5 Signs You’re Underestimating Your Project Costs
Introduction
If you’re a U.S.-based contractor or trade business owner, keeping your construction estimates accurate isn’t just important—it’s the lifeline of your profitability. Unfortunately, many small to mid-sized businesses underestimate project costs without realizing it until it’s too late. This blog outlines five key signs that you might be underestimating your project costs and what you can do to fix it.
Sign 1 – Your Margins Are Shrinking But Your Revenue Isn’t
It’s a classic sign: You’re landing jobs, your revenue looks steady, but your profit margins are razor-thin or dropping month after month. If your overhead hasn’t changed and you’re still losing money, you’re likely underestimating your project costs—especially labor and material price escalations.
Construction estimating must factor in inflation, regional price shifts, overtime, and unforeseen overheads. Skipping those can make even a well-bid job turn unprofitable.
🔗 Learn how we account for overhead in our estimation services.
Sign 2 – Change Orders Are Frequent and Expensive
While change orders are part of construction, a high volume or value of them is often a red flag. It means something was missed in the original scope—or worse, you didn’t fully understand what the project demanded.
Missing costs during QTO or MTO phases can lead to incomplete estimates. You may have captured the square footage of drywall, but did you account for corner beads, fire tape, or access panels?
VASL’s dual QTO and MTO process reduces change orders by offering scope-accurate estimates the first time.
Sign 3 – You’re Still Estimating with Old-School Methods
Estimating by pen and paper or using spreadsheets without cost databases may feel familiar, but it’s a huge disadvantage. Today’s tools like PlanSwift, Bluebeam, RSMeans, and AutoCAD allow faster and more precise takeoffs, dynamic pricing, and spec-based costing.
By using outdated processes, you’re likely:
- Missing current material pricing
- Ignoring labor productivity benchmarks
- Forgetting local code-specific requirements
That leads to underquoting and lower project profitability.
At VASL, we use modern tools including RSMeans, PlanSwift, and AutoCAD to deliver accurate, up-to-date estimates.
Sign 4 – You’re Winning Too Many Bids
Winning work is great—until you realize you’re winning too many. If you’re outbidding the competition by a large margin, that could be a warning signal that you’re underestimating your true costs.
Overly aggressive pricing might impress clients, but it won’t help your bottom line if you end up taking losses or burning out your crew with underpriced labor assumptions.
Instead of just aiming to win, aim to win profitably. That’s what precision QTO and MTO deliver—realistic scopes, validated pricing, and accurate profit projections.
Sign 5 – Vendor Quotes Don’t Match Your Estimates
If you’re consistently surprised by vendor pricing—whether it’s for lumber, piping, electrical fixtures, or HVAC systems—it means your MTO process is lacking.
Your initial takeoffs might look good, but if you didn’t use vendor-verified pricing, you’re underestimating. RFQ mismatches delay timelines, cause budget shifts, and frustrate clients.
We help you prevent this by offering RFQ-to-Vendor services alongside MTO documentation, so your estimates reflect actual supplier realities.
See how it works at VASL Estimation Services
How Underestimating Impacts Project Profitability
Underestimating your project costs doesn’t just mean absorbing a few unbilled hours. It leads to:
- Project delays due to material shortages
- Negative client relationships from scope misunderstandings
- Team burnout due to unrealistic labor timelines
- A cycle of jobsite firefighting instead of proactive management
Every undercounted screw, pipe fitting, or man-hour accumulates into thousands of dollars in profit loss.
Common Reasons Contractors Underestimate Costs
Here’s why it happens frequently:
Incomplete QTO
Surface-level square footage without accounting for detailed elements like openings, slopes, or complex assemblies.
No MTO Layer
No breakdown of material specs like gauge, fire rating, brand compatibility, or compliance needs.
No Localized Pricing
Estimates based on national averages rather than city-specific labor and material rates.
Lack of RFQ-Based Verification
Failure to request vendor-specific quotes and relying on outdated catalogs or assumptions.
Time Pressure
Short bidding windows lead to rushed and error-prone estimates.
How VASL Prevents Underestimation
Our estimating process is built around removing cost blind spots:
- Full QTO and MTO breakdowns using PlanSwift, Bluebeam, and RSMeans
- Vendor-based RFQs to reflect actual pricing
- Spec-compliant documentation for every trade
- 24–48 hour turnaround time so you never miss a bid
- Output in Excel, PDF, or your template
From fencing to roofing to remodels—we help trade contractors get it right, every time.
Final Thoughts
Accurate estimating isn’t just about math—it’s about business survival. If you’re seeing any of the signs above, it’s time to take a closer look at how you calculate costs.
At VASL, we give you clarity, consistency, and control over your bidding and project costs. You don’t need to guess anymore.
Email: saman@vasl.team
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