what does a quantity surveyor do
A quantity surveyor manages the cost and commercial side of construction projects. They help make sure a project is planned, priced, contracted, and delivered within budget while meeting quality and legal standards.
What they do
A quantity surveyor typically:
- Estimates costs, materials, labour, and timelines.
- Prepares tender and contract documents, including bills of quantities.
- Monitors budgets, cash flow, and payments during the build.
- Assesses risk, advises on cost-saving options, and helps with value engineering.
- Reviews work completed by subcontractors and supports final accounts and claims.
Where they work
Quantity surveyors are involved across the full lifecycle of a project, from feasibility and planning through construction and final handover. They usually work with clients, contractors, architects, engineers, and subcontractors to keep the project commercially on track.
In simple terms
If a construction project is the “engine,” the quantity surveyor is one of the people making sure it does not run out of money or drift off budget.
If you want, I can also explain the difference between a quantity surveyor and a building surveyor.