Tender settlement meeting for construction
The tender settlement meeting is part of the pre-contract planning process, held just before the contractor submits their tender to the client. The estimate is converted to a tender for senior management to review and assess whether it complies with the client’s requirements as stated in the tender instructions.
Commercial and technical matters are checked to ensure that scheduling, pricing and sequencing are accurate, as well as sub-contractor arrangements and that the risk that will be incurred should they be awarded the contract has been properly considered. Decisions will often be made on the basis of how much the contractor needs the work, their level of confidence in their ability to provide the work as stated in the tender, and their level of comfort with any assumptions that may have been made in the estimate.
The meeting should have formal minutes taken which set down the decisions reached. As well as reviewing all aspects of the bid, there may be other decisions to be made before proceeding with submission to the client. The most common of these include:
- If nothing is specified in the invitation to tender, what documents, if any, should be submitted with the tender? Some contractors prepare additional information such as a company profile brochure or tender stage construction programme that they hope will make their bid stand out from the others.
- Has an alternative design or method been offered? If so, another price may need to be settled by the review panel.
- Qualifications, which vary the requirements of the tender documents, are generally not permitted by clients. However, some circumstance may require them, so management must decide on a suitable approach and review whether any qualifications are likely to result in the tender being rejected.
- Do the tender documents require a fully priced bill of quantities or is this only required if the tender is being seriously considered for acceptance?
- Evaluation of the risks that may have been taken during the estimating process (were certain factors assumed or decisions taken on a basis of probability?).
[edit] Find out more
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Construction contract.
- Form of tender.
- Invitation to tender.
- Margin.
- Mid-tender interviews.
- Pre-tender interviews.
- Procurement route.
- Selective tendering.
- Serial tendering.
- Tender documentation.
- Tender evaluation.
- Tender for supply contracts.
- Tender processes for construction contracts.
- Tender settlement.
[edit] External references
- ‘Introduction to Estimating for Construction’, GREENHALGH, B., Routledge (2013)
Featured articles and news
Cutting construction carbon footprint by caring for soil
Is construction neglecting one of the planet’s most powerful carbon stores and one of our greatest natural climate allies.
ARCHITECTURE: How's it progressing?
Archiblogger posing questions of a historical and contextual nature.
The roofscape of Hampstead Garden Suburb
Residents, architects and roofers need to understand detailing.
Homes, landlords. tenants and the new housing standards
What will it all mean?
The Architectural Technology podcast: Where it's AT
Catch-up on the latest episodes.
Edmundson Apprentice of the Year award 2026
Entries now open for this Electrical Contractors' Association award.
Traditional blue-grey slate from one of the oldest and largest UK slate quarries down in Cornwall.
There are plenty of sources with the potential to be redeveloped.
Change of use legislation breaths new life into buildings
A run down on Class MA of the General Permitted Development Order.
Solar generation in the historic environment
Success requires understanding each site in detail.
Level 6 Design, Construction and Management BSc
CIOB launches first-ever degree programme to develop the next generation of construction leaders.
Open for business as of April, with its 2026 prospectus and new pipeline of housing schemes.
The operational value of workforce health
Keeping projects moving. Incorporating unplanned absence and the importance of health, in operations.
A carbon case for indigenous slate
UK slate can offer clear embodied carbon advantages.
Costs and insolvencies mount for SMEs, despite growth
Construction sector under insolvency and wage bill pressure in part linked to National Insurance, says report.




















