Templates, scoring frameworks, and comparison matrices for every stage of the construction bidding process. Run a fair, analytically rigorous bid on every project.
A well-structured bid process ensures fair competition and protects the owner from cost overruns. Follow these six stages for every procurement cycle.
A standardized bid proposal ensures all vendors submit comparable information. Use this structure when requesting or preparing bids.
| # | Description | Qty | Unit | Unit Price | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Structural steel — W12x26 beams | 48 | EA | $1,240.00 | $59,520.00 |
| 2 | Steel erection & bolting | 1 | LS | $42,800.00 | $42,800.00 |
| 3 | Shop drawings & detailing | 1 | LS | $8,500.00 | $8,500.00 |
| 4 | Touch-up painting | 1 | LS | $4,200.00 | $4,200.00 |
| 5 | Crane rental — 60-ton mobile | 12 | DAY | $2,800.00 | $33,600.00 |
| Total Bid Amount | $148,620.00 | ||||
A bid tab normalizes all vendor quotes into one view. Color-coded variances and exclusion flags make it easy to spot the best value — not just the lowest number.
| Line Item | Vendor A Apex Steel |
Vendor B Metro Fab |
Vendor C Ironworks Co |
Vendor D Pacific Struct. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Structural Steel (W12x26) | $59,520 | $62,400 | $61,200 | $71,040 |
| Steel Erection & Bolting | $42,800 | $38,500 | $48,600 | $41,200 |
| Shop Drawings & Detailing | $8,500 | $9,200 | $7,800 | $8,900 |
| Touch-Up Painting | $4,200 | $3,600 | $4,400 | $5,800 |
| Crane Rental (60-ton) | $33,600 | $39,600 | $28,800 | $34,200 |
| Total Base Bid | $148,620 | $153,300 | $150,800 | $161,140 |
| Exclusion Flags | None | Excludes crane standby time | Excludes touch-up after erection | Excludes shop drawing revisions |
| Adjusted Total | $148,620 | $157,800 | $155,200 | $164,040 |
Price alone does not determine the best bid. A weighted scorecard evaluates vendors across six critical dimensions to find the best overall value.
| Criteria | Weight | Vendor A Apex Steel |
Vendor B Metro Fab |
Vendor C Ironworks Co |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted Total | ||||
Recognizing these tactics during bid evaluation protects your project budget and ensures a fair selection process. Protect payment rights even when bid manipulation occurs — see our Lien Waivers Guide.
Heavy billing in early phases to improve cash flow at the contractor's benefit. The schedule of values is inflated for mobilization and early work items.
Intentional exclusions to appear cheaper on the bid total. Critical work items are omitted, creating change orders after award.
Inflated unit prices on items likely to increase in quantity, and deflated prices on items likely to decrease. The bidder profits from change orders.
Submitting a low bid with the intent to renegotiate terms, add qualifications, or escalate pricing after being named apparent low bidder.
Disclosing one bidder's prices to competitors to drive down costs after bids are received. This unethical practice erodes trust, discourages competitive bidding, and may violate anti-competition laws.
Submitting the lowest bid to win the award, then retracting it or claiming a "clerical error" to force the project to the second-lowest bidder, who may be an affiliated company or partner.
Related companies submit separate bids to create an illusion of competition. They coordinate pricing so one entity wins at a predetermined price, effectively eliminating competitive pressure.
Bonds and retainage terms vary significantly between bids and materially affect project economics. Always evaluate these alongside headline price.
A bid bond guarantees the bidder will honor their bid if selected. Typically 5–10% of bid amount. Required on most public projects and increasingly on large private work. The bond creates financial consequences for bid retraction and helps ensure competitive integrity.
Performance bonds guarantee project completion; payment bonds guarantee subcontractors and suppliers get paid. Required by law on federal projects over $150K (Miller Act) and most state/municipal work. Bonding capacity is a competitive advantage — build your surety relationship early.
Retainage rates (typically 5–10%) and release conditions vary between bids and significantly affect project economics. A vendor with 5% retainage released at substantial completion is fundamentally different from 10% held until final completion. Always normalize retainage terms when comparing bids.
Following these six principles ensures you compare true cost — not just headline numbers — across every vendor submission.
Ensure every vendor is pricing the same scope of work. Map each bid's line items back to the original scope document and flag any additions or omissions.
Add back the cost of any excluded items using market pricing or other vendors' rates. A $150K bid that excludes $12K in crane standby costs more than a $158K bid that includes it.
Factor in mobilization, bonds, insurance costs, retainage terms, payment timing, and any allowances. The lowest bid number is rarely the lowest total cost. Account for material price volatility — see our Material Price Tracking guide.
Retainage rates and release conditions vary. A vendor requesting 5% retainage released at substantial completion versus 10% held until final completion can have a material impact on project cash flow.
Confirm every bidder meets your insurance requirements before including them in the evaluation. Inadequate coverage can create massive liability exposure — see our Construction Insurance Guide.
Net-15, net-30, and net-60 terms affect project financing costs. Early payment discounts, billing frequency, and progress payment structures should all be compared side by side.
When soliciting sub bids, a complete and organized bid package ensures you receive accurate, comparable proposals. Include these sections in every RFQ. When sourcing internationally, specify Incoterms — see our Incoterms 2020 Guide.
Common questions about bid templates, comparison matrices, and evaluation best practices.
Explore related guides and recent blog posts on bid leveling, subcontract management, and risk transfer.
Scope gaps, exclusion flags, and true-cost adjustments handled automatically. Trueleveler's Bid Leveling engine runs the tabulation matrix for you — faster and more accurately than manual comparison.
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