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Construction Budget Overruns: Statistics, Causes, and How to Prevent Them

Construction has one of the worst overrun records of any sector. Almost 9 in 10 infrastructure projects exceed budget. Here is why -- and what good project controls actually look like.

Construction cost overrun statistics

Costs are underestimated in almost 9 out of 10 transportation infrastructure projects, with actual costs averaging 28% above the original estimate (Flyvbjerg, Holm & Buhl 2002, 258 projects). For construction megaprojects over 1 billion US dollars, 98% overrun by more than 30%, with an average overrun of 80% (McKinsey 2015). Across all project types, only 47.9% finish within the original budget (Flyvbjerg's 16,000-project database, 2023).

9 in 10
transportation infrastructure projects underestimate costs
Flyvbjerg, Holm & Buhl 2002
28%
average overrun vs original estimate
Flyvbjerg, Holm & Buhl 2002
47.9%
of all project types complete within original budget
Flyvbjerg database 2023
98%
of construction megaprojects overrun by 30%+
McKinsey 2015

Construction-Specific Causes

Most-cited single cause

Design errors and rework

Errors in drawings or specifications discovered during construction require demolition, replacement, re-inspection, and programme delays. Most expensive when discovered after concrete is poured or structural elements are fixed.

Major 2020-2025 driver

Material cost escalation

Steel, timber, copper, and concrete prices spiked sharply between 2020 and 2023, with some materials at multiples of pre-pandemic levels at their peaks. Even fixed-price contracts saw contractors seek relief. Escalation clauses and early procurement are now standard risk mitigation.

Common in urban projects

Site condition surprises

Underground utilities, historic contamination, archaeological finds, and poor ground conditions not identified in the site investigation add cost and time. Thorough intrusive ground investigation before tender is essential but often cut to save pre-construction costs.

Insolvency risk post-2020

Subcontractor failures

Subcontractor insolvency mid-project requires emergency retendering, programme re-sequencing, and often premium pricing. Performance bonds provide some protection but claims are slow. Financial checks on subcontractors before appointment are essential.

Building safety post-Grenfell

Regulatory changes mid-project

UK: the Building Safety Act 2022 and higher-risk building regulations have added significant cost to residential projects in progress. Historic approvals may no longer be valid. Similar regulatory risk exists in any jurisdiction with evolving fire, energy, or access standards.

Uncontrollable but manageable

Weather and force majeure

Extreme weather events, flooding, and drought affect programme and cost. While not controllable, schedule float, weather contingency in estimates, and appropriate insurance can reduce the financial impact.


Phase-by-Phase Risk Table

PhaseCommon Overrun CausesTypical Cost ContributionKey Controls
Pre-ConstructionOptimistic estimating, incomplete design, scope gapsSets the baseline -- biggest long-term riskIndependent estimate review, reference class forecasting
DesignValue engineering failures, design changes, coordination errors2-5% of project cost per major changeBIM coordination, clash detection, design freeze gate
ProcurementScope gaps between packages, market conditions, subcontractor quality5-15% if tendered to a poor marketFull Bills of Quantities, competitive tender, financial vetting
ConstructionSite surprises, weather, variation instructions, subcontractor performanceLargest absolute cost risk phaseMonthly cost reports, EVM tracking, change order log
CloseoutPunch list inflation, commissioning failures, latent defects1-3% of contract value on averageClear defects liability period, retention funds, handover checklist

Contract Types and Cost Risk

Contract TypeWho Bears Overrun RiskBest ForRisk to Owner
Lump Sum / Fixed PriceContractor (except variations and force majeure)Well-defined scope, completed designLow
GMP (Guaranteed Maximum Price)Contractor above the cap; owner belowMost projects -- good balance of riskLow to Medium
Cost-PlusOwner bears all riskEmergency work, novel projectsVery High
Time and MaterialsOwner bears all riskSmall works, undefined scopeVery High
NEC 4 / FIDICShared -- depends on option selectedUK/international public sectorMedium

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of construction projects go over budget?

Costs are underestimated in almost 9 out of 10 transportation infrastructure projects, with actual costs averaging 28% above estimates (Flyvbjerg, Holm & Buhl 2002, 258 projects). For construction megaprojects (over $1B), 98% suffer cost overruns of more than 30%, with an average overrun of 80% (McKinsey 2015). Across all project types, only 47.9% complete within the original budget (Flyvbjerg's 16,000-project database, 2023).

What is the most common cause of construction budget overruns?

Design errors and rework are the most commonly identified single cause of construction overruns in industry studies. Inaccurate initial estimates are the root cause in the majority of cases. Material cost escalation (particularly since 2020) and subcontractor failures are significant secondary causes. Site condition surprises are particularly expensive to resolve mid-construction.

Which construction contract type protects the owner from cost overruns?

A Guaranteed Maximum Price (GMP) contract provides the strongest owner protection: the contractor absorbs any costs above the agreed maximum. A lump sum fixed-price contract is also protective. Cost-plus and time-and-materials contracts place all overrun risk on the owner. GMP contracts require a fully defined scope to work -- they are unsuitable for projects where design is incomplete at tender.

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Updated 2026-06-13