What Does a Quantity Surveyor Actually Do?
A quantity surveyor manages the cost and commercial risk of construction projects – from initial feasibility through design, procurement, construction, and final account. The QS ensures that projects are built to budget, that contracts are administered correctly, and that every change in scope is costed, agreed, and documented. They are the financial and contractual backbone of the built environment.
QS professionals operate in two distinct contexts. A PQS (Private or Professional Quantity Surveyor) works on the client side – typically employed by a consultancy – and acts in the client's interest, preparing cost plans, tendering, and monitoring spend. A Contractor QS works for the main contractor or a subcontractor, managing the commercial position from the delivery side: pricing variations, certifying valuations, and pursuing claims. Both roles require the same core technical competencies; the perspective and interests represented are different. According to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), there are over 113,000 RICS-qualified members practising globally across both contexts.
Salaries reflect the profession's skill premium: graduate QS roles pay £25,000–£30,000 (£30,000–£40,000 London); MRICS chartered QSs earn £42,000–£58,000 (£55,000–£65,000 London); senior QSs reach £56,000–£75,000 (£70,000–£90,000 London), according to the Maxim Recruitment 2025/26 QS Salary Report. If you are considering this career, the how to become a quantity surveyor guide explains every route in detail.
A Quantity Surveyor's Day in the Life
What does a typical working day look like for a QS in practice? The table below represents a composite day for a mid-level Contractor QS on a £15m residential construction project – though the specific mix of tasks varies significantly by seniority, contract type, and whether you work client-side or contractor-side. The tools listed are widely used across the sector; software proficiency is increasingly a requirement at interview. For a deeper look at how these tasks relate to the QS curriculum, see the course modules overview.
| Time of Day | Activity | Tool / Standard Used |
|---|---|---|
| 08:00–09:00 | Site progress review – check programme against actual spend; review previous week's interim valuation certificate | Asta Powerproject / MS Project; cost report spreadsheet |
| 09:00–10:30 | Taking-off – measuring quantities from architect's drawings for a new variation instruction (VI); preparing BoQ amendment | RICS NRM2 measurement rules; CostX or On-Screen Takeoff; AutoCAD drawings |
| 10:30–12:00 | Subcontractor procurement – reviewing tender returns for mechanical and electrical package; negotiating final prices | Tender comparison spreadsheet; JCT Subcontract form; BCIS cost data |
| 12:00–13:00 | Monthly interim valuation submission – pricing measured work completed to date; preparing application for payment | JCT SBC/Q contract; valuation certificate template; Excel |
| 13:30–14:30 | Variation account review – agreeing rates with the employer's QS on variation orders instructed in the previous month | NEC3/JCT contract clauses; daywork sheets; RICS daywork schedule |
| 14:30–16:00 | Risk and opportunity register update – reviewing commercial risks; assessing impact of delayed steel delivery on programme | Risk register (Excel / Primavera Risk Analysis); contract programme |
| 16:00–17:00 | Client cost report preparation – updating forecast final account; briefing the client on projected cost overrun vs contingency | Cost report template; BCIS indices; PowerPoint for client presentation |
| 17:00–17:30 | Contract correspondence – drafting a notice under the contract for an extension of time claim caused by client-issued information delays | JCT SBC/Q Clause 2.28 / NEC3 Clause 60.1; contract letter template |
NRM2 = RICS New Rules of Measurement 2 (rics.org/nrm). JCT = Joint Contracts Tribunal. NEC = New Engineering Contract. BCIS = Building Cost Information Service (bcis.co.uk).
PQS (Client-Side) vs Contractor QS: Responsibilities Compared
The split between PQS and Contractor QS roles is one of the most important distinctions in the profession – yet it is often overlooked in introductory career guides. Your career trajectory, the type of employer you target, and the day-to-day nature of your work will differ substantially depending on which side of the contract you choose. Both are valid and well-remunerated QS careers; they simply involve different perspectives on the same construction project. The QS salary guide provides a detailed breakdown of pay across both sectors.
