The Real Cost of Getting Your Building Estimate Wrong (And How to Avoid It)

An inaccurate building estimate does not just cause awkward conversations. It can derail a project, destroy a margin, create contractual disputes, and – in the worst cases – leave a job unfinished.

Yet across the UK, builders, developers, and self-builders regularly proceed with projects based on rough figures, builder’s gut feelings, or online calculators that have little connection to the actual cost of construction.

This article looks at what happens when a building estimate gets it wrong, why it happens, and what a professional approach to estimating actually prevents.

What Happens When a Building Estimate Is Wrong?

1. You Lose Margin – or the Project

For builders and contractors, an inaccurate estimate is a direct threat to profitability. If you price a job at £85,000 and the actual cost comes in at £105,000, that is not just a reduced margin – it is a £20,000 loss, potentially representing the entire anticipated profit on the contract and more.

In competitive tendering, there is a particular risk: the tendency to sharpen prices to win work, based on estimates that are optimistic rather than rigorous. Winning a tender you have underpriced is often worse than not winning it at all.

2. Clients Lose Confidence

When the real cost of a project significantly exceeds the original estimate, client relationships suffer. Even if the estimate was always described as ‘indicative’, clients anchor to the number they were given first. A 20% variance feels like a broken promise.

The consequences range from difficult conversations and delayed decisions to clients walking away from projects entirely – leaving work partly complete and professional relationships damaged.

3. Cash Flow Problems Appear Mid-Build

Underestimated projects do not just hit you at the end. Problems typically surface during the build, when costs are already committed and there is no easy exit. A homeowner who budgeted £180,000 for a new build may find themselves halfway through the project with £160,000 spent, still needing a kitchen, bathrooms, and external works.

Funding gaps mid-build are one of the most stressful situations in construction – for both the client and the contractor. Decisions get made under pressure, quality suffers, and relationships break down.

Most construction professionals agree: the single most common cause of project failure is an inaccurate estimate at the outset.

4. Variations Become Disputes

On projects where the original estimate was weak, every variation becomes contentious. If the client did not have a clear baseline cost from the start, they have no context for evaluating whether a variation price is reasonable. Disputes escalate. In some cases, they end up in adjudication or court.

A detailed, professionally prepared building estimate provides an agreed baseline. When costs change – and on any real building project, some will – both parties can assess the change against a common reference point.

5. Planning and Development Decisions Go Wrong

For developers and investors, a building estimate that is significantly wrong at feasibility stage can lead to sites being acquired at prices that do not reflect the real cost of development, schemes being pursued that are not viable, and planning applications being submitted for buildings that cannot be built for the budget available.

Development appraisals built on inaccurate build costs are particularly dangerous because the other inputs – land value, GDV, profit margin – all depend on the build cost being right. An error of 10% in the estimate can turn a viable scheme into one that fails.

Why Do Building Estimates Go Wrong?

Understanding the causes of inaccurate estimates is the first step to avoiding them.

  • Insufficient design information: Estimates prepared from early sketches rather than developed drawings will always carry significant uncertainty. The level of detail in the estimate should match the level of detail in the design.
  • Out-of-date rates: Material and labour costs in UK construction have been volatile since 2020. An estimate using rates from two or three years ago may be substantially wrong for current market conditions.
  • Missing items: The most common source of underestimation is not wrong rates – it is missing line items. Preliminaries, scaffolding, structural engineer fees, building control, and drainage are regularly omitted from informal estimates.
  • Optimism bias: Both builders and clients tend to anchor to figures they want to be true. Professional estimators are paid to be accurate, not optimistic.
  • Regional variation ignored: Labour costs in London and the South East are 15-25% higher than national averages. An estimate that does not account for location will be wrong before a single quote has been obtained.
What a Professional Estimate Actually Includes

A properly prepared professional building estimate goes well beyond a top-line figure. It should include:

  • A full measured takeoff from current drawings
  • Rates based on current UK labour and material prices
  • Preliminaries (site set-up, supervision, temporary works)
  • Breakdown by trade or building element
  • Regional adjustments where appropriate
  • Clearly identified exclusions and assumptions
  • A contingency allowance (typically 10% for new build; 15%+ for refurbishment)

When all of these are in place, the estimate becomes a management tool – not just a number. You can use it to check contractor quotes, assess the cost of design changes, and track actual spend against budget during the build.

The Contingency Conversation

Every professional estimator will include a contingency in their estimate. For a new build, 10% is standard. For a refurbishment – particularly one involving an older property where unknowns are higher – 15% or even 20% may be appropriate.

Clients sometimes push back on contingencies, viewing them as padding. The opposite is true: a properly sized contingency is what makes a project resilient to the unexpected. The question is not whether to include a contingency, but whether the contingency reflects the actual risk profile of the project.

Projects that exhaust their contingency and have no further headroom are the ones that stall. A realistic contingency, built into the original budget, is one of the most important risk management tools available.
How to Get Your Estimate Right
  • The most reliable way to get an accurate building estimate is to commission one from a professional estimating service with current market knowledge and residential construction expertise.Key principles to follow:
    • Commission the estimate from proper drawings: The more developed your design, the more accurate your estimate. Do not rely on a figure from a sketch. Use a residential estimating service once drawings are developed.
    • Use a specialist residential estimator: Domestic construction has different cost drivers to commercial. Use a service with specific residential expertise.
    • Ask what is excluded: Always check the exclusions list. A low headline figure with a long exclusions list can be misleading.
    • Build in contingency: 10% minimum on a new build; more for refurbishment or projects with unknowns.
    • Update the estimate at key stages: As the design develops, update the estimate to reflect the current scope.

ProQuant Estimating: Accurate Residential Estimates Across the UK

ProQuant Estimating provides detailed, professionally prepared building estimates for residential construction projects across the UK. Our estimates are prepared from your drawings by experienced estimators using current labour and material rates, and delivered within five working days.

Whether you are a builder tendering for a new job, a developer at feasibility stage, or a self-builder wanting confidence in your budget, we can help. Get in touch to discuss your project.

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About the author
Ollie Wilcox

With a strong foundation built from hands on site experience in his early career, Oliver Wilcox brings a practical and informed perspective to the construction industry. He went on to earn a BSc (Hons) in Building Studies, further strengthening his technical expertise and understanding of the built environment.

Following this, he spent 10 years working within the estimating sector, developing a deep knowledge of cost planning, measurement and project evaluation across residential developments.

In 2011, he co-founded Proquant Estimating LTD alongside his business partners, with a vision to deliver affordable, accurate, efficient and reliable estimating services.

Since then, the company has grown significantly and is recognised as the leading residential estimating service throughout the UK.

His combined site experience and professional expertise continues to drive Proquant’s commitment to precision, quality and client focused delivery.