How Construction Delivery Methods Allocate Risk and What It Means for Your Project

Construction worker reviewing blueprints and plans at a work desk.

Every construction project allocates risk. Assessing the construction project delivery method by risk determines how much exposure you take on as the owner. Explore five common construction delivery methods across cost, schedule, design, performance, and coordination risk so you can choose the approach that best fits your project.

The Five Risk Questions Every Owner Should Ask

Your delivery method should address these risk questions across these categories:

  • Cost risk. Who bears cost overruns? Is the contract price fixed, reimbursable, or capped with a Guaranteed Maximum Price (GMP)?
  • Schedule risk. Who bears delay risk? Does the method require sequential phases, or can design and construction overlap?
  • Design risk. Who bears the risk of design errors or omissions? Does the owner retain a separate architect, or does one entity hold both responsibilities?
  • Performance risk. Who bears the risk of construction quality failures?
  • Coordination risk. Who bears the risk of trade conflicts? Does one entity coordinate all trades, or does the owner hold separate contracts with each contractor?

How Different Construction Delivery Methods Manage Risk

Design-Bid-Build Separates Design and Construction Risk

Design-bid-build is the traditional sequence: the owner hires an architect to complete the design, then takes competitive bids from contractors and awards a fixed-price contract. Design and construction are separate contracts with separate parties.

The owner carries design risk through the owner-architect agreement. If the design contains errors or omissions, the consequences typically flow through to the contractor in the form of change orders. The contractor carries construction risk under a stipulated-sum contract, and once the price is set, any cost overruns are the contractor’s responsibility.

Because design is completed before construction begins, the owner has a fully defined scope before committing to the construction price. The architect and contractor hold separate contracts with the owner, so coordination between the two runs through the owner rather than directly between the parties.

Best fit when: Your scope is well defined, and price transparency matters most.

AIA design-bid-build documents:

Pro Tip Design-bid-build gives owners the most transparent pricing, because contractors bid against a complete set of drawings.

Design-Build Puts Accountability Under One Roof

Design-build consolidates design and construction under a single contract with one party. The design-builder carries both design risk and construction risk. Errors in design, coordination failures, and construction quality issues all flow to the same party, simplifying accountability for the owner.

The trade-off is reduced design oversight and an earlier scope commitment. If the scope is not well defined when the design-build contract is signed, the owner may lose cost certainty.

Best fit when: Speed and single-point accountability are your top priorities.

AIA documents for design-build:

Considerations for Progressive Design-Build

Progressive design-build is a variant worth considering. In progressive design-build projects, the owner and design-builder work collaboratively throughout the early design phases under a cost-reimbursable arrangement before agreeing to a GMP or stipulated sum. The owner retains more design influence during early phases, and the two parties defer pricing until the scope is better defined.

Best fit when: You need collaboration before locking in a final price. View all progressive design-build agreements.

CMc Uses a GMP To Cap Cost Risk

In the construction manager as constructor (CMc) model, also called CMAR, the owner hires a construction manager for the project during design. The CMc provides preconstruction services alongside the architect, then transitions to construction under a GMP.

The GMP caps the owner’s cost exposure. If construction costs exceed that ceiling, the CMc absorbs them. The CMc’s early involvement also reduces schedule risk because constructability issues get resolved during design rather than in the field.

Design risk still flows through a separate owner-architect agreement, the same as in design-bid-build. The owner retains design risk, and the CMc carries construction risk above the GMP.

Best fit when: You want GMP protection with early contractor involvement.

AIA documents for CMc:

Construction Manager as Constructor vs. Design-Build

Both models bring contractors in early, but accountability is structured differently. In the CMc model, the owner has a direct relationship with the architect, which means more design influence and exposure.

In design-build, design and construction risk are consolidated under one party. Owners who want design input alongside cost protection often choose CMc with GMP.

CMa Keeps Risk With the Contractor

The construction manager as adviser (CMa) model brings a construction manager in to advise and represent the owner, but not as the constructor. The CMa does not hold trade contracts or carry construction risk.

  • Separate contractors perform construction under separate agreements.
  • Construction risk remains with the contractor holding the prime agreement.
  • Design risk remains with the owner through the architect contract.

