Process
Step-by-Step Bid Leveling Process
Follow these eight steps to produce a defensible, apples-to-apples comparison across all bidders for any trade package.
Before any analysis begins, confirm that every bid package is complete. Check for the base bid amount, any required alternates, a clear list of inclusions and exclusions, the schedule of values or line-item breakdown, and all required certificates (insurance, bonding capacity, licenses). Incomplete submissions introduce gaps that compound throughout the leveling process. If a bidder omits their exclusion list, you can't accurately adjust their total—and you risk comparing a complete bid against one that looks cheaper only because it left items out.
Create a submission compliance matrix that tracks which documents each bidder provided. This becomes the first filter: vendors who didn't submit complete packages either need to provide missing items before the deadline or be excluded from evaluation.
Bids for the same scope often arrive with different units of measure. One concrete sub prices by cubic yard, another by cubic meter. One drywall contractor prices per square foot of wall area, another per linear foot of partition. Before any meaningful comparison is possible, all quantities and units must be converted to a common standard.
Establish a baseline unit for each line item based on your original scope document or CSI MasterFormat division. Convert all vendor quantities to match. Pay special attention to:
- Imperial vs. metric conversions (common on projects with international subs)
- Area vs. linear measurements for partition and ceiling work
- Weight vs. count for structural steel and rebar
- Installed quantity vs. material quantity (waste factors vary between bidders)
Build a tabulation matrix where rows represent your scope line items and columns represent each bidder. Map every line item from every bid back to your original scope breakdown. This is where the real work begins—because bidders rarely organize their proposals to match your structure.
A mechanical contractor might lump ductwork and piping into one line, while your scope separates them. A structural steel fabricator might break out connections separately, while others include them in the tonnage price. The comparison matrix forces alignment so every dollar is mapped to the correct scope element. Items that don't map to any scope line should be flagged as potential additions or overages.
This is the most critical step in the entire process and where the majority of post-award change orders originate. Review every bid's exclusion list, qualifications section, and assumptions. For each excluded item, determine whether it's part of the required scope. If it is, you need to assign a cost to that exclusion so the bid total reflects the actual cost of delivering the complete scope.
Common exclusions that frequently get missed include temporary protection and weather enclosures, final cleaning and debris removal, hoisting and material handling above a certain floor, overtime and shift premiums for phased work, and permit fees. Use pricing from other bidders who included these items, or apply market-rate estimates. Add these costs back to produce an adjusted total that represents the true price for the full scope of work.
With all bids mapped to the same line items, compare unit prices across vendors. Flag any line item where one bidder's unit price deviates more than 15–20% from the average of all bidders. Outliers can indicate several things: the bidder may have a genuine cost advantage (or disadvantage) for that specific item, they may have made a pricing error, or they may be running an unbalanced bid—deliberately inflating certain unit prices where they expect quantity increases, while deflating others to win on the total.
Unit price analysis is also valuable for negotiation. If three out of four bidders price concrete formwork at $8–9 per square foot of contact area and one prices it at $14, that's a data point worth discussing before award.
Beyond the base bid, evaluate each vendor's proposed alternates and value engineering suggestions. Some alternates are directly comparable (e.g., porcelain tile vs. luxury vinyl plank in a finish schedule alternate). Others require judgment—a mechanical sub proposing a different equipment manufacturer may offer significant savings but change the long-term maintenance profile.
Qualifications deserve equal scrutiny. Statements like “subject to site conditions” or “schedule to be confirmed” can create open-ended exposure. Catalog each qualification, assess its potential cost impact, and factor it into the risk profile for that bidder. A vendor with a clean proposal and no qualifications may be a better choice than one with a lower number and a page of caveats.
This is where everything comes together. For each bidder, start with their submitted base bid, then apply the following adjustments:
- Add back the cost of any excluded scope items at market rate
- Adjust for unit or quantity discrepancies identified in Step 2
- Factor in differences in mobilization, bonding, and insurance costs
- Account for retainage terms and payment schedule differences
- Apply any alternate credits or additions being considered
The resulting number is the leveled total—the true apples-to-apples cost of each vendor delivering the complete, identical scope of work. This is the number that should drive the award recommendation, not the raw bid amount. On most projects, the leveled ranking differs from the raw ranking for at least one trade package.
Every award decision should be documented with a clear rationale that can withstand review by project managers, owners, and auditors. Record the leveled totals for all bidders, the specific adjustments made and why, any risk factors considered beyond price (safety record, schedule capacity, past performance), and the final recommendation with supporting reasoning.
This documentation serves multiple purposes: it protects the project team if the award is questioned, creates a reference for future projects with similar scopes, and provides the basis for negotiations with the selected vendor. On public work, this documentation may be legally required to demonstrate fair and transparent procurement.