What is an RFI

Summary: An RFI (Request for Information) is a formal written request from a contractor to a designer or owner seeking clarification on construction documents. RFIs are used when drawings are unclear, information is conflicting, or details are missing. The RFI process is critical for documentation and often leads to drawing revisions that must be tracked for scope changes.

Definition

An RFI (Request for Information) is the formal mechanism contractors use to request clarification when construction documents don’t provide enough information to proceed with work. Rather than making assumptions that could lead to costly rework, contractors submit RFIs to get official answers from the design team.

RFIs create a documented paper trail that:

  • Clarifies design intent before work begins
  • Protects all parties by recording questions and responses
  • Identifies gaps or conflicts in construction documents
  • Often triggers drawing revisions or change orders

When to Submit an RFI

SituationExample
Unclear drawingsDimension missing from a detail, unclear material specification
Conflicting informationArchitectural drawings show one thing, structural drawings show another
Missing detailsReference to a detail that doesn’t exist in the drawing set
Ambiguous specificationsSpec says “or equal” without defining acceptable alternatives
Coordination conflictsMEP routing conflicts with structural elements
Code compliance questionsDesign appears to conflict with local building codes
Constructability issuesDesign cannot be built as shown in the field

When NOT to Submit an RFI

  • Questions answered elsewhere in the documents (search first)
  • Requests for design changes (use substitution request or change order request)
  • Pricing questions (use bid clarification during bidding phase)
  • Information already provided but misplaced by the contractor

The RFI Process

Standard RFI Workflow

  1. Contractor identifies issue - Field team or project engineer discovers unclear or conflicting information
  2. RFI drafted - Formal document prepared with specific question, relevant drawing references, and suggested resolution if applicable
  3. RFI submitted - Sent to general contractor (if subcontractor) or directly to design team
  4. RFI logged - Tracked in project management system with unique number and timestamp
  5. Designer reviews - Architect or engineer evaluates the question
  6. Response issued - Written response provided, often with sketches or revised details
  7. Response distributed - Answer shared with relevant parties
  8. Work proceeds - Construction continues based on clarified information

Typical RFI Timeline

PhaseTypical Duration
Contractor drafts RFI1-2 days
GC review and forwarding1-3 days
Design team response3-10 days (contract-dependent)
Distribution and implementation1-2 days
Total cycle time1-3 weeks

Contract documents typically specify required response times, often 7-14 days for standard RFIs.

RFI Impact on Projects

Industry Statistics

MetricImpact
Average RFIs per project800+ on large commercial projects
Cost per RFI$1,000-$2,000 to process (labor for all parties)
RFI-related delaysLeading cause of schedule claims
Response time40% of RFIs exceed contractual response deadlines

Schedule Impact

RFIs affect project schedule in multiple ways:

  • Direct delays - Work cannot proceed until answer received
  • Out-of-sequence work - Crews moved to other areas while waiting
  • Cascade effects - Delayed trades impact subsequent work
  • Acceleration costs - Overtime to recover lost time

Cost Impact

Cost CategoryDescription
Processing costLabor to draft, review, log, and respond
Delay costsStandby labor, equipment, extended overhead
Redesign costsDesign team hours to resolve complex issues
Change order costsWhen RFI response changes scope

RFIs and Drawing Revisions

A significant percentage of RFI responses result in revised drawings. This connection is critical:

The RFI-to-Drawing-Revision Pipeline

  1. RFI submitted - Contractor identifies document issue
  2. Designer investigates - Design team reviews the question
  3. Revision required - Many RFIs reveal design issues requiring formal drawing updates
  4. Revised drawings issued - New revision of affected sheets distributed
  5. Changes must be tracked - Contractor needs to identify all changes in new revision

Why This Matters

When a revised drawing is issued in response to an RFI:

  • The revision may contain only the RFI-related change
  • The revision may contain additional changes beyond the RFI
  • Other unrelated changes may have been incorporated
  • The contractor must review the entire sheet for all modifications

This is where drawing comparison becomes essential. The RFI response tells you what the designer intended to change. Drawing comparison shows you what actually changed.

What You KnowWhat You Need
RFI response describes intended clarificationFull list of all changes on revised sheet
Designer’s verbal/written explanationVisual documentation of every modification
Expected change based on your questionUnexpected changes that affect scope

RFI Documentation Requirements

Essential RFI Components

ElementPurpose
Unique RFI numberTracking and reference
Date submittedTimeline documentation
Drawing/spec referenceSpecific location of issue
Clear questionPrecise description of what needs clarification
Impact descriptionHow lack of information affects work
Suggested resolutionContractor’s proposed interpretation (optional but helpful)
Response required byDeadline based on schedule impact

Response Documentation

RFI responses should include:

  • Clear written answer to the question
  • Reference to any revised drawings being issued
  • Confirmation of cost/schedule impact (or lack thereof)
  • Signatures from authorized design team members

Best Practices for RFI Management

PracticeBenefit
Submit earlyAvoid delays when work reaches that phase
Be specificVague questions get vague answers
Include graphicsMark up drawings to show exact location of concern
Suggest solutionsSpeeds response when you offer reasonable options
Track response timesDocument delays for potential claims
Compare revised drawingsVerify response and identify other changes
Link RFIs to changesConnect responses to change orders when scope is affected

RFI Connection to Change Orders

Many RFIs reveal scope issues that warrant change orders:

RFI OutcomeChange Order Implication
Clarification onlyNo change order needed
Added scopeChange order for additional work
Reduced scopeCredit change order may apply
Different materialsCost adjustment if price differs
Design errorPotential change order depending on contract

The documentation from RFIs and subsequent drawing comparisons provides the evidence needed to support change order requests.

How Drawing Comparison Supports RFI Workflows

After receiving RFI responses with revised drawings:

Without Drawing ComparisonWith Drawing Comparison
Trust that only RFI-related changes were madeVerify all changes on revised sheets
May miss undocumented modificationsCapture every change regardless of RFI scope
No visual record of what changedClear documentation for change orders
Rely on revision clouds (often incomplete)Detect changes whether clouded or not

Drawing comparison answers: “What else changed besides the RFI response?”

FAQ

What’s the difference between an RFI and a submittal?

An RFI asks for clarification on existing design documents. A submittal provides product-specific information for designer approval before procurement or installation. RFIs are questions; submittals are answers to specification requirements.

Who can submit an RFI?

Typically the general contractor or construction manager submits RFIs to the design team. Subcontractors usually route RFIs through the GC rather than directly to designers, though this varies by contract.

What happens if the designer doesn’t respond in time?

Contract documents typically specify consequences for late responses, which may include schedule relief for the contractor. Persistent delays become documentation for delay claims.

Can an RFI be verbal?

No. RFIs must be written and formally logged to create proper documentation. Verbal clarifications should be confirmed in writing, often as an RFI to memorialize the response.

How many RFIs is normal?

RFI volume varies by project complexity. Large commercial projects commonly generate 800+ RFIs. High RFI counts may indicate incomplete design documents or scope definition issues.

Key Takeaways

  • An RFI is a formal request for clarification when construction documents are unclear, conflicting, or incomplete
  • The average large project generates 800+ RFIs, each costing $1,000-$2,000 to process
  • RFI responses frequently result in revised drawings that must be reviewed for all changes
  • Drawing comparison ensures you catch