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Project Cost Control in Construction With an ERP

Most projects do not lose money slowly. They lose it in places nobody was watching. Here is how an ERP keeps cost in view.

By TCB Infotech16 June 20267 min read
A construction site with materials
Key Takeaways
  • Track budget against actual cost by project and BOQ item, not just at the top level.
  • Committed cost shows the real position, including open orders.
  • Material at site and subcontractor cost are where margin quietly leaks.
  • Live margin lets you act in week three, not at handover.

Ask a contractor where a project went wrong and the answer is rarely one big mistake. It is a hundred small ones: a rate that crept up, material that was over-ordered, a subcontractor bill nobody checked against measurement. By handover, the margin is gone, and the figures only confirm it. Cost control in an ERP changes when you find out.

Budget against actual, by BOQ item

Top-level cost tells you a project is over budget. It does not tell you where. When budget and actual cost are tracked against each BOQ item and cost head, you can see the exact line that is slipping while there is still time to act.

Committed cost, not just spend

Most cost trouble is already decided before it is paid. An open purchase order or a subcontractor work order is committed cost: money promised but not yet billed. An ERP that tracks commitment shows the real position, so you are not surprised when the bills land.

  • Open purchase orders counted as committed.
  • Subcontractor work orders included.
  • The true cost-to-complete, not just spend to date.

Material at site is where margin leaks

On a busy site, material that is over-ordered, double-issued or unaccounted for quietly eats margin. Tracking material from indent to delivery to consumption per project closes that gap, and the savings often pay for the system on their own.

Subcontractor cost under control

Subcontractor bills should match measured work, not a round number. When work orders, measurement, bills and retention live in one system, you pay for what was done, and disputes drop.

Live margin, not a post-mortem

Put these together and project margin becomes a number you watch, not one you discover. A slipping line, a leaking material head, a subcontractor running ahead of measurement, each shows up early enough to fix.

What to set up well

  • Build a cost-code structure that matches how you actually run projects.
  • Capture commitments, not just invoices, so cost-to-complete is real.
  • Track material at site from day one, not after the first overrun.

Done this way, cost control stops being a year-end audit and becomes a weekly habit. The overruns that used to surface at handover surface in week three, while you can still do something about them.

Frequently asked questions

How does an ERP control construction project cost?
It tracks budget, committed cost and actual spend against each project and BOQ item, so an overrun shows up early instead of at handover.
What is committed cost?
Committed cost is money you have promised but not yet paid, such as open purchase orders and subcontractor work orders. Tracking it shows the real position, not just what has been billed.
Can it work across many projects?
Yes. Each project has its own cost view, and head office sees cost and margin across the whole portfolio in one place.

Stop Finding Overruns at Handover

Book a short call. We will look at how you track cost today and show where a construction ERP would tighten it.

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