Stage 1: Initial Site Appraisal
At this stage, you are typically working with minimal information – perhaps outline planning permission, a site area, and a rough indication of what the scheme will include. You need a build cost figure to plug into your development appraisal and arrive at a residual land value.
The estimate at this stage should be based on m2 rates adjusted for the scheme type, location, and specification level. For residential development in 2026, indicative rates typically range from £1,600-£2,500/m2 for standard specification new build, depending on location and complexity.
At appraisal stage, the build cost estimate should carry an appropriate contingency – typically 10-15% – and include:
- Construction costs (substructure, superstructure, fit-out)
- External works and landscaping
- Utilities connections and infrastructure
- Professional fees (architect, structural engineer, building control)
- Contingency allowance
- Finance costs on construction (if not modelled separately)
Stage 2: Pre-Planning / Planning Application
Once an architect has developed a scheme design, the estimate should be updated to reflect the actual scope. At this stage, you are no longer relying purely on m2 rates – you should be working from developed drawings that allow a more detailed cost plan.
This is also the point at which specification decisions begin to firm up. The build cost at planning stage should reflect the actual specification you intend to deliver, not an aspirational or worst-case figure.
Lenders and planning authorities increasingly require credible cost information to support applications and funding arrangements. A professionally prepared cost plan at this stage adds credibility to your proposals.
Stage 3: Tender
At tender stage, you are moving from a cost plan to actual contractor prices. A bill of quantities prepared from the working drawings gives contractors a consistent basis for pricing and allows you to compare tenders on a like-for-like basis.
The difference between your pre-tender estimate and the lowest compliant tender price tells you something important. If it is within 5-10%, your estimating has been accurate and the market is broadly in line with expectations. If it is 20%+ higher, you need to understand why – and whether it reflects a problem with the estimate, a problem with the market, or a specification that needs revisiting.