The CMa’s risk profile is closer to design-bid-build than to construction manager as constructor. The CM’s value is in managing complexity across multiple contracts, not in absorbing risk.

Construction manager as adviser is a practical choice for experienced owners managing large or complex programs who want independent professional oversight without moving their adviser into a constructor role.

Best fit when: You need independent oversight on a complex project.

AIA documents for CMa:

Integrated Project Delivery: Shared Risk, Shared Reward

Integrated project delivery (IPD) is built around shared decision-making, shared risk, and shared reward. The owner, architect, and contractor sign a single multi-party agreement. Risk and reward are shared across all three parties, including financial upside if the project performs better than targets.

The integrated project delivery agreement establishes a shared target cost and a shared savings or risk pool. If costs stay within target, all parties benefit. If costs overrun, all parties contribute to the resolution. That shared structure creates alignment incentives no other delivery model can match.

Integrated project delivery demands a high level of trust and open-book accounting from all participants. It is not suited to every project or team, but for complex projects where design, engineering, and construction require deep collaboration from early phases, it can significantly reduce waste and disputes.

Best fit when: Collaboration and shared outcomes outweigh traditional risk allocation.

AIA documents for IDP:

Delivery Methods Across the Five Risk Questions

The table below summarizes how each delivery method allocates risk across the five risk questions.

Project TypeCost RiskSchedule RiskDesign RiskPerformance RiskCoordination Risk
Design-Bid-Build
🟩
Fixed-Price
🟥
Sequential
🟥
Owner
🟨
Contractor
🟥
Owner
Design-Build
🟨
Scope Driven
🟩
Fast-Track
🟩
Single Entity
🟩
Single Entity
🟩
Single Entity
CMc (GMP)
🟩
GMP Cap
🟨
Early Input
🟥
Owner
🟨
Shared
🟨
CMc Leads
CMa
🟨
Variable
🟧
Complex
🟥
Owner
🟥
Owner
🟧
Owner
IPD
🤝
Shared Pool
🤝
Shared Goals
🤝
Shared Team
🤝
Shared Team
🤝
Shared Team

Key

🟩 Lower owner exposure
🟨 Shared or manageable exposure
🟧 Meaningful owner exposure
🟥 Significant owner exposure
🤝 Risk intentionally shared among parties

Match Your Risk Tolerance to the Right Delivery Method

Every project is different, but these guidelines can provide a useful starting point to choose the best delivery method.

  • Use design-bid-build when your project scope is well defined before construction begins and competitive price certainty is your priority. Design-bid-build gives you the most transparent market-tested price, and the fixed-price contract protects you once construction starts.
  • Use design-build when you want a single point of accountability for design and construction, your schedule cannot accommodate sequential phases, and you can define performance outcomes clearly. Consider using progressive design-build if you need design collaboration before locking on a final price.
  • Use a CMc with GMP when you want cost certainty with early contractor involvement. CMc gives you more design control than design-build while still protecting against cost overruns.
  • Use a CMa when you are managing a complex, multi-contract program and want independent professional oversight without moving your adviser into a constructor role.
  • Use IDP when your project demands deep design-construction collaboration from the earliest phases, all three parties can operate under an open-book model, and shared risk and reward are acceptable to your organization.
Pro Tip There is no universally lowest-risk delivery method; the right answer depends on your project and your risk tolerance.

Find the Contract That Fits Your Delivery Method

Once you have identified the delivery method that fits your project, the next step is selecting agreements that align with that risk profile. The right contract structure helps ensure responsibilities, expectations, and risk allocation match the way your project will be delivered.

With an unlimited subscription, you get access to the full document library across every delivery method, so the right contract is ready when you are.

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is for general informational purposes only, and the views contained herein are the author’s own. It is not legal advice or legal opinion; it does not create any attorney-client relationship; and it may not be used to indicate any intent or to inform any interpretation of ACD’s documents or services, which the AIA Documents Committee separately creates. If you need advice, seek the help of an attorney or other qualified professional who can help you make decisions based on the specifics of your situation.