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Prime Cost Sums in Construction Contracts: Risks, BOQ Examples, and Pricing Strategy

Learn how Prime Cost sums affect contractor risk, margin exposure, and BOQ pricing strategy. Includes real construction examples, split vs composite PC items, and OH&P placement guidance.

Prime Cost Sums in Construction Contracts: Risks, BOQ Examples, and Pricing Strategy
Prime Cost Sums in Construction Contracts: Risks, BOQ Examples, and Pricing Strategy
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Prime Cost Sums in Construction Contracts: Hidden Risks and Pricing Strategies

Prime Cost (PC) sums adjust material supply allowances in construction contracts, but they do not adjust execution risk. This guide explains how PC items affect contractor margin, how BOQ structure changes exposure, and where to place overhead and profit to avoid unintended losses during material selection.

Prime Cost (PC) sums are commonly used in construction contracts to allow flexibility in selecting materials later in the project. While they appear straightforward, they introduce hidden pricing risks that can affect contractor margin, wastage exposure, and defects liability obligations.

Understanding how to structure and price PC items correctly—especially in Bills of Quantities (BOQs)—is essential for protecting both contractor and employer from unintended financial consequences.

This guide explains how PC sums work in practice, why they create hidden risk, and how to decide where overhead and profit (OH&P) should be placed when pricing them.


What Is a Prime Cost Sum?

A Prime Cost (PC) sum is an allowance included in the contract for materials that will be selected later by the Architect/Engineer or employer.

Prime Cost sums are recognized across major contract frameworks including FIDIC, AIA contract forms, and RICS measurement guidance, where they are used to manage material selections that cannot be finalized at tender stage.

Unlike provisional sums, which adjust scope uncertainty, prime cost sums mainly adjust material selection uncertainty.

The allowance typically covers supply only, while installation is priced separately by the contractor.

Typical PC items include:

  • ceramic tiles

  • sanitary fixtures

  • light fittings

  • timber flooring

  • doors and ironmongery

  • architectural finishes

Once the final material is selected, the contract sum is adjusted to reflect the actual supply cost.

However:

PC adjustments usually compensate material price only—not execution exposure.


Why Prime Cost Sums Create Hidden Contractor Risk

PC sums adjust supply value but usually do not adjust execution risk.

They typically do not compensate changes in:

  • wastage value

  • handling sensitivity

  • storage requirements

  • installation productivity

  • supervision effort

  • protection requirements

  • replacement obligations during the defects liability period (DLP)

As material value increases, these risks increase—even if installation rates remain unchanged.

This makes PC sums one of the most misunderstood pricing mechanisms in BOQ contracts.


Why Employers Use Prime Cost Sums

Employers and consultants use Prime Cost sums to keep the tender moving when final finishes, fixtures, or specialist materials are not yet fully selected. This gives the design team flexibility and can avoid delaying procurement of the main works package. However, the employer should understand that a PC sum does not eliminate risk; it only postpones final material selection. If the allowance is unrealistic, or if selections are made late, the project may still face cost growth, coordination issues, approval delays, and pressure on programme.


Prime Cost Sums Create Selection and Supply-Chain Risk

Prime Cost sums are not only pricing allowances. They also create selection and supply-chain risk. When the final material is chosen later by the architect, engineer, or employer, the contractor may still face uncertainty in supplier lead time, sample approvals, procurement timing, delivery sequencing, storage conditions, handling requirements, and coordination with installation activities. In other words, the contract may carry an allowance for material value, but the project may still be carrying uncertainty in how that material will actually be selected, sourced, and absorbed into the works.


Real Example: Ceramic Tile PC Allowance (Composite BOQ Structure)

Consider the following BOQ wording.

Composite format (single-line PC structure)

Supply and install ceramic tile flooring to toilet areas including supply, installation, adhesive, accessories, transportation, cutting, wastage, protection, and maintenance during the defects liability period, complete as per drawings and specifications, with Prime Cost allowance for tiles = 10 $/m².

