Cost plans and estimates, built from your own history
A cost plan rarely starts from nothing. It starts from the last three jobs that looked a bit like this one. But finding them, lifting the right rates and adjusting for the differences means a senior surveyor digging through old files for the better part of a day before a single line is priced. One wrong rate carried into the plan, and the error sits there until someone catches it, if they catch it. That is half a day of your highest charge-out rate spent before the real work begins.
AI trained on your own historical cost data does the digging. You describe the scheme, it surfaces comparable elements from your past projects, drafts a first-pass elemental cost plan with your rates, and flags where the new job differs from the precedent. The surveyor isn't pricing from a blank page. They're reviewing and correcting a draft, which is faster and produces a better starting position.
For a practice in the £1–20m range, that can move an early cost plan from a day's work to a couple of hours of senior review. The judgement stays human. The blank page goes away.
Bills of quantities and tender comparisons
Assembling a bill and then comparing returns is detailed, repetitive work where a small slip carries straight through to the recommendation. Tenderers price against different assumptions, qualify in different places, and leave different gaps. Lining them up by hand is slow and error-prone.
AI can assemble bill items from measured quantities, then normalise tender returns onto a common basis: matching line items, surfacing where one bidder has priced something the others haven't, and flagging arithmetic that doesn't add up. It produces a like-for-like comparison and a list of queries to put to each tenderer.
The point isn't to hand the decision to a machine. It's that your surveyor reviews a checked, reconciled comparison instead of building it from scratch, and the obvious errors are caught before they reach the client report.
Valuations and payment certificates
Interim valuations and payment certificates are where small errors compound. A figure carried wrong one month gets carried wrong the next. Retention is misapplied. A variation is valued twice or missed entirely. By month six the running account no longer ties out and someone spends a day finding out why.
AI drafts the valuation from your measured progress and the contract terms, reconciles it against the previous certificate, and flags movements that don't follow: a line that's gone backwards, retention that's off, a variation that appears in one place but not another. The certifier still signs it off. They're checking a reconciled draft rather than rebuilding the maths every month.
Across a year of monthly valuations on several jobs, that's both hours saved and fewer errors carried forward, which is the part clients actually notice.
Cost reports and CVRs from live data
The monthly cost report or cost-value reconciliation is often a weekend job: pulling figures from the accounts, the valuations and the commitment schedules into a spreadsheet, then writing it up. The data already exists. The work is collecting and shaping it.
When your cost data sits in connected systems, AI can pull the current position and draft the report: cost to date, value, forecast final cost, and the movement since last month, with the variances explained in plain terms. Your surveyor reviews the narrative and the judgement calls instead of assembling the numbers.
That turns a recurring weekend of spreadsheet work into a review on a Monday morning, with the report drawn from live figures rather than a hand-keyed snapshot that's already a few days old.
Chasing information and formatting
A real share of a QS's week goes on neither maths nor judgement. It goes on chasing subcontractors for prices, chasing the team for progress data, and formatting documents into the house style before they go out. None of it needs a surveyor, but it usually gets one.
AI can draft the chase emails, track what's outstanding, and format reports, schedules and comparisons to your template. It won't make a commercial decision, and it shouldn't. It clears the admin that sits between your senior people and the work that earns the fee.
What the payback actually looks like
For a cost consultancy in the £1–20m band, the recovered time tends to land in a few hours per surveyor per week once these workflows are in place. On a small commercial team that adds up to the equivalent of a part-time resource handed back, illustratively in the region of £15–40k of senior time a year. Treat the figures as typical rather than promised; the real number depends on your job mix and how clean your data already is.
The accuracy gain matters as much as the hours. Fewer errors carried month to month means fewer awkward conversations with clients and contractors, and a commercial position you can actually trust. The aim isn't to replace the surveyor. It's to keep your most expensive people on the work that needs their judgement, and take the building, checking and chasing off their desk.