Structural Bid Template

Structural Change Order Template — Added Scope, T&C, Approval Block

A Texas structural subcontractor used IronKit's Change Order Generator to document added scope on a warehouse project. The GC had requested three extra beam pockets, a second delivery, and four additional column base plates not on the original drawings. Without a formal change order, the contractor would have absorbed the cost as "extras." IronKit produced a signed-off change order in 8 minutes — description of change, itemized cost table, impact to schedule, and a dual signature block. The GC signed the same day.
Document Preview
Bid Template — Generated by IronKit

Project Details

Change Order No.CO-004
Date2026-05-14
Contract ReferenceSubcontract No. 2026-STL-0042
ProjectWarehouse Addition — Building C
OwnerIndustrial Properties LLC
Reason for ChangeArchitectural revision — beam pocket locations revised, 4 added base plates

Scope of Work

  • Fabricate and install 3 additional beam pockets in W14 columns (not on original drawings)
  • Furnish and install 4 additional column base plates 18"×18"×1" with hardware
  • Second delivery trip required due to late-release items
  • Field re-mobilization for added base plate installation

Bill of Quantities

DescriptionQtyUnitUnit PriceTotal
3 beam pockets in W14 columns — shop fab3ea$185.00$555.00
4 additional base plates 18"×18"×1" + hardware4ea$155.00$620.00
Second delivery trip (flatbed)1ls$650.00$650.00
Field re-mobilization — 4 hours @ $85/hr1ls$340.00$340.00
Added base plate installation — 6 hours @ $85/hr1ls$510.00$510.00
Subtotal$2,675.00
Overhead & Insurance (12%)$321.00
Profit (15%)$449.00
Bid Total$3,445.00

Exclusions

  • Any additional items beyond those specifically listed above
  • Engineered re-design or RFI responses (by EOR)
  • Rework to previously accepted work due to owner-initiated design changes

Payment Schedule

  • Added amount due per original payment schedule milestones
  • Total added contract value: $2,675 direct + 12% OH + 15% profit

Terms & Conditions

  • This change order modifies the original contract. All other terms remain in effect.
  • Schedule impact: +3 working days to erection completion.
  • This change order must be signed by both parties before work begins.
  • Failure to execute this change order does not constitute acceptance of added work.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do I need a formal change order instead of a verbal agreement?
Verbal agreements for added scope don't hold up at final billing. A signed change order with itemized cost and scope description is your only protection. GCs who approve extras verbally often "forget" them at closeout. Every change — even a $500 extra — gets a written change order.
How quickly should I issue a change order after scope changes?
Same day if possible, within 3 business days at maximum. Most contracts have a claim notice period — if you don't issue a change order within the contractual notice window, you may waive your right to additional compensation. Check your subcontract language.
What must a change order include to be enforceable?
Description of the change (what changed, from what, to what), itemized cost, schedule impact, reference to the original contract, and dual signatures. Optional but useful: photos of the changed condition, RFI or architect's sketch reference, and the date you first received direction.
Does IronKit generate change orders for all trade types?
Yes. The Change Order Generator works for structural steel, pipe fab, sheet metal, and general welding service. The template automatically populates the right sections based on your trade and provides a standard T&C block you can customize for your jurisdiction.

Generate Your Own — In 3 Minutes

Generate your own bid template in 3 minutes — free for 14 days.

Start Free Trial $29/mo after trial. Cancel anytime.
Start Free Trial — 14 Days Free