Financial

What are typical profit margins on federal contracts?

Quick Answer: Profit margins typically range from 5-15% depending on contract type, risk, and competition. Fixed-price contracts generally allow higher margins than cost-reimbursement due to risk transfer.

As of 2024FAR 15.404-4

Detailed Answer

Profit margins on federal contracts vary significantly based on multiple factors: **Typical profit ranges by contract type:** - Firm Fixed Price: 10-15%+ (higher risk, higher potential margin) - Time & Materials: 8-12% (moderate risk) - Cost-Plus-Fixed-Fee: 3-9% (lower risk, regulated fee) - Cost-Plus-Award-Fee: Base 3% + up to 10% award fee - Cost-Plus-Incentive-Fee: Variable based on performance **Factors affecting profit:** - Competition level (more competition = lower margins) - Contract complexity and risk - Past performance and incumbent advantages - Small business set-asides (often lower margins) - Technical difficulty and innovation - Federal funding climate **Regulatory considerations:** - Cost-type contracts have FAR-mandated fee limits - CPFF generally limited to 10% of estimated cost - Architect-engineer contracts capped at 6% of estimated cost - Commercial items have more pricing flexibility **Weighted Guidelines Method (FAR 15.404-4):** Government considers: - Performance risk: 0-9% - Contract risk: 0-5% - Capital investment: -2% to +4% - Total can exceed 15% for high-risk contracts **Practical considerations:** - Margins vary widely by industry sector - IT services often 8-12% - Professional services 7-10% - Complex systems integration 12-18% - Commodities and supplies 3-8% **Pricing strategy:** - Don't underprice to win—it's unsustainable - Include adequate management reserve - Factor in compliance costs - Understand indirect cost recovery