Quantity Unit Rate Amount
2,500 25 62,500

Here:

Total rate includes:

  • installation

  • accessories

  • wastage

  • OH&P

  • PC allowance

If selected tiles cost 18 $/m²:

Adjustment = +8 × 2,500

Installation pricing remains unchanged.

This structure generally protects contractor margin better than split PC structures.


Alternative Example: Split PC BOQ Structure

Some BOQs separate supply allowance from installation works.

Item 1 — PC Material

Prime Cost allowance for supply of ceramic floor tiles to toilet areas as selected by the Architect/Engineer.

Quantity Unit Rate Amount
2,500 10 25,000

Item 2 — Installation Works

Installation of ceramic floor tiles including adhesive, accessories, cutting, wastage, transportation, supervision, protection, testing, and maintenance during defects liability period, complete as per drawings and specifications.

Quantity Unit Rate Amount
2,500 15 37,500

This structure introduces a key pricing decision:

Where should overhead and profit be placed?


Why the Split Structure Creates Margin Risk

If overhead and profit are included inside the PC item instead of the installation item, contractor margin may reduce automatically when cheaper materials are selected.

Original Tender (Markup Hidden Inside PC Item)

Component Value ($/m²)
Base PC allowance 10
Contractor OH&P inside PC 2
Tendered PC rate 12
Installation item 15

Now assume the Architect/Engineer selects tiles costing 5 $/m².

Post-Selection Adjustment

Component Value ($/m²)
Selected tile supply cost 5
Adjusted proportional OH&P 1
Adjusted PC rate 6

Result:

The contractor loses 1 $/m² of margin compared to the original tender assumption.

If OH&P had been placed in the installation item instead, the margin would remain unchanged.


A Second Example: Sanitary Ware PC Allowance

PC exposure increases significantly when materials are expensive.

Example wording:

Supply and install wash basin including brackets, fixing accessories, sealants, connection to water supply and drainage, testing, protection, and maintenance during defects liability period, complete as per drawings and specifications, with Prime Cost allowance for basin = 120 $/No.

If the selected basin costs:

400 $

Replacement during DLP becomes substantially more expensive.

Yet installation pricing remains unchanged unless the contract explicitly allows adjustment.


Wastage and Defects Liability Period Exposure

PC sums adjust supply value only—not lifecycle exposure.

Higher-value materials increase:

  • breakage risk

  • replacement cost

  • storage requirements

  • handling sensitivity

  • protection effort

  • supervision complexity

For example:

Replacing a cracked 5 $ tile during DLP is negligible.

Replacing a 100 $ tile is not.

However, installation pricing usually remains unchanged.

This is one of the most overlooked risks in PC pricing.


Two Common BOQ Structures Compared

Structure Adjustment Risk Margin Stability
Composite PC item Low High
Split PC item Medium Depends on markup placement
Split PC with markup inside PC High Low

As a general rule:

Avoid placing OH&P inside adjustable PC items unless higher-value selections are expected.


Decision Strategy: Where Should OH&P Be Placed?

The correct placement of overhead and profit depends on expected material selection direction.

Use the following workflow.

prime cost placement strategy  horisontal quollnet
Prime Cost OH&P Placement Strategy (Selection Direction Flowchart)

This decision framework helps contractors balance margin protection against potential upside when materials exceed PC allowances.


PC Pricing Decision Workflow

Step 1 — Is the BOQ composite or split?

Composite item:

Margin is generally stable.

Split item:

Continue to Step 2.

Step 2 — Is the final material selection likely to exceed the PC allowance?

