Government Construction Contract Cost Recovery Australia | Blaze Business & Legal

Why government contracts are a different conversation

A contractor working on a government project has a significant advantage over one working on an equivalent private sector project: the government principal is subject to procurement policies and value-for-money obligations that private sector principals are not.

Those policies do not automatically entitle you to cost recovery. But they create a framework for a conversation that a private sector principal may simply refuse to have.

Commonwealth procurement policy

The Commonwealth Procurement Rules require Commonwealth entities to achieve value for money, to treat suppliers fairly and consistently, and to conduct procurements with integrity. A Commonwealth entity that refuses to engage on a legitimate cost increase claim creates risk for its own project. The argument to make is not that the agency is contractually obliged to pay. It is a commercial and policy argument for why engagement on cost sharing is in the agency’s interest.

Queensland government procurement

The Queensland Procurement Policy and the Building and Construction Procurement Guidance from the Department of Energy and Public Works specifically address how agencies should manage cost escalation on capital works projects. The guidance encourages agencies to consider contract modifications and commercial negotiations where cost escalation threatens project delivery. Reference this guidance explicitly in your approach to the agency.

GC21 Edition 2 (NSW Government)

GC21 is a more contractor-friendly document than many standard forms. Schedule 7 deals with cost reimbursement. If Schedule 7 has been completed in the Contract Particulars, the contract includes a cost adjustment mechanism. Check Schedule 7 before assuming you have no entitlement.

GC21 also includes a good faith obligation on both parties, which creates an argument for engaging on cost sharing even where the strict contractual position is unfavourable.

DHA and Defence contracts

Defence Housing Australia and Defence construction projects are subject to Commonwealth procurement rules and specific contract frameworks. Rachelle Hare worked in-house in this environment and has direct experience of how cost recovery conversations are conducted within the Defence procurement framework.

The Commonwealth’s approach to cost recovery on Defence projects has been evolving in response to the sustained period of cost escalation.

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How to approach a government principal about cost recovery

Government agencies respond to formal, documented, policy-referenced approaches.

  1. Lead with the contract. Identify specifically what your contract says about cost increases, variations, and price adjustment.
  2. Show the numbers. Provide Shannon Drew’s documented analysis of your actual cost increase across all six inputs, including overhead recovery and pricing exposure.
  3. Reference the procurement policy. Cite the specific government procurement policy provisions that support engagement on cost sharing.
  4. Frame it as a project risk issue. An agency that understands that your cost position creates a delivery risk is more likely to engage.
  5. Propose a specific mechanism. Do not ask the agency to agree to pay more. Ask them to agree to a specific cost adjustment mechanism.
  6. Get it documented. Any agreement reached needs to be in writing and properly executed as a deed of amendment.

     

The back-to-back problem: where you do achieve cost recovery from the government principal, consider whether any of that recovery should flow through to affected subcontractors.

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FAQ

Are government construction contractors entitled to cost recovery when input costs rise?
Not automatically. Government procurement policies create a framework and an expectation of engagement, but they do not create automatic entitlements. The approach and the documentation are what determine whether recovery is achieved.
What is the Queensland government's position on construction cost escalation?
The Queensland Procurement Policy and the Building and Construction Procurement Guidance encourage agencies to consider contract modifications and commercial negotiations where cost escalation threatens project delivery. Reference this guidance explicitly in your approach.
Does GC21 include cost adjustment mechanisms?
Schedule 7 of GC21 deals with cost reimbursement. If Schedule 7 has been completed in the Contract Particulars, the contract includes a cost adjustment mechanism. Check before assuming you have no entitlement.
How should I document my approach to a government principal?
Come with Shannon Drew's financial analysis across all six inputs, a specific dollar amount, a reference to the relevant procurement policy provisions, and a proposed mechanism. Follow up the meeting with a written proposal. Full cost analysis methodology.

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Get Help with Your Contracts, Cost Position, and Business

Three fixed-fee services for construction businesses working through the cost crisis. Rachelle Hare and Shannon Drew directly, from the first conversation.

Strategy Session $750 + GST Contract Audit $1,500 + GST Business Triage $1,975 + GST
25+ years in construction. Fixed fees. No junior staff.
Rachelle Hare, Managing Director, Blaze Business and Legal
Rachelle Hare
Managing Director and Principal, Blaze Business & Legal

Rachelle Hare is a construction lawyer and business adviser with 25 years of experience, including in-house roles at Thiess, Laing O’Rourke, Acciona, DHA, and UGL. She advises construction businesses on contracts, cost recovery, risk, procurement, commercial strategy, and business structuring across Queensland and Australia.