FinancialProcess

How is award fee calculated on federal contracts?

Quick Answer: Award fee is calculated based on periodic performance evaluations against stated criteria. An Award Fee Determination Official rates performance and determines the percentage of available fee pool to pay.

As of 2024FAR 16.405-2

Detailed Answer

Award fee on Cost-Plus-Award-Fee (CPAF) contracts is determined through a structured evaluation process: **Award fee structure:** - Base fee: Fixed amount paid regardless of performance (may be 0-3%) - Award fee pool: Maximum additional fee available based on performance - Total potential fee: Base fee + Full award fee pool **Evaluation process:** 1. Performance monitored during evaluation period (typically quarterly or semi-annually) 2. Award Fee Evaluation Board reviews against criteria 3. Board makes fee recommendation to Award Fee Determining Official (AFDO) 4. AFDO makes final fee determination 5. Contractor notified of rating and fee earned **Typical rating scales:** - Excellent: 91-100% of available fee - Very Good: 76-90% of available fee - Good: 51-75% of available fee - Satisfactory: No more than 50% of available fee - Unsatisfactory: 0% of available fee **Evaluation criteria commonly include:** - Technical performance quality - Schedule adherence - Cost control effectiveness - Management responsiveness - Small business subcontracting compliance - Customer satisfaction **Important considerations:** - Award fee determinations are largely discretionary - Minimum acceptable performance earns little or no award fee - Decisions are not subject to disputes process - Past periods' fee cannot be recovered later - Award fee plan is part of contract **Maximizing award fee:** - Understand evaluation criteria thoroughly - Document performance proactively - Address concerns immediately when raised - Communicate regularly with government - Request interim feedback