Costing individual construction projects accurately is what separates profitable contractors from busy-but-struggling ones. Here Nuala McGowan, CPA, ACA, AIA and founder of McGowan Accountancy Service offers advice on how to cost individual contracts.
1. Define Scope & Specifications Clearly
Start by fully understanding what you’re building.
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Review drawings, plans, and specifications
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Clarify materials, finishes, and quality standards
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Identify exclusions (what’s NOT included)
? If the scope is vague, your estimate will be wrong—guaranteed.
2. Break the Project into Work Packages (Takeoff)
Divide the project into measurable components:
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Site work (excavation, drainage)
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Structure (concrete, steel, timber)
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Finishes (plastering, flooring, painting)
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Services (electrical, plumbing)
Then perform a quantity takeoff:
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Measure volumes, areas, lengths (e.g., m³ of concrete, m² of plaster)
3. Assign Unit Costs
Attach costs to each item:
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Materials (current supplier prices)
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Labour (hours × hourly rates)
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Plant & equipment (hire or ownership cost)
? Use updated local rates—construction prices fluctuate a lot.
4. Add Indirect Costs & Risks
Don’t just price the physical work—include:
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Site overheads (site office, utilities, supervision)
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Preliminaries (permits, insurance, safety compliance)
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Contingency (typically 5–15% depending on uncertainty)
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Inflation or price escalation (for longer projects)
5. Review, Adjust & Validate
Before finalizing:
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Cross-check quantities and calculations
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Compare with similar past projects (benchmarking)
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Get quotes from subcontractors/suppliers
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Stress-test assumptions (e.g., “what if materials rise 10%?”)
For more information or to make an appointment contact Nuala McGowan on (090) 66 25818 or email nuala@mcgowanaccountancy.com
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