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.
Stage 6 — Completion & Final Account — covers the period from Practical Completion (PC) through to the issue of the Final Certificate and the formal close-out of all financial matters. The QS role at this stage shifts from active cost management to structured financial settlement: agreeing all outstanding variations and claims, certifying the making-good of defects, issuing the Final Valuation, and reconciling the final outturn against the original approved budget.
This guidance note provides an overview of the stage for RICS-regulated QS firms practising in England & Wales. It sets out the financial, contractual, and professional obligations that arise between PC and the issue of the Final Certificate, with cross-references to the detailed topic-specific notes (GN-FA-01 to GN-FA-10) that follow. It is grounded in the RICS Black Book suite and relevant JCT/NEC contractual provisions.
Stage 6 is one of the most commercially important periods of the project lifecycle. Errors of omission or delay in the Final Account process can expose clients to conclusive certificate risk, loss of retention, or unenforced LAD deductions. RICS members have a professional duty to manage this stage rigorously and to advise clients of critical contractual deadlines.
A distinct but critically important scenario that can arise at or during Stage 6 is contractor insolvency. When a contractor becomes insolvent — whether through liquidation, administration, company voluntary arrangement (CVA), or administrative receivership — the standard Final Account process under the contract is replaced by a separate insolvency payment regime. The QS must be able to prepare a Notional Final Account (see section 5 below), liaise with the insolvency practitioner, and protect the employer's financial position during what can be a complex and high-risk stage of project close-out. RICS Termination of Contract, Corporate Recovery and Insolvency (GN 104/2013) and RICS Final Account Procedures (s.4.16) are the primary professional references.
Key Principles
- Practical Completion triggers simultaneous financial events: first moiety of retention released, LADs cease to accrue, Defects Liability Period (DLP) commences — per RICS Defining Completion of Construction Works (1st ed., August 2024).
- The DLP (typically 12 months under JCT SBC/Q 2016 Clause 2.38) is the contractor's right and obligation to rectify notified defects; the employer may not appoint others without following the contract procedure.
- Under JCT SBC/Q 2016 Clause 4.15, the Final Certificate is conclusive evidence of the sum due unless challenged by adjudication, arbitration or litigation within 28 days of issue — a critical client-risk deadline.
- The RICS Final Account Procedures (1st ed., effective 14 March 2016, reissued October 2024) establishes the structured process for settling the Final Account: submission, checking, queries, negotiation, agreement, and final statement.
- RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd ed., August 2024) requires elemental cost data to be prepared in BCIS/SFCA format and submitted for benchmarking — a professional obligation, not optional.
- RICS Retention (GN 90/2012) confirms that retention monies should be held on trust; the QS must ensure prompt release of both moieties at the contractual trigger dates.
- Contractor insolvency — Notional Final Account: where the contractor becomes insolvent during or before Final Account, the standard payment regime ceases and is replaced by the insolvency settlement mechanism. The QS is required to prepare two documents: (1) a Notional Final Account (prepared as soon as insolvency is confirmed — showing what the contractor would have been entitled to receive had it completed the works, i.e. the 'A' figure in the JCT post-termination account formula); and (2) a Completion Final Account (prepared after a replacement contractor finishes the works, incorporating all additional completion costs). Per RICS Termination of Contract, Corporate Recovery and Insolvency (GN 104/2013), Section 4.2.1.1, the Notional Final Account 'assesses the party's liability to the insolvent company and shows the implications on the contract'; it may be higher than the anticipated Final Account because it recognises costs incurred at the date of insolvency. The Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 (CIGA 2020) also affects some termination rights and should be reviewed with the client's solicitors in any insolvency event.
Practical Application
The Notional Final Account — illustrative structure (JCT SBC/Q 2016 Clause 8.7.4 formula):
Source: RICS Termination of Contract, Corporate Recovery and Insolvency (GN 104/2013), Appendix A. Where (A) exceeds (B+C+D) a balance is due to the contractor's estate; where (B+C+D) exceeds (A) the excess is a debt owed to the employer.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Failing to advise clients of the 28-day challenge window after the Final Certificate — once that deadline passes, the certificate is conclusive and disputed items are lost.
- Releasing the second moiety of retention before the Certificate of Making Good Defects is formally issued — premature release creates a recovery problem if further defects emerge.
- Leaving variations open without written agreement — as memories fade and people leave projects, unresolved variations become entrenched disputes that cost far more than their value to settle.
- Failing to distinguish between patent defects (visible at PC), latent defects (discovered later, within limitation period), and design defects (designer/D&B contractor liability) — incorrect categorisation leads to incorrect advice.
- Omitting the BCIS cost analysis or treating it as optional — it is a professional obligation under RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd ed.) and contributes to the benchmarking database on which the profession relies.
- In insolvency: overvaluing the contractor's work in the period immediately before insolvency is confirmed — under HGCRA 1996 s.111(10), a withholding notice is not required once insolvency is established, but any overpayment made before insolvency will be very difficult to recover from the insolvent estate; accurate interim valuations are therefore the QS's most important insolvency risk mitigation tool (RICS Final Account Procedures, s.4.16).
APC Competency & Quick Reference
- Contract Practice Level 3 — advising on Final Account procedures, retention, conclusive certificate risk, insolvency provisions
- Quantity Surveying & Construction Level 3 — Final Account preparation, cost reconciliation, BCIS analysis
- Project Financial Control and Reporting Level 3 — Final Cost Report, budget vs outturn reconciliation
- Corporate Recovery and Insolvency Level 2/3 — Notional Final Account, insolvency practitioner liaison, JCT Clause 8 termination provisions
Completion & Final Account Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Identify the contractual financial triggers at Practical Completion under JCT SBC/Q 2016 and NEC4 and advise clients on their obligations and deadlines.
- Apply RICS Final Account Procedures and RICS Defining Completion guidance to manage the settlement of the Final Account professionally and within contractual timescales.
- Prepare a Notional Final Account in the event of contractor insolvency in accordance with RICS Termination of Contract, Corporate Recovery and Insolvency (GN 104/2013), applying the JCT Clause 8.7.4 post-termination account formula and liaising with the insolvency practitioner to protect the employer's financial position.
Further Reading
- RICS, Defining Completion of Construction Works, 1st edition, August 2024
- RICS, Final Account Procedures, 1st edition, effective 14 March 2016 (reissued October 2024) — s.4.16: Notional final accounts caused by contractor insolvency
- RICS, Termination of Contract, Corporate Recovery and Insolvency, 1st edition (GN 104/2013, reissued September 2025) — s.4.2.1.1: Notional final account; Appendix A: sample notional final account
- RICS, Cost Analysis and Benchmarking, 2nd edition, August 2024
- RICS, Retention, GN 90/2012
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities 2016 (SBC/Q 2016) — Clauses 2.38–2.40, 4.15, 4.20, 8.1, 8.5, 8.7.4 (post-termination account formula)
- Levi Solicitors LLP v Wilson & Anor [2022] EWHC 24 (Ch) — confirmed that upon contractor insolvency, the JCT insolvency settlement mechanism replaces the standard Final Account and payment regime
- Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 (CIGA 2020) — impacts on contractual termination rights on insolvency
Sections 3–8 are for subscribers
Your subscription unlocks Practical Application steps, Common Mistakes to Avoid, APC Quick Reference, the Stage Checklist, CPD Learning Outcomes, Further Reading, and all production-ready templates.