Purpose
Note on JCT editions: JCT has published the 2024 Edition. This guidance cites JCT SBC/Q 2016 clause references; the commercial and payment mechanisms are substantively unchanged in the 2024 edition, but specific clause references should be verified against the contract edition in use on any given project.
RIBA Stage 5 — Construction and Post-Contract Administration is the longest and most commercially intensive stage of the project lifecycle. It spans from site possession through to Practical Completion, during which the QS maintains continuous financial control: certifying monthly interim payments, administering the change control process, updating the Forecast Final Cost and cash flow forecast, advising on contractual notices and claims, and issuing regular cost reports to the client. The quality and rigour of Stage 5 commercial administration determines the outcome of the final account and the employer's exposure to contractor claims.
The Stage 5 QS role is underpinned by two intersecting frameworks: the terms of the building contract (which define the parties' obligations, payment mechanisms, variation procedures, and claims processes) and the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 as amended by the Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 (which imposes statutory payment obligations that override contrary contract terms). Every commercial decision at Stage 5 must be taken with reference to both. The QS must know the contract form and its specific provisions — JCT SBC/Q 2016, JCT DB 2016, NEC4, or other — as the procedural obligations differ materially between forms.
Stage 5 builds directly on the quality of Stage 4 documentation. A well-structured Bill of Quantities or pricing document makes interim valuation straightforward; clearly drafted contract particulars (LADs rate, defects liability period, retention percentage) avoid disputes; a complete change control register from Stage 4 provides the baseline for tracking variations. Conversely, poor Stage 4 documentation — ambiguous pricing documents, incomplete contract particulars, or unresolved pre-contract queries — will generate disputes during construction that consume disproportionate time and cost to resolve.
Key Principles
- RICS Interim Valuations and Payment (2nd edition, 2015): monthly certification process, components of an interim valuation, payment notice and pay less notice procedures, retention administration, materials on site pre-conditions.
- RICS Change Control and Management (1st edition, effective 1 April 2021): definition of change vs variation, seven-step change control process, risk allocation under JCT/NEC/FIDIC, BIM and change management, variation register maintenance.
- RICS Valuing Change (current edition): variation valuation hierarchy — contract rates, analogy rates, star rates, daywork; JCT Schedule 2 quotation procedure; NEC compensation event assessment methodology.
- RICS Cash Flow Forecasting (2nd edition, July 2024): monthly cash flow updates, S-curve methodology, variance analysis, front-end loading detection, retention profile, cyclical adjustment (Christmas/Easter), drawdown certification.
- RICS Cost Reporting (1st edition, 2015): Forecast Final Cost build-up, cost report minimum content, frequency, comparison to budget, risk register integration.
- RICS Extensions of Time (1st edition, effective 10 February 2015): Relevant Events (JCT), Compensation Events (NEC4), notice requirements, concurrency, EoT assessment methodology, LADs implications.
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (as amended by LDEDCA 2009): payment due date, final date for payment, payment notices, pay less notices, right to suspend, adjudication — the statutory framework that overrides contract terms.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Not confirming commercial procedures at the pre-start meeting — ambiguity about payment cycle dates, variation instruction procedures, and reporting format generates disputes from the first valuation onwards.
- Missing the Payment Notice deadline — under HGCRA, if no valid Payment Notice is issued within the contractual timescale, the contractor's application becomes the notified sum and must be paid in full, even if it is incorrect.
- Certifying without visiting site — the QS is certifying the value of completed work; certifying work that has not been inspected exposes the employer to overpayment and the QS to professional liability.
- Allowing uncontrolled variations without formal written instructions — verbal or informal instructions create scope disputes and make the final account significantly harder to settle.
- Reporting a cost overrun only when it is too late for the client to take corrective action — the cost report must flag emerging overspends as soon as they are identified, with proposed mitigating actions.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
APC Competencies: Contract Administration (L3) | Cost Management (L3) | Commercial Management (L2) | Procurement & Tendering (L1)
Construction & Post-Contract Stage Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Describe the full sequence of QS commercial responsibilities at RIBA Stage 5, from pre-start meeting to Practical Completion, and identify the RICS professional standards and HGCRA statutory framework governing each responsibility.
- Apply the HGCRA payment framework — payment due date, final date for payment, payment notices, and pay less notices — within the specific contractual mechanisms of JCT SBC/Q 2016 or NEC4, ensuring all statutory and contractual payment obligations are met.
- Construct a Forecast Final Cost from the contract sum baseline, incorporating agreed and anticipated variations, risk allowances, and assessed loss and expense, and present it in a cost report with a clear variance analysis against the approved budget.
Further Reading
- RICS Interim Valuations and Payment (2nd edition, 2015, RICS Books)
- RICS Change Control and Management (1st edition, effective 1 April 2021, RICS)
- RICS Cash Flow Forecasting (2nd edition, July 2024, RICS)
- RICS Extensions of Time (1st edition, effective 10 February 2015, RICS Books)
- RICS Cost Reporting (1st edition, 2015, RICS Books)
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (c.53, HMSO) as amended by Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 (c.20, HMSO)
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