Construction Estimate Review Checklist: Check Costs Before You Send a Bid
Use This Checklist Before Every Construction Estimate
A construction estimate review checklist gives your team a repeatable final pass before a bid or proposal is sent. Use it to confirm that the scope, quantities, costs, assumptions, and client-facing details are complete. The goal is not to slow estimating down; it is to catch the omissions and pricing risks that become expensive once work has been approved.
1. Confirm Scope, Drawings, and Client Requirements
Review the estimate against the latest plans, site notes, client conversations, specifications, and subcontractor information. Confirm the work included, identify exclusions, and make allowances visible. If a selection, condition, or responsibility is still unknown, document it instead of silently absorbing the risk into an unexplained total.
2. Check Quantities, Units, and Production Assumptions
Verify measurements, takeoffs, units of measure, crew hours, production rates, and equipment duration. Compare the estimate with similar completed work where appropriate, then note the conditions that make this job different. This gives the reviewer a practical way to identify quantities or productivity assumptions that do not match the scope.
3. Validate Current Cost Inputs
Check supplier quotes, material prices, delivery, labor burden, subcontractor pricing, equipment, permits, taxes, and site costs. Record the source and date of important inputs, especially for items with price volatility or long lead times. A shared cost library helps, but it should be reviewed against the specific project before the bid is issued.
Build a reliable estimating database4. Review Markup, Overhead, Contingency, and Margin
Confirm that the estimate recovers direct costs and the overhead, risk, supervision, waste, and contingency appropriate for the work. Review material and labor pricing together; a material markup alone cannot protect a job if labor burden or project overhead is missing. Escalate estimates that fall outside the team’s normal margin or pricing rules.
Review the material and labor markup formula5. Check Client-Facing Proposal Details
Before delivery, confirm that the client name, project address, scope, pricing, allowances, exclusions, schedule assumptions, payment terms, and next step are clear. The proposal should match the reviewed estimate and make it easy for the client to understand what they are approving. A clean handoff reduces questions, revisions, and disputes later.
Explore construction proposal software6. Record the Final Review and Version
Document the reviewer, the date, important assumptions, open questions, and the version approved for delivery. If scope or pricing changes after the review, return to the checklist before issuing a revised estimate. This keeps the process consistent as your team grows and gives everyone a clear record of what was approved.
Learn more about construction cost validationFrequently Asked Questions
What should be on a construction estimate review checklist?
Include scope, drawings, quantities, production assumptions, current costs, taxes, markup, overhead, contingency, exclusions, allowances, client details, payment terms, and final version approval.
Who should review a construction estimate before it is sent?
The estimator should complete the first review, and a project manager, owner, or designated approver should review estimates that exceed the team’s normal risk, value, or margin thresholds.