1. Allocation of expenses
In a typical accounting scenario, a business knows the costs of each item it sells and has fairly stable overhead costs—this is not the case with construction accounting. Instead, there are a number of different direct and indirect costs to record and expense. Direct costs are directly related to the installation and preparation of the materials and services needed to complete the final construction project. For example: materials, labor, equipment, and subcontract costs.
Indirect costs are those that are not direct inputs to a specific project but are necessary or beneficial to a project’s completion. There are two types of indirect costs. The first are overhead costs such as rent, utilities, vehicle fleet depreciation, etc. The second are indirect costs that are fixed to a certain project such as project estimation, project administration, transport of workers, use of tools and equipment, and support functions like payroll processes, collections, quality control, and inspections.
So that your business doesn’t find itself in a hole at the end of the year, these indirect expenses need to somehow be estimated, allocated to jobs, and billed for. When deciding which indirect costs should be allocated, ask yourself this question: “If I didn’t have these contracts, would I still have these expenses?” If the answer is no, you should find a way to allocate those costs.
There are several ways to allocate indirect costs, but regardless of the method, detailed accounting records will be key. At Island Painting Inc., Jim takes an average of previous years’ indirect expenses and adjusts that number to fit current sales volume. Indirect costs are then allocated on a pro-rata basis according to job size.
Indirect costs can also be allocated to projects based on estimated or actual hours worked. Expenses such as insurance premiums and non-billable hours for estimating or payroll processes can be allocated to jobs using either of the above-mentioned methods.
Tool use and depreciation is another indirect cost that should be accounted for but often falls through the cracks. According to data from the Institute of Certified Construction Industry Financial Professionals , 42 percent of contractors that accept jobs valued at $1M or greater have no mechanism for tool allocation. This represents a major cost incurred and not recouped. Similar to other indirect costs, contractors can expense tools on a pro-rata basis according to contract sale size, the number of hours worked, the days or weeks required for project completion. For larger jobs that require more equipment, you may be able to expense tools directly to the client as purchased.
Keep in mind, not all clients will be comfortable with general percentages charged on a pro-rata basis and may require invoice line items to explain indirect costs for tools, insurance, home office costs, fleet maintenance, and more.
To ensure your costs are covered and clients are billed fairly, it’s important to have standard, repeatable processes to account and bill for indirect expenses. In addition to strengthening existing processes for expense tracking, software solutions that enable item expense tracking per job can simplify cost allocation and help reduce errors.