A material takeoff (MTO) is the process of quantifying every material needed for a construction project by reviewing architectural, structural, and MEP drawings. It is the foundation of every accurate cost estimate.
Both approaches have their place. Understanding the trade-offs helps you choose the right method for your project size and team capabilities.
Whether you are using paper plans or digital software, the fundamental process follows these seven steps.
Start by reviewing all architectural, structural, MEP, and civil drawings along with the specification book. Identify all drawing sheets, revision dates, and any addenda. Cross-reference the spec sections with the drawing details — specs often call out materials that are not visible in the drawings.
Confirm the drawing scale on every sheet. Digital plans sometimes have incorrect scale factors from PDF conversion. Use a known dimension (room size, column spacing, door width) to verify. A 5% scale error on a 50,000 SF building means 2,500 SF of miscounted material.
Break the takeoff into logical groupings: concrete, masonry, metals, wood/plastics, thermal/moisture, doors/windows, finishes, mechanical, electrical, and plumbing. This mirrors CSI MasterFormat and makes the quantities usable for both estimating and procurement.
Work through each area of the building methodically — floor by floor, wing by wing. Measure linear items (piping, conduit, baseboards), area items (flooring, drywall, roofing), volume items (concrete, fill), and count items (fixtures, outlets, valves). Record dimensions and units consistently.
Add appropriate waste percentages to net quantities. Standard waste factors: drywall 5–8%, concrete 3–5%, lumber 10–15%, flooring 8–12%, paint 10–15%, conduit/piping 5–10%. Waste varies by material complexity, jobsite conditions, and labor skill level.
Compare your quantities against benchmark ratios. For example, a typical office building uses 8–12 SF of drywall per SF of floor area, 0.15–0.25 CY of concrete per SF, and 12–18 electrical outlets per 1,000 SF. If your numbers deviate significantly from benchmarks, investigate before finalizing.
Create a clean summary organized by CSI division with columns for item description, specification reference, quantity, unit of measure, and waste factor applied. This becomes your bid basis, procurement list, and change order reference throughout the project.
These eight mistakes account for the majority of takeoff-related cost overruns. Most are preventable with proper process controls.
The most expensive error. Entire systems or areas get overlooked, especially items shown only in details or specifications (not on main plans). Use a comprehensive checklist and cross-reference every spec section against your takeoff.
A single scale error compounds across every measurement on that sheet. Always verify scale with a known dimension before measuring. Digital plans are especially prone to scaling issues after conversion.
Net quantities from plans are not procurement quantities. Every material has cutting waste, installation loss, and breakage. Omitting waste factors means you will be short on every single line item.
Where systems overlap (wall/ceiling intersections, pipe crossings), quantities can get counted twice. Establish clear rules for how intersections are measured and which trade "owns" each area.
Plan revisions and addenda issued during bidding change quantities, sometimes significantly. Always takeoff from the latest revision and document which addenda are included in your bid.
Mixing up square feet with square yards, linear feet with board feet, or cubic yards with cubic feet. Establish consistent units from the start and double-check all conversions, especially when pulling from manufacturer data.
Each construction trade has unique measurement methods, units, and waste factors. Here are the key considerations for the major trades.
| Trade | Primary Unit | Key Measurements | Typical Waste | Common Pitfalls |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete | Cubic Yards | Footings, slabs, walls, columns, beams | 3–5% | Forgetting reinforcing steel, form ties, embeds |
| Structural Steel | Tons | Beams, columns, joists, decking, connections | 2–5% | Missing connection hardware, shear studs |
| Mechanical (HVAC) | LF / Each | Ductwork, piping, equipment, controls | 5–10% | Missing fittings, hangers, insulation |
| Electrical | LF / Each | Conduit, wire, devices, panels, fixtures | 5–10% | Underestimating wire lengths (vertical runs) |
| Drywall/Framing | SF / LF | Wall area, ceiling area, soffits, bulkheads | 5–8% | Forgetting backing, blocking, fire-rated assemblies |
| Flooring | SF / SY | Floor areas by finish type, transitions, base | 8–12% | Not accounting for pattern matching waste |
| Plumbing | LF / Each | Piping, fixtures, valves, equipment | 5–8% | Missing cleanouts, access panels, sleeves |
A takeoff only reaches its full value when quantities are compared against actual vendor bids. Bid leveling transforms raw quantities into actionable procurement decisions.
When multiple subcontractors bid the same scope, their quantities should be similar. If one sub bids 40% more drywall than the others, either they see scope you missed or they made an error. Bid leveling surfaces these discrepancies automatically.
Raw bids are rarely comparable. One sub includes alternates, another excludes permits, a third has different unit prices. Leveling normalizes all bids against your takeoff baseline so you compare equivalent scopes.
Your takeoff defines what should be included. When a vendor bid is missing line items from your takeoff, that is a scope gap — and a potential cost overrun. AI-powered leveling can detect these gaps in seconds rather than hours.
Accurate takeoff quantities combined with leveled bid data reveal where you are overpaying and where you can negotiate. The combination of precise quantities and competitive pricing typically saves 3–8% on material costs.