- Feasibility cost estimates – order-of-cost estimates at early RIBA Stage 1–2, before design is fixed
- Cost planning – elemental cost plans at RIBA Stages 2–4, tracking design decisions against budget
- Tender documentation – preparing Bills of Quantities (BoQ) or Schedules of Works for competitive tendering, measured to NRM2 standards
- Tender analysis – evaluating contractor tender returns, querying anomalies, recommending contractor selection
- Valuation and cost reporting – certifying contractor interim payment applications; issuing cost reports to the client
- Contract administration – issuing variation instructions, assessing extension of time claims, managing the final account
- Employer: QS consultancies (e.g. Arcadis, Turner & Townsend, Gleeds, Rider Levett Bucknall), developers, public sector bodies
- Pre-contract estimating – pricing tender documents, building up rates from first principles, preparing tender submissions
- Subcontractor procurement – tendering and letting packages; comparing quotes; negotiating and placing orders
- Interim applications for payment – measuring work done to date; submitting monthly valuations to the employer's QS for certification
- Variation management – pricing employer-instructed changes; agreeing rates; maintaining a variation account
- Commercial reporting – cost–value reconciliation (CVR); forecasting final project margin; reporting to the commercial director
- Claims and disputes – preparing extension of time (EoT) submissions; loss and expense claims; potential adjudication preparation
- Employer: Main contractors (e.g. Balfour Beatty, Mace, Kier, Vinci), specialist subcontractors, design-and-build contractors
4 Core Skills Every Quantity Surveyor Needs
These are the four technical competency areas that RICS tests at the APC Final Assessment, and that employers screen for at every level from graduate to senior. The SEG Awards Level 4+5 Diploma curriculum is structured around these four areas, ensuring learners build job-ready skills from the outset. Understanding these competencies also helps you evaluate whether a QS career aligns with your existing professional background – which is explored further in the career change to QS guide.
1. Measurement – NRM2 and Taking Off
Measurement is the defining technical skill of the quantity surveyor. The RICS New Rules of Measurement 2 (NRM2) is the UK industry standard for detailed measurement of construction work for BoQ production. QSs must be able to take off quantities from drawings – accurately measuring lengths, areas, and volumes for every building element – and convert those quantities into priced Bills of Quantities that form part of the contract documents. Measurement underpins every downstream QS function: you cannot price variations, settle valuations, or prepare a final account without the ability to measure. Modern measurement increasingly uses digital tools such as CostX, Bluebeam, and On-Screen Takeoff, though the underlying NRM2 rules govern all measurement regardless of software.
2. Contract Law – JCT and NEC
The two dominant UK construction contract families are the JCT (Joint Contracts Tribunal) and NEC (New Engineering Contract) suites. JCT contracts – particularly the JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q) – dominate private commercial and residential development. NEC contracts (particularly NEC3 and NEC4) dominate infrastructure, public sector, and government-procured work. A QS must understand the payment provisions, variation clauses, extension of time mechanisms, and dispute resolution procedures within whichever contract form governs their project. Misreading a contract clause – or missing a notice obligation – can result in claims being time-barred and significant financial loss. The JCT vs NEC contracts guide provides a full comparison of the two contract families.
3. Cost Engineering and Financial Management
Cost engineering encompasses the full lifecycle of project financial management: initial feasibility estimates, elemental cost plans, pre-tender estimates, post-contract cost reporting, cost-value reconciliation, and the settlement of the final account. QSs use BCIS (Building Cost Information Service) data, market tender prices, and first-principles rate build-ups to establish realistic cost benchmarks. They apply cost indices to adjust for inflation, model cashflow profiles, and advise clients on the financial risk of design changes. Effective cost engineering requires a blend of data literacy, commercial intuition, and project management awareness – as well as the ability to communicate financial risk in terms that non-technical clients and project directors can act on. BCIS publishes the most widely used cost indices and elemental cost data in the UK.
4. Negotiation and Stakeholder Communication
Quantity surveying is a commercial function – and commercial functions require negotiation. Whether you are agreeing subcontractor rates, negotiating variation assessments with the employer's QS, settling a final account, or managing a client's expectations on cost overrun, negotiation is a daily competency. Alongside this, QSs must communicate clearly in writing: contract notices, payment certificates, cost reports, and variation orders all carry contractual weight and must be drafted precisely. RICS APC assessors consistently cite communication and professional judgement as the differentiating competencies at Final Assessment – technical measurement skills are assumed as a baseline; what distinguishes a good QS is the ability to apply those skills commercially and communicate the outputs clearly to all stakeholders.
Frequently Asked Questions: What Does a Quantity Surveyor Do?
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How to Become a Quantity Surveyor · QS Salary Guide 2025/26 · Online QS Degree Pathway