Payment schedule
In construction, a payment schedule (or schedule of payments) is a list of dates setting out when payments will be made by one party to another under the terms of the contract between them. It can also also be linked to the completion or fulfilment of certain pre-agreed activities or stages, at which point payments must be made.
The Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 was introduced with the purpose of ensuring that payments are made promptly throughout the supply chain and that disputes are resolved swiftly. Among the provisions included in the act was the right to be paid in interim, periodic or stage payments. Amendments made in 2011, established that dates for payments must be set out in the construction contract.
By including a payment schedule in the contract, setting out who needs to do what and by when, the likelihood of parties getting dates wrong (e.g. employer failing to serve a payment notice on time, or a contractor failing to serve an application for payment on the right date), can be reduced, and so disputes are less likely.
A payment schedule will usually include the following details:
- The starting date for the contract.
- The amount to be paid as an initial payment.
- The interval of other payments after the initial payment.
- The timeframe within which the project will be completed.
- The estimated total construction contract amount.
NB: In the case of Grove Developments Ltd v Balfour Beatty Regional Construction Ltd [2016] it was found that because the parties to the contract had not agreed to extend the payment schedule in the event that the works took longer to complete than expected, Balfour Beatty was not entitled to further interim payments and that the Scheme for Construction Contracts did not apply as there had been an adequate mechanism for payment.
As a result of this, contracts should set out how payments will be made if the works continue beyond the timeframe initially anticipated.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
Featured articles and news
Do you take the lead in a circular construction economy?
Help us develop and expand this wiki as a resource for academia and industry alike.
Warm Homes Plan Workforce Taskforce
Risks of undermining UK’s energy transition due to lack of electrotechnical industry representation, says ECA.
Cost Optimal Domestic Electrification CODE
Modelling retrofits only on costs that directly impact the consumer: upfront cost of equipment, energy costs and maintenance costs.
The Warm Homes Plan details released
What's new and what is not, with industry reactions.
Could AI and VR cause an increase the value of heritage?
The Orange book: 2026 Amendment 4 to BS 7671:2018
ECA welcomes IET and BSI content sign off.
How neural technologies could transform the design future
Enhancing legacy parametric engines, offering novel ways to explore solutions and generate geometry.
Key AI related terms to be aware of
With explanations from the UK government and other bodies.
From QS to further education teacher
Applying real world skills with the next generation.
A guide on how children can use LEGO to mirror real engineering processes.
Data infrastructure for next-generation materials science
Research Data Express to automate data processing and create AI-ready datasets for materials research.
Wired for the Future with ECA; powering skills and progress
ECA South Wales Business Day 2025, a day to remember.
AI for the conservation professional
A level of sophistication previously reserved for science fiction.
Biomass harvested in cycles of less than ten years.
An interview with the new CIAT President
Usman Yaqub BSc (Hons) PCIAT MFPWS.
Cost benefit model report of building safety regime in Wales
Proposed policy option costs for design and construction stage of the new building safety regime in Wales.
Do you receive our free biweekly newsletter?
If not you can sign up to receive it in your mailbox here.






















