
Claims in construction projects are a crucial tool for recovering costs, losses, or damages incurred by one party due to the actions or inactions of the other. Construction claims can involve delays, disruptions, variations, or contract breaches, and navigating them is often complex due to contractual ambiguity, tight timelines, and the multi-disciplinary effort required for successful resolution.
Understanding the challenges in construction claim management is vital for project teams, especially contractors, consultants, and contract administrators.
Common Challenges in Managing Construction Claims
Several recurring issues arise when managing claims in construction projects. These include:
- Time Constraints
Strict deadlines for submitting notices and claims can lead to rejected entitlements if not managed properly. - Ambiguous or Contradictory Contract Clauses
Vague or conflicting provisions in construction contracts can complicate entitlement assessments. - Lack of Project Team Awareness
Limited understanding among site and management teams about claim procedures or contractual obligations can cause delays and missed opportunities. - Relationship Considerations
Parties may avoid pursuing claims aggressively to preserve business relationships, even when entitlement exists.
Most Complex Claim Issues
The following are some of the most challenging obstacles in the claim preparation and submission process:
- Insufficient Contemporary Records
Missing documentation for abortive works or allocated resources makes substantiating claims extremely difficult. - Lack of Contractual or Legal Understanding by the Other Party
This can lead to disputes or unrealistic expectations, regardless of whether it stems from a genuine lack of understanding or a deliberate stance. - Untracked Impacts from Dynamic Coordination
Daily coordination between multiple parties often generates cost or time impacts that go unnoticed until it’s too late to quantify them properly. - Weak or Inaccurate Project Scheduling
An unreliable or poorly updated schedule severely limits the contractor’s ability to demonstrate entitlement to extensions of time or cost recovery. - Confidentiality of Company Records
Sometimes, claim justification—especially for head office overhead costs—requires sharing sensitive financial data, which companies may hesitate to disclose. - Quantifying Disruption Claims
While theoretically possible, disruption analysis is notoriously hard to execute in practice, as it requires highly detailed progress and productivity records. - Time-Consuming Delay Analysis Techniques
Advanced methods like Time Slice Windows Analysis demand substantial data and effort, which might not be justifiable in smaller claims.
Understanding and preparing for these challenges early in the project lifecycle (from contract review and record-keeping to program integrity and team awareness) can significantly increase the chances of successful claim resolution. Proactive claim management is no longer optional; it’s a competitive necessity in today’s construction industry.


