Purpose
The Feasibility Stage corresponds to RIBA Stage 1 (Preparation and Brief) and represents the point at which the QS first engages meaningfully with the project following appointment. Its primary purpose is to test whether the proposed project is financially viable before significant design expenditure is committed. The QS’s role is to translate the client’s brief into cost terms, establish a realistic cost range for the project, identify and quantify key risks, and advise on the most appropriate procurement route.
Cost advice at this stage is governed by RICS NRM 1: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning for Capital Building Works (2nd edition, reissued as practice information October 2022). The RICS Cost Prediction Professional Standard (Global, 1st edition, reissued June 2024) further imposes mandatory obligations on how cost predictions are communicated — including the requirement to disclose the basis of the estimate and its expected accuracy range.
Decisions made at feasibility shape every subsequent stage of the project. An underfunded budget, an unidentified site constraint, or the wrong procurement route chosen here will create problems that are far more expensive and disruptive to resolve once design has advanced. Getting the feasibility stage right is one of the most valuable services a QS provides.
Key Principles
- RICS NRM 1 is the governing standard for Order of Cost Estimates at feasibility. It defines the methods (floor area method, functional unit method, elemental method) and sets out what must be included, excluded, and disclosed.
- The RICS Cost Prediction Professional Standard (reissued June 2024) is mandatory. It requires QS practitioners to disclose the basis of any cost prediction and its expected accuracy range. A cost estimate presented without these disclosures is non-compliant.
- Always present cost advice as a range, not a single-point figure. At feasibility stage, the level of design information does not support false precision. A range with clearly stated assumptions and exclusions is both more honest and more defensible.
- Feasibility study and cost planning are distinct activities. A feasibility study is a high-level viability test using cost/m² benchmarks or functional unit rates. Cost planning is the structured, detailed process that follows — evolving through NRM 1 elemental breakdowns across Stages 2, 3, and 4.
- BCIS (Building Cost Information Service) is the primary benchmarking tool for UK construction. Any benchmark rate must be adjusted for location (regional index), time (Tender Price Index), specification uplift/reduction, and project-specific abnormals before use.
- Optimism bias — the systematic tendency to underestimate costs and overestimate benefits — must be explicitly addressed in the feasibility cost estimate. Failure to account for optimism bias is a common cause of budget inadequacy as projects develop.
- The project risk register is established at feasibility and maintained throughout the project life. At RIBA Stage 1, a risk/design contingency of 10–15% is typically appropriate, reducing to 7–10% at Stage 2 and 3–5% at Stage 3 as risks are resolved.
Practical Application
Follow these steps when the feasibility stage is triggered post-appointment:
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Presenting a single-point cost figure without a range and stated assumptions. This is non-compliant with the RICS Cost Prediction Professional Standard and misleads the client about the inherent uncertainty at this stage.
- Failing to address optimism bias explicitly. Budgets that do not account for systematic underestimation will be found inadequate as the project develops, creating credibility problems for the QS.
- Not documenting the project brief in writing before preparing the cost estimate. If the brief changes and the estimate changes with it, you need a documented baseline to show why.
- Omitting abnormal costs or failing to flag them clearly. Abnormals such as piled foundations, contamination remediation, or complex access must be included in the estimate and clearly identified — not hidden within elemental rates where they will distort future benchmarking.
- Recommending a procurement route verbally or informally without a written appraisal and recorded client decision. The procurement choice is one of the most consequential decisions of the project — it must be documented.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
This guidance note is relevant to the following RICS APC competencies: Cost Management (, Levels 1–3); Procurement and Tendering (, Levels 1–2); Risk Management (, Levels 1–2); Data Management (, Level 1).
Feasibility Stage Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Prepare an Order of Cost Estimate in accordance with RICS NRM 1, selecting appropriate benchmark rates and applying correct adjustments for location, time, specification, and known abnormals.
- Establish a project risk register using the RICS Management of Risk framework, quantifying contingency allowances appropriate to the stage of design.
- Produce a procurement options appraisal setting out the advantages and disadvantages of available routes relative to the client’s stated priorities, and issue a written recommendation.
Further Reading
- RICS NRM 1: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning for Capital Building Works (2nd edition, reissued as practice information October 2022)
- RICS Cost Prediction Professional Standard, Global (1st edition, reissued June 2024)
- RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, June 2015, reissued as practice information March 2025)
- RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd edition)
- RICS Developing a Construction Procurement Strategy and Selecting an Appropriate Route (2nd edition)
- RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (1st edition)
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