Yes:

Place part of OH&P inside PC item (possible upside)

No:

Place OH&P inside installation item (protect margin)

Uncertain:

Place OH&P inside installation item (lowest risk strategy)

pc sum pricing decision tree
PC Sum Pricing Decision Tree (Composite vs Split Logic)


Decision Table for Fast Pricing Strategy Selection

Expected Selection Outcome Recommended OH&P Placement Risk Level
Higher than PC allowance Inside PC item Moderate
Near PC allowance Split between both Medium
Lower than PC allowance Inside installation item Low
Unknown Inside installation item Lowest

This table is especially useful during tender pricing reviews.


Project Type Matters When Pricing PC Items

Material selection direction often depends on project type.

Project Type Likely Selection Outcome
low-cost housing below PC allowance
mid-range residential near allowance
luxury residential tower above allowance
5-star hotel above allowance

Estimators should align OH&P placement strategy with expected specification upgrades or value engineering risk.


Practical Strategy for Structuring PC BOQ Items

When pricing PC items:

Separate fixed installation costs from material-sensitive costs

Avoid embedding margin inside adjustable PC allowances unless justified

Consider wastage exposure relative to material value

Evaluate replacement exposure during defects liability period

Assess likely selection direction based on project type

If uncertain:

Place overhead and profit inside the fixed installation portion rather than the adjustable PC allowance.


Key Takeaway

Prime Cost sums adjust material price but not execution risk.

Contractors should structure BOQ rates carefully to avoid unintended margin erosion when final selections differ from tender assumptions.

Correct placement of overhead and profit inside PC structures is one of the simplest and most effective ways to protect pricing stability in construction contracts.

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Elie Saad
Apr 09, 2026
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Prime Cost Sums in Construction Contracts: Risks, BOQ Examples, and Pricing Strategy

Frequently Asked Questions


FAQ

Q: What is a Prime Cost sum in construction?

A: A Prime Cost sum is an allowance included in the contract for materials that will be selected later by the Architect/Engineer or employer. It usually covers supply value only and is adjusted once the final material is chosen.

FAQ

Q: Do Prime Cost sums include installation?

A: Not usually. Installation is typically priced separately by the contractor unless the BOQ uses a composite item structure that combines supply and installation in one line.

FAQ

Q: What happens if the selected material costs less than the PC allowance?

A: The contract price is normally reduced by the difference. If the contractor included overhead and profit inside the adjustable PC item, part of that margin may also reduce.

FAQ

Q: What happens if the selected material costs more than the PC allowance?

A: The contract price is normally increased by the difference in supply value. However, that does not automatically compensate the contractor for higher wastage value, handling sensitivity, storage needs, or defects liability exposure.

FAQ

Q: What is the difference between a Prime Cost sum and a Provisional sum?

A: A Prime Cost sum is mainly an allowance for material selection, while a Provisional sum is usually an allowance for scope that is identified but not sufficiently defined at tender stage.

FAQ

Q: Why are Prime Cost sums risky for contractors?

A: They are risky because they usually adjust material price only, not execution risk. Higher-value selections can increase wastage exposure, breakage cost, storage requirements, handling sensitivity, and replacement cost during the defects liability period.

FAQ

Q: What is the difference between a composite PC item and a split PC item?

A: A composite PC item combines supply and installation in one BOQ line, while a split PC item separates the PC material allowance from the contractor’s installation item. Split structures usually create more sensitivity around where overhead and profit should be placed.

FAQ

Q: Where should contractors place overhead and profit in a split PC BOQ item?

A: If the final material selection is uncertain or likely to fall below the allowance, the lower-risk strategy is usually to place overhead and profit inside the fixed installation item rather than the adjustable PC item.

FAQ

Q: Why does project type matter when pricing Prime Cost sums?

A: Because project type often affects selection direction. Low-cost housing is more likely to select materials below the allowance, while luxury residential towers and 5-star hotels are more likely to select materials above it.

FAQ

Q: Do Prime Cost sums protect the contractor against defects liability period replacement risk?

A: Not automatically. PC adjustments usually cover supply value only. If expensive materials are selected, replacement during the defects liability period may become much more costly unless the contract specifically addresses that risk.

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