In construction estimating

Escalation

A budget allowance for the increase in material and labor costs between the date of the estimate and the date the work is performed.

Definition

Escalation is a budget allowance for the increase in material and labor costs between the date of the cost estimate and the date the work is actually performed. On any project where the estimate is prepared months or years before construction, current pricing alone is not enough — the estimate has to account for inflation in material, labor, and equipment costs through the construction period.

Escalation is most visible on volatile materials (steel, copper, lumber, fuel) and on long-duration projects where construction stretches over multiple years.

How escalation is used in estimating

In estimating, escalation is typically calculated as a percentage applied to the base estimate, scaled by the time between the estimate date and the midpoint of construction. On a project with a 3 percent annual material inflation rate and a midpoint of construction 18 months from the estimate date, escalation might be 4.5 percent applied to material-heavy lines. Labor escalation is calculated separately, usually based on union agreements or historical wage trends.

During the post-pandemic period, material escalation became one of the most discussed risks in commercial estimating. Lumber, steel, and copper saw double-digit annual swings, and contractors who did not include escalation in long-duration bids were caught between fixed contract prices and rising costs. Sophisticated estimating teams now publish a monthly escalation index and apply it explicitly to every long-duration bid.

Calculating escalation

Identify the time between estimate date and construction midpoint. Multiply by the projected annual inflation rate for material, labor, and equipment separately. Apply the resulting percentage to the corresponding lines in the estimate. On long projects, consider compounded annual rates rather than simple linear inflation. Many contracts include escalation clauses that allow the contract price to adjust if specified material indices move beyond a threshold — these clauses shift escalation risk back to the owner.

Frequently asked questions

Q.How is escalation different from contingency?

Escalation is a known, predictable allowance for cost inflation between estimate and construction. Contingency is a reserve for unknown risks. Both load into the estimate but cover different categories of cost growth.

Q.How much escalation should I include?

Apply your projected annual inflation rate (typically 3 to 6 percent on material in normal markets, higher in volatile periods) to the time between estimate date and construction midpoint. On long projects this can become a meaningful percentage of total cost.

Q.Who bears the risk of cost escalation?

On a fixed-price contract, the contractor bears it unless the contract includes an escalation clause. Cost-plus contracts pass escalation to the owner because actual costs are reimbursed. Many recent contracts include material-specific escalation clauses that share the risk.

Q.What is an escalation clause?

A contract clause that allows the contract price to adjust if specified material indices (steel, copper, fuel) move beyond a defined threshold. It shifts escalation risk back to the owner for the categories named in the clause.

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Escalation in Construction Estimating | Glossary