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.
Interim payment valuations are the monthly financial assessments of the value of work completed under a building contract. They give rise to interim certificates and payment notices that obligate the employer to pay the contractor within a defined period. Under the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (as amended), all qualifying construction contracts must provide for interim or periodic payments — a statutory right that cannot be contracted out of.
The QS's role is to assess the value of completed work objectively and accurately, reflecting the true state of progress. This requires a site visit before each valuation — the QS must not certify work that has not been inspected. Each component of the valuation (measured works, preliminaries, variations, materials on site, retention) must be assessed independently and documented. The valuation is both a management tool and a legal document: errors that lead to overcertification give the contractor cash it has not earned, and errors that lead to undercertification may trigger adjudication.
JCT SBC/Q 2016 Clauses 4.9–4.13 set out the payment mechanism: the valuation date (as stated in the Contract Particulars), the due date (7 days after the valuation date), the final date for payment (14 days after the due date), and the contractual timescales for Payment Notices (issued by the QS within 5 days of the valuation date) and Pay Less Notices (issued by the employer at least 5 days before the final date for payment). These statutory deadlines are strict — a missed Payment Notice deadline means the contractor's application becomes the notified sum.
Key Principles
- RICS Interim Valuations and Payment (2nd edition, 2015): full valuation procedure; components of an interim valuation; disputed valuations; materials on/off site pre-conditions; retention administration; the QS's obligation to visit site before certifying.
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, ss.109–113 (as amended by LDEDCA 2009): right to interim payments; payment due date; final date for payment; payment notice obligations; pay less notice obligations; right to suspend for non-payment; right to adjudication — all implied into qualifying construction contracts.
- JCT SBC/Q 2016, Clauses 4.9–4.13: valuation date; due date (7 days after valuation date); final date for payment (14 days after due date); QS issues Interim Payment Notice within 5 days of valuation date; employer may issue Pay Less Notice not less than 5 days before final date for payment.
- RICS Retention in Construction Contracts (current edition): retention is held as trust money — it does not belong to the employer; retention percentage (typically 3–5%) applies to each interim payment; one-half released at Practical Completion; one-half released at end of Defects Liability Period.
- JCT SBC/Q 2016, Clause 3.17 — materials on site: three pre-conditions for inclusion: (i) materials must be properly stored, protected from damage and theft; (ii) the employer's title to the materials must be vested (materials become employer's property on payment); (iii) materials must be insured for their full value.
- JCT SBC/Q 2016, Clause 4.13 — off-site materials (listed items): additional requirements — items must be uniquely marked; bond may be required; RICS off-site materials checklist must be satisfied before payment is certified.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Missing the Payment Notice deadline — if no Payment Notice is issued within 5 days of the valuation date, the contractor's application becomes the notified sum by default under the HGCRA. The employer must then pay the full application amount, even if it is inflated, unless a valid Pay Less Notice is issued before the final date for payment.
- Certifying without visiting site — the QS's professional obligation is to certify the value of completed work; certifying from the contractor's application without site inspection is negligent and exposes the employer to overpayment and the QS to professional liability.
- Including materials on site without checking all three JCT 3.17 pre-conditions — materials that are not properly stored, not vested in the employer, or not insured should not be included in the interim valuation.
- Applying a global percentage to the contract sum rather than assessing each work section separately — different trades advance at different rates; a global percentage assessment systematically overcertifies slower trades and undercertifies faster ones.
- Not tracking cumulative retention carefully — retention is trust money and must be accounted for accurately; errors in the retention calculation compound over multiple valuation cycles and create disputes at Practical Completion.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
APC Competencies: Contract Administration (L3) | Cost Management (L3) | Legal & Regulatory Compliance (L2) | Commercial Management (L2)
Interim Payment Valuations Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Apply the HGCRA 1996 payment framework — valuation date, due date, final date for payment, Payment Notice, and Pay Less Notice — within the JCT SBC/Q 2016 payment mechanism, ensuring all statutory and contractual deadlines are met.
- Assess each component of an interim valuation (measured works, preliminaries, variations, materials on site, retention) independently and with reference to the contract pricing document and site inspection evidence.
- Identify the legal status of retention as trust money, apply the correct retention deduction and release sequence, and advise the client on the risks of failing to ring-fence retention funds.
Further Reading
- RICS Interim Valuations and Payment (2nd edition, 2015, RICS Books)
- RICS Retention in Construction Contracts (current edition, RICS)
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (c.53, HMSO) — ss.109–113
- Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 (c.20, HMSO) — ss.139–145
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q, 2016 edition, Sweet & Maxwell) — Clauses 4.9–4.13 and 3.17
- Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998 (SI 1998/649, HMSO) — default payment provisions where contract does not comply with HGCRA
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