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Prolongation costs—the time-related expenses incurred by a contractor when a construction project is delayed through no fault of its own—are among the most commercially significant and frequently disputed elements of construction claims in Germany. These costs typically include extended site overheads, labour, equipment hire, site supervision, insurance, financing, utilities, and other ongoing project expenses that continue to accrue during an extension of time. As Germany’s construction sector continues to face economic uncertainty in 2026, including rising inflation, higher labour costs resulting from new collective wage agreements, fluctuating material prices, and persistent supply-chain disruptions, the financial impact of project delays has become increasingly severe. Even a relatively short delay can substantially increase project costs and significantly reduce or eliminate a contractor’s expected profit.
Recovering prolongation costs, however, requires more than demonstrating that a delay occurred. Contractors must establish that the delay was caused by events beyond their control, demonstrate a direct link between the delaying event and the additional costs incurred, and comply with contractual notice and documentation requirements. The legal basis for such claims may differ depending on whether the project is governed by the German Civil Code (BGB), the Construction Contract Procedures (VOB/B), or bespoke contractual terms. Understanding how to calculate prolongation cost and substantiated within Germany’s legal framework is therefore essential for contractors, employers, quantity surveyors, claims consultants, and construction lawyers seeking to effectively manage risk and resolve construction disputes.
This guide sets out the complete process: choosing between the VOB/B contractual route and the BGB §650c statutory route, meeting notice and evidence requirements, applying accepted calculation methods, and assembling a claim that German courts or arbitral tribunals will take seriously.
Before any number-crunching begins, the claimant must determine which legal regime governs the prolongation claim. Getting this wrong, or failing to comply with the procedural requirements of the applicable route, can extinguish an otherwise valid entitlement entirely. The two primary routes are the contractual regime under the Vergabe- und Vertragsordnung für Bauleistungen Teil B (VOB/B) and the statutory regime under BGB §650c.
| Route | Applicability | Key compliance point |
|---|---|---|
| VOB/B contract (contractual clause) | Public contracts and many private contracts that incorporate VOB/B | Strict notice content & timing per VOB/B §2; contract may modify statutory remedies |
| BGB §650c (statutory) | Contracts under BGB or mixed contracts where statutory rule asserted | Interim payment path; 80 % rule for partial performance and statutory calculation triggers |
| Practical effect for claim | Depends on contract wording and speed of notices | Choose early; preserve both notice compliance and evidence for statutory relief |
Where the parties have incorporated VOB/B into the construction contract, standard practice for all public-sector projects and widespread in private commercial construction, the contractor’s entitlement to additional remuneration for changed or additional works, including the time-related cost consequences of those changes, is primarily governed by VOB/B §2(5) and §2(6). These clauses create a contractual mechanism for price adjustment that, in practical terms, displaces or supplements the statutory rules of the BGB. Crucially, VOB/B imposes its own notice obligations: failure to announce additional cost consequences before executing the changed work can result in a partial or total loss of the claim.
BGB §650c, introduced as part of the 2018 construction contract law reform (Bauvertragsrecht), provides a statutory mechanism for adjusting remuneration when the employer orders a modification. Under §650c(1), the contractor is entitled to remuneration calculated on the basis of the actual costs incurred plus reasonable mark-ups for overhead and profit. The provision’s practical power lies in §650c(3): the contractor may demand an interim payment of up to 80 % of the remuneration calculated under §650c(1), even before the final amount is agreed, giving it a rapid cash-flow tool.
Industry observers note that the OLG München has confirmed that §650c can apply even where VOB/B has been incorporated, provided the statutory prerequisites are met, making it a valuable fallback or parallel route for prolongation cost calculation in Germany.
VOB/B notice requirements are the single most common reason prolongation claims fail in Germany. The contractor must announce its entitlement to additional remuneration before beginning execution of the changed or additional work. Under VOB/B §2(5), where the employer changes the scope of an already-contracted service, the contractor must announce the resulting price consequences. Under §2(6), additional services not originally contracted must be ordered in writing, and the contractor must again flag any price impact, including prolongation cost, before execution.
