Purpose
Cost Plan Reconciliation is the formal analytical process of tracing the movement from the original approved project budget (Formal Cost Plan 1 at RIBA Stage 2 or the Employer's Requirements Budget) through successive cost plans, tender returns, contract sum, and post-contract adjustments to the agreed Final Account. It is the definitive account of how and why the project cost changed from inception to close-out, and forms the core analytical content of the Final Cost Report to the client.
The reconciliation has two purposes: (i) client accountability — demonstrating to the client where their budget was spent, where it was saved, and why the final outturn differed from the original approved estimate; and (ii) professional knowledge — building the QS firm's understanding of which elements, project types, or procurement routes are prone to cost growth, so that future estimates are more accurate.
RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd ed., August 2024) requires the reconciliation to be structured using the BCIS elemental format so that the project's cost data can be compared with BCIS benchmarks and submitted to the BCIS cost database.
Key Principles
- RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd ed., August 2024): the Cost Plan Reconciliation should be structured using the SFCA (Standard Form of Cost Analysis) elemental breakdown; cost/m² GIFA should be calculated for each element and compared to BCIS benchmarks.
- RICS Project Financial Control and Reporting: the reconciliation must explain variances between each stage of cost reporting — from Cost Plan 1 (RIBA Stage 2) through to Final Account — identifying design change, scope change, market conditions, and risk events as drivers.
- NRM1 (RICS New Rules of Measurement, Order of Cost Estimating, 2nd ed.): provides the elemental cost breakdown structure that underpins the reconciliation; the 12 main elements (substructure, superstructure, etc.) are the standard framework.
- RICS Cost Prediction PS (effective 1 January 2020): requires the QS to be able to account for all risk allowances and explain how risk materialised or did not materialise in the final outturn.
- BCIS submission: RICS members are expected (RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking, 2nd ed.) to submit completed cost analysis data to BCIS in the standard format — contributing to the industry benchmark database.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Presenting a single-line budget vs outturn comparison without an elemental breakdown — the client cannot understand what changed and why without the elemental structure.
- Categorising all variations as 'client-instructed scope changes' without distinguishing design development, market, risk, and contractor-initiated items — this misrepresents the project cost story and obscures the QS's own estimating accuracy.
- Failing to submit BCIS cost analysis data — this is a professional obligation and omitting it deprives the industry of the benchmarking data that underpins every future estimate.
- Using net area (NIA) instead of GIFA for the cost/m² calculation — BCIS data is benchmarked on GIFA and using a different metric makes the comparison meaningless.
- Completing the reconciliation after the Final Cost Report is issued — the reconciliation should be completed and agreed before the Final Cost Report is issued to the client.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
- Project Financial Control and Reporting Level 3 — cost plan reconciliation, variance analysis, client reporting
- Quantity Surveying & Construction Level 3 — elemental cost analysis, BCIS benchmarking, SFCA format
Completion & Final Account Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Prepare a Cost Plan Reconciliation in BCIS/SFCA elemental format, tracing cost movement from original budget to Final Account and categorising variances by driver type.
- Calculate and interpret cost/m² GIFA benchmarks by element against BCIS data for the relevant project type, identifying significant variances and their causes.
- Submit completed cost analysis data to BCIS in the standard format in compliance with RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd ed., August 2024) professional obligations.
Further Reading
- RICS, Cost Analysis and Benchmarking, 2nd edition, August 2024
- RICS, New Rules of Measurement: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning for Capital Building Works (NRM1), 2nd edition, April 2012
- RICS, Project Financial Control and Reporting (Black Book)
- RICS, Cost Prediction PS, effective 1 January 2020
- BCIS — Building Cost Information Service: bcis.co.uk
- RICS Property Measurement PS, 2nd edition, 2018 — GIFA definition
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