A low quote can feel like good news – until the work starts and the extras begin to appear. Knowing how to compare building quotes properly gives you a clearer picture of what you are buying, how your home will be managed and whether the final cost is likely to match the figure you were given.
For an extension, renovation, kitchen, bathroom or structural alteration, the right comparison is not simply about finding the lowest number. It is about making sure each builder has priced the same work, to the same standard, with the same level of responsibility. That is how homeowners can make a confident decision without setting themselves up for avoidable stress later.
Start by making the scope the same
Building quotes are only comparable when the builders are working from the same information. If one contractor has seen detailed drawings, a specification and structural calculations, while another has priced from a short conversation and a few photographs, the figures will naturally be very different.
Before requesting prices, set out what you want included. This does not need to be a complicated document, but it should cover the key decisions: the rooms being altered, the finishes you expect, any structural work, kitchen or bathroom fittings, heating and electrical requirements, and external works such as patios, fencing or drainage.
Where plans are available, give every builder the same set. If you have chosen particular tiles, appliances, windows or sanitaryware, provide the product details or a realistic allowance. Small differences in specification can create large differences in price. A basic laminate worktop and a premium quartz worktop, for example, may both be described as a kitchen worktop, but they are not equivalent costs.
A dependable builder will also ask questions before pricing. That is usually a positive sign. It shows they are trying to understand the project rather than making assumptions that may later become costly variations.
How to compare building quotes line by line
Put the quotes side by side and look beyond each total. A clear quote should explain the work being allowed for, not leave you to guess what sits behind one large figure. You are looking for enough detail to see whether foundations, structural steel, plastering, decorating, electrics, plumbing, flooring and finishing work have all been considered where relevant.
The wording matters. A quote that says renovation works or bathroom installation without further detail may conceal very different interpretations of the job. One builder may include removal, waste disposal, wall preparation, tiling, plumbing alterations, electrical testing and final decoration. Another may only include fitting the main items.
Pay particular attention to these areas, as they are commonly missed or treated differently:
- Site set-up, protection of existing areas, scaffolding, skips and waste removal.
- Building Control fees, planning-related costs and structural engineer requirements.
- Electrical and plumbing alterations, certification and connection of supplied appliances.
- Making good after structural work, including plastering, decorating and matching finishes.
- External drainage, landscaping or reinstatement after access has been needed.
A detailed quote does not need to predict every hidden condition in an older property. It should, however, state what is included, what has been assumed and what could affect the price. Clarity at this stage is far more valuable than a vague promise that everything will be taken care of.
Check allowances and provisional sums carefully
Allowances are often reasonable, especially where you have not chosen final products. The concern is not that they appear in a quote, but whether they are realistic and clearly identified.
A provisional sum is an estimated amount for work that cannot yet be fully defined, such as drainage alterations uncovered during excavation. A prime cost allowance is commonly used for products you will choose later, such as taps, tiles or light fittings. Ask what figure has been allowed and whether it includes VAT, delivery, fitting and associated materials.
A bathroom quote with a £2,000 allowance for fittings can look competitive, but it may not suit your plans if the sanitaryware you have in mind costs significantly more. Equally, a quote with several large provisional sums carries more uncertainty than one based on a developed design and a thorough site visit. It may still be the right route for an early-stage project, but it should not be presented as a fixed final cost.
Separate exclusions from genuine savings
Every builder may exclude certain items. That is not automatically a problem. The issue arises when exclusions are unclear, or when one quote leaves out essential work that another has included.
Read the exclusions section slowly. Look for phrases such as subject to survey, client to supply, not included, by others, or provisional. Then ask who will arrange and pay for each item. If the builder excludes kitchen supply but includes fitting it, check whether they have allowed for delivery, assembly, worktop templating, appliance connections and any changes needed once the kitchen design is final.
This is also where a single-contractor approach can make a practical difference. When one experienced team coordinates core trades, there is less risk of gaps between the carpenter, electrician, plumber and plasterer. If separate specialists are involved, make sure the quote is clear about who is responsible for sequencing the work and resolving any clashes on site.
The lowest quote may be genuinely efficient, particularly if a builder has trusted suppliers, in-house trades or a well-organised programme. But if it is substantially lower than the others, ask why. It could reflect a different construction method or buying power. It could also mean key items have been omitted, allowances are too low, or the project has not been fully understood.
Compare the builder as well as the price
Your home will be a working site for weeks or months, so the quotation process is also an early test of how the builder operates. Consider how quickly they responded, whether they visited the property, how they handled questions and whether their paperwork was straightforward.
Ask who will manage the project day to day. On a larger renovation or extension, you should know whether there will be a named site manager or lead contact, how often you will receive updates and how decisions will be recorded. Good communication is not an extra. It is one of the strongest protections against misunderstandings, delays and unexpected costs.
It is also sensible to check that the builder has suitable insurance, relevant trade credentials and recent examples of comparable work. A contractor who has completed bathrooms may not necessarily be the best fit for a complex rear extension involving structural steel, roofing, drainage and Building Control inspections. Look for experience that matches the scale and type of project you are planning.
For homeowners living through the work, ask about site standards too. How will dust be controlled? Where will materials be stored? How will access be managed? Will the team leave the site tidy at the end of the day? These details affect everyday family life and often reveal the level of care a builder brings to the job.
Ask about programme, payments and changes
Two quotes can cover the same work but offer very different client experiences. Ask each builder for an indicative start date and programme, including major milestones. Weather, supplier lead times and unforeseen site conditions can affect any build, so be wary of guarantees that sound unrealistic. What matters is whether the builder has planned the work sensibly and communicates promptly if circumstances change.
Review the payment schedule before committing. Stage payments should relate to meaningful progress, such as completion of foundations, structural work, first fix or agreed installation stages. Avoid arrangements that require a large proportion of the project cost before materials are ordered or work is completed.
You should also understand the process for variations. Changes are sometimes unavoidable, particularly in period properties where opening up walls can reveal hidden issues. A professional approach is to explain the finding, set out the cost and programme impact, and obtain your approval before progressing wherever possible. Verbal conversations are useful, but written confirmation protects everyone.
Make the final decision with confidence
Once you have clarified the detail, compare the revised figures, not just the first quotes. The best value is usually the proposal that gives you a realistic scope, transparent allowances, clear responsibilities and confidence in the people who will be working in your home.
At Primary Construction, we believe a quote should help homeowners understand their project, not make it harder to make a decision. A careful conversation before work begins can prevent many of the problems people associate with building projects.
Choose the builder who is prepared to explain the detail, answer difficult questions and take proper ownership of the work. That foundation of clarity is just as valuable as the bricks, timber and finishes that will transform your home.