A notice that merely states “we reserve our rights” is insufficient. German case law consistently requires the notice to contain specific factual content:
The critical deadline is before execution: once the contractor proceeds without notice, the claim is at serious risk. There is no fixed calendar deadline (e.g., 28 days), but promptness is expected. Common pitfalls include: serving notice only to the site team rather than to the contractual employer; omitting the causal link between the change and the delay; and failing to update the notice when the scope or duration of the delay evolves. Each of these can be fatal to recovery.
A compliant short-form notice should follow this structure: (1) date and project reference; (2) identification of the employer’s instruction or change event; (3) statement that the change will result in additional time and cost; (4) outline of affected programme activities and estimated duration impact; (5) categories of prolongation cost affected; (6) express reservation of rights under VOB/B §2(5) or §2(6). Practitioners should maintain a template and adapt it to each event promptly.
BGB §650c structures the remuneration adjustment for ordered modifications in three steps. Under §650c(1), the contractor is entitled to remuneration based on actual costs required (tatsächlich erforderliche Kosten) plus appropriate surcharges for overhead and profit. Under §650c(2), where the contractor’s obligation is reduced, the employer may reduce the price, but the contractor retains the right to at least the costs already incurred plus a reasonable profit margin. Under §650c(3), the contractor may demand an interim payment (Abschlagszahlung) of up to 80 % of the amount calculated under §650c(1), even before the parties agree on the final adjusted price. This 80 % rule is the provision’s most powerful feature for cash-flow protection during prolongation.
Where the employer refuses to pay the interim amount, the contractor can seek a court order. The likely practical effect is that German courts treat the 80 % interim payment claim as a relatively straightforward application, provided the contractor can demonstrate: (a) a valid employer order or deemed order; (b) a prima facie calculation of actual costs; and (c) proper notice. Early indications from appellate practice suggest that courts are willing to grant interim payment even in complex prolongation scenarios, making BGB §650c a commercially attractive route when VOB/B notice compliance is uncertain.
Three principal methods are used internationally, and increasingly in German practice, to calculate prolongation cost. Each has strengths and weaknesses, and the choice often depends on the quality of available records.
The Hudson formula estimates the head-office overhead and profit component of prolongation cost using data from the contract itself. The formula is:
Prolongation cost (H/O element) = (Head-office overhead & profit % from contract ÷ 100) × (Contract sum ÷ Contract period in days) × Delay period in days
Its advantage is simplicity: it requires only three data points readily available from the contract. Its weakness is that it assumes the contract percentage accurately reflects actual overhead absorption, which may overstate or understate the true position.
The Emden & Ashworth formula replaces the contract percentage with the contractor’s actual head-office overhead and profit rate, derived from audited accounts:
Prolongation cost (H/O element) = (Actual H/O & profit % from accounts ÷ 100) × (Contract sum ÷ Contract period in days) × Delay period in days
This approach is generally considered more accurate because it reflects the contractor’s real cost structure rather than a bid assumption. It requires disclosure of financial records, which some contractors resist.
The actuals method builds the prolongation cost from the ground up: the claimant identifies every time-related resource deployed during the delay period (site staff, plant, temporary facilities, insurance, bonds, utilities) and prices each at its actual daily or weekly cost. This is the most granular and, when well-documented, the most persuasive method, and it aligns closely with BGB §650c’s reference to tatsächlich erforderliche Kosten (actually required costs).
Industry observers expect German courts and tribunals to favour the actuals method where contemporaneous records support it, because it matches the statutory language of §650c and satisfies the general civil-law burden of proof under ZPO §286. The Hudson formula serves as a useful cross-check or fallback where site records are incomplete. The Emden & Ashworth approach occupies a middle ground and is frequently deployed in arbitration. Practitioners should present the primary claim on actuals and include a Hudson or Emden & Ashworth calculation as a reasonableness check. The table below illustrates a Hudson calculation for reference.
| Parameter | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Contract sum | € 12,000,000 | Contract |
| Contract period | 540 days | Contract |
| H/O & profit % (from contract) | 8.5 % | Contract breakdown |
| Daily contract turnover | € 22,222 | €12 m ÷ 540 |
| Daily H/O contribution | € 1,889 | 8.5 % × €22,222 |
| Delay period | 45 days | Schedule analysis |
| Hudson prolongation (H/O) | € 85,000 | €1,889 × 45 |
A claim is only as strong as its proof. German civil procedure places the burden squarely on the claimant to demonstrate both the fact and the quantum of delay-related costs. Understanding what constitutes acceptable proof of prolongation cost is essential before assembling any calculation.
