Construction
Change order disruptions and indirect delay overhead in commercial construction
Field analysis report — calculated according to engineering standards.
FEATURED Q&A (FAQ)
Q1.What is Change order disruptions and indirect delay overhead in commercial construction?
A project management study measuring how change orders generate indirect costs through schedule slippage, crew disruption, and extended site overhead.
Q2.How is it calculated?
Direct material and labor change parameters are loaded with fixed daily site overhead and labor inefficiency multipliers. Formula: True Change Order Cost = Direct Materials & Labor + (Schedule Extension Days * Daily Fixed Site Overhead) + Labor Inefficiency Cost.
Q3.Why does it matter / What are the benefits?
Bidding change orders solely on direct costs ignores schedule extensions. If a change extends a project by 8 days, the contractor absorbs 8 days of fixed site overhead, eroding profit.
Problem Definition
An electrical subcontractor signed a contract change order based on material costs but suffered a net margin loss due to an 8-day project delay and crew disruption.
Parameter Analysis
- Base contract: $250,000, direct change order value: $14,500
- Schedule extension: 8 days, daily site burn rate: $1,850/day
- Target margin floor: 15%
Analysis Result
While the change order appeared profitable on a direct-cost basis, the 8-day delay burn rate caused a 4.2% erosion in the overall project net margin.
Recommended Action
Include fixed daily site overhead and mobilization fees as separate items in all change order proposals.
Engineering Method
Construction scheduling delay analysis (Eichleay Formula variations) applied to indirect cost distribution.
USED CALCULATION SYSTEM
Change Order Impact Analyzer
Run your own calculations dynamically by inputting field parameters into this system.
This is a technical simulation and decision-support output. It is not financial, legal or engineering advice. Verify all results before making business decisions.