Purpose
The Bill of Quantities (BQ) is the primary pricing document for traditionally procured building contracts. Prepared by the QS in accordance with NRM 2: Detailed Measurement for Building Works (2nd edition, effective 1 December 2021), it provides tenderers with a complete, consistent schedule of measured quantities, enabling contractors to price the works on an equal basis without independently measuring the drawings. The BQ also forms part of the contract and, post-contract, governs the valuation of variations, interim payments and the final account.
NRM 2 defines the structure, content and measurement rules for all building work sections — from demolitions (Section 3) through to builder's work in connection with M&E (Section 41). The BQ must be structured to reflect the contract programme and trade sequence, enabling the QS to extract activity-level valuations for interim certificates and to identify the cost impact of variations by work section.
For Design and Build contracts, the pricing document is typically a Contract Sum Analysis (CSA) rather than a BQ — see GN-TD-10. For NEC4 contracts, work is priced via an Activity Schedule (Option A/C) or a Bill of Quantities (Option B/D). The choice of pricing document must align with the selected contract form and be confirmed before tender documents are compiled.
Key Principles
- NRM 2: Detailed Measurement for Building Works (2nd edition, effective 1 December 2021): mandatory RICS measurement rules for BQ preparation; defines BQ types, composition, work sections, provisional and PC sums, codification, and ICMS mapping.
- NRM 2 Work Sections 3–41: cover all building work trades from Demolitions (S3) to Builder's Work in Connection with M&E Services (S41) — each section has specific measurement rules, item descriptions and coverage rules.
- Defined and undefined provisional sums (NRM 2): a defined provisional sum has sufficient design information to price nature, construction method, fixity and quantity; an undefined provisional sum does not — tenderers cannot include programme allowances for undefined sums.
- Prime cost (PC) sums (NRM 2): supply-only rates for materials or goods of unknown precise quality; excludes fixing costs, contractor OHP — tenderers add these separately. PC sums should be minimised at Stage 4.
- RICS E-Tendering (2nd edition, 2010): RICS recommends web-based tender extranets for BQ distribution, particularly for projects over £3m; disk/CD acceptable; email not recommended as primary distribution method.
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q 2016): the BQ forms a contract document; quantities are at the employer's risk — errors in measured quantities are valued under the contract variations machinery.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using undefined provisional sums for work that should be measured — extensive undefined sums transfer risk back to the client, undermine cost certainty, and prevent tenderers from building in reasonable programme allowances.
- Using PC sums for work that should be specified and measured at Stage 4 — PC sums are appropriate only where the client genuinely has not selected the product; using them to avoid specification decisions is poor practice.
- Omitting coverage rules from the preambles section — without clear coverage rules, tenderers make different assumptions about what is included in measured items, making tender analysis and post-contract valuation difficult.
- Not reconciling the BQ total to the Pre-Tender Estimate before issue — a material discrepancy between the two should be investigated and resolved before tenders go out, not after they are returned.
- Issuing a BQ in a format that does not support post-contract cost management — the BQ structure should enable easy interim valuation, variation pricing and final account preparation, not just tendering.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
APC Competencies: Procurement & Tendering (L2) | Cost Management (L2) | Design Economics & Cost Planning (L2) | Commercial Management (L1)
Pricing Documents & BQ Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Prepare a Bill of Quantities in accordance with NRM 2: Detailed Measurement for Building Works (2nd edition, 2021), applying the correct measurement rules, description conventions and coverage rules for each work section.
- Distinguish between firm BQs, approximate BQs and schedules of rates, and between defined and undefined provisional sums and PC sums, and select the appropriate document type for each project context.
- Explain how BQ structure directly affects post-contract cost management — interim payment assessment, variation valuation and final account preparation — and design the BQ accordingly.
Further Reading
- RICS NRM 2: Detailed Measurement for Building Works (2nd edition, effective 1 December 2021, RICS Books)
- RICS E-Tendering (2nd edition, 2010, RICS Books)
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q, 2016 edition, Sweet & Maxwell)
- NEC4 Engineering and Construction Contract (2017, Thomas Telford) — Options A–D
- RICS Tendering Strategies (1st edition, 2015, RICS Books) — Section 3.6
- ICMS: International Construction Measurement Standards (2nd edition, 2019, ICMS Coalition)
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