The foundation of any prolongation claim is a forensic schedule analysis that demonstrates the causal link between the employer-risk event and the extension of the project timeline. Accepted methodologies include Critical Path Method (CPM) analysis, particularly time impact analysis (TIA) or windows analysis, where the delay event is inserted into the baseline programme and its effect on the critical path is measured. German courts expect the schedule to be based on a realistic, contemporaneous baseline rather than a theoretical or reconstructed programme.
German courts frequently appoint their own expert (gerichtlicher Sachverständiger) under ZPO §404 to assess delay and quantum. Claimants should anticipate this by preparing their own expert report to a standard that will withstand scrutiny, using transparent methodology, cross-referencing contemporaneous records, and clearly distinguishing between proven and estimated cost items.
The following worked example demonstrates how to calculate prolongation cost for a hypothetical 45-day employer-caused delay on a German commercial building project. Assumed project parameters: contract sum €12,000,000; original contract period 18 months (540 calendar days); monthly site overheads €95,000; head-office overhead and profit percentage per contract 8.5 %.
Monthly site overheads of €95,000 convert to a daily rate of €95,000 ÷ 30 = €3,167 per day. This figure captures site staff (project manager, site engineer, foreman, administrator), temporary facilities (site offices, welfare, fencing, security), insurances, bonds and utilities.
Site prolongation cost = daily site overhead × delay days = €3,167 × 45 = €142,500.
Using the Hudson formula from the table above: €1,889 per day × 45 days = €85,000.
| Cost element | Amount (€) | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Site overheads (45 days × €3,167) | 142,500 | Actuals, monthly cost records and payroll |
| Head-office overhead (Hudson) | 85,000 | Contract percentage, cross-check |
| Additional plant standing time | 18,750 | Plant logs, crane idle @ €417/day × 45 days |
| Subtotal | 246,250 | |
| Less: unproven items / discount for uncertainty | (12,300) | 5 % prudential discount |
| Net prolongation claim | 233,950 |
The 80 % interim payment under BGB §650c(3) would be €233,950 × 80 % = €187,160, the amount the contractor could demand as an interim payment even before final agreement on quantum.
When assembling the prolongation claim submission, ensure the following documents and schedules are attached:
Even a well-prepared prolongation claim faces risks. Employers will challenge causation (arguing concurrent delay or contractor culpable delay), the reasonableness of rates, and the adequacy of notice. To mitigate these risks, contractors should: maintain contemporaneous records from day one rather than reconstructing them after the event; engage a delay analyst early enough to influence record-keeping; and consider negotiation or adjudication before formal litigation, which can take two to four years through the Landgericht and Oberlandesgericht. Employers facing prolongation claims should conduct an early independent review of the schedule analysis and consider whether the §650c interim payment exposure justifies early commercial settlement.
Both sides benefit from understanding that German courts scrutinise factual evidence rigorously, early expert instruction and disciplined documentation are the strongest forms of risk mitigation available.
Accurately understanding how to calculate prolongation cost in Germany requires mastery of three linked disciplines: legal compliance (choosing and executing the correct VOB/B or BGB §650c route), rigorous evidence collection (forensic scheduling and contemporaneous cost records), and sound calculation methodology (actuals supported by formula cross-checks). In the current 2026 environment of rising labour and material costs, the financial stakes of getting this process right, or wrong, are higher than ever. Whether you are a contractor seeking to recover legitimate delay costs or an employer assessing exposure, professional legal guidance from a specialist in German construction law is essential.
Explore the construction law practice directory to connect with qualified practitioners who can review your claim, advise on compliance, and help you secure the recovery you are entitled to.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Atif Yildirim at SMNG Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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