can supply any enchanted book you need. For emerald farming, the fisherman and farmer are the most efficient. It depends on your playstyle and what stage of the game you’re in.












