Estimate Costs

Finance/Planning/Estimate Costs
Inputs Tools & Techniques Outputs

Inputs, tools & techniques, and outputs for this process.

A planning activity that approximates the monetary resources needed for each work package or activity. It uses suitable estimating methods, includes reserves for uncertainty, and documents the basis of estimate to support budgeting and funding decisions.

Purpose & When to Use

Estimate Costs determines how much money the project will likely require for labor, materials, services, facilities, tools, and risk responses. It provides credible figures to inform budgeting, funding approvals, procurement, and trade-off decisions. Use it during planning and refine it as scope, schedule, and risks become clearer. Early estimates are broad ranges; later estimates become more detailed and precise.

Mini Flow (How It’s Done)

  • Confirm scope and structure: review the WBS, scope boundaries, acceptance criteria, and key assumptions and constraints.
  • Gather cost inputs: resource rates and calendars, vendor catalogs and quotes, historical data, benchmarks, tax and duty rules, and escalation indices.
  • Select methods that fit the data and timing: analogous for quick early estimates, parametric for scalable models, bottom-up for detailed work packages, three-point for uncertainty ranges, vendor bid analysis for procurements, learning curve where applicable, and cost of quality analysis.
  • Estimate each work package or activity: calculate direct and indirect costs, consider make-or-buy, account for logistics, overheads, licenses, and compliance.
  • Add risk-related contingency: include costed risk responses and probabilistic allowances for known uncertainties; keep management reserve separate and not in the cost baseline.
  • Document the basis of estimate: methods used, data sources, assumptions, constraints, ranges, confidence level, and exclusions.
  • Aggregate and time-phase: roll up estimates by WBS and phase, align with the schedule to build a cash flow view.
  • Validate and refine: compare to historicals and benchmarks, reconcile with funding limits, and iterate with scope, schedule, and risk updates.

Quality & Acceptance Checklist

  • All WBS elements are covered; no double counting or gaps.
  • Rates, unit costs, and quantities come from current, reliable sources.
  • Direct and indirect costs are included, such as labor, materials, facilities, overheads, licenses, and compliance.
  • Procurement items include shipping, duties, taxes, and warranty or support costs.
  • Inflation, currency, and escalation assumptions are stated and applied consistently.
  • Estimates are time-phased and aligned with the schedule and resource calendars.
  • Contingency is justified by identified risks; management reserve is excluded from the cost baseline.
  • Basis of estimate is complete: methods, data sources, assumptions, constraints, ranges, confidence, and exclusions.
  • Peer review or expert validation performed; variances against benchmarks are explained.
  • Compliance with organizational policies and governance requirements is confirmed.
  • Key stakeholders have reviewed and signaled acceptance for the level of accuracy and risk.

Common Mistakes & Exam Traps

  • Confusing estimates with the budget: the budget aggregates approved estimates into a cost baseline that includes contingency but not management reserve.
  • Using single-point numbers when uncertainty is high; provide ranges with confidence levels instead.
  • Omitting indirect and lifecycle costs such as training, operations, maintenance, and disposal.
  • Double counting risk costs by including them in both activity estimates and separate line items without justification.
  • Choosing bottom-up when time or data are limited, or using parametric models outside their valid range.
  • Ignoring schedule impacts on cost, like overtime, resource availability, or extended durations.
  • Failing to include taxes, duties, shipping, and currency effects in procurement estimates.
  • Overprecision that implies certainty; two decimals do not make an uncertain estimate more accurate.
  • Not updating estimates after approved changes, new risks, or scope clarifications.
  • Exam trap: management reserve is outside the cost baseline and not allocated to activities; contingency is inside the baseline and tied to identified risks.

PMP Example Question

While preparing cost estimates, the team prices several risk responses for likely threats. How should these costs be handled relative to the cost baseline?

  1. Add them to management reserve, which sits outside the baseline.
  2. Include them as contingency within activity or work package estimates, forming part of the cost baseline.
  3. Convert them into schedule buffers rather than cost items.
  4. Exclude them until a risk event occurs to avoid inflating the baseline.

Correct Answer: B — Include them as contingency within activity or work package estimates, forming part of the cost baseline.

Explanation: Costed risk responses and contingency for known uncertainties belong in the estimates and cost baseline. Management reserve is separate and not assigned to specific work.

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