Purpose
A fee proposal is a formal offer to provide QS services at a defined cost, setting out the scope of services, methodology, programme, and commercial terms. Getting fee proposals right protects your firm commercially, legally, and professionally.
Under RICS Rule of Conduct 3 (Service), firms must agree terms of engagement before commencing services. The fee proposal forms the basis of those terms, so accuracy and clarity are paramount.
Key Principles
- Fee structures for QS services typically take one of three forms: lump sum (fixed fee for defined scope), percentage of construction cost, or time-based (hourly/daily rates). Each carries different risk profiles.
- A lump sum fee is most common for clearly defined scopes. Percentage fees are more common on complex or phased projects where scope is difficult to define upfront.
- Always price against a clearly defined scope of services (reference RICS QS Scope of Services 2022). An insufficiently scoped proposal leads to fee erosion and scope creep.
- Include explicit assumptions and exclusions — what is NOT included is just as important as what is.
- Consider risk allowances, particularly for projects with limited information at tender stage.
- The RICS Standard Form of Consultant's Appointment (May 2022) should accompany or be referenced in the fee proposal to establish the contractual framework.
- Include your PII level, net contribution clause position, and any proposed limitations of liability in the proposal or accompanying terms.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Pricing without a clearly defined scope — this is the most common cause of fee shortfalls.
- Failing to include assumptions and exclusions, leaving the firm exposed to scope creep.
- Underpricing to win work, leading to under-resourced delivery and poor client outcomes.
- Not including a programme or resource plan, making it difficult to manage fee drawdowns against progress.
- Submitting a proposal without confirming PII adequacy for the scale of the commission.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
This topic is relevant to: Business Development (Level 1–2), Client Care (Level 1–2), Commercial Management of Construction (Level 1), RICS Rules of Conduct.
Pre-Appointment Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Understand the different fee structures used in QS appointments and the risk implications of each.
- Produce a compliant, clearly scoped fee proposal that protects the firm commercially.
- Apply the RICS QS Scope of Services 2022 framework when defining and pricing services.
Further Reading
- RICS QS Scope of Services 2022
- RICS Standard Form of Consultant's Appointment and Explanatory Notes (May 2022)
- RICS Rules of Conduct (Global, October 2021)
- RICS Risk, Liability and Insurance Guidance Note (1st edition, April 2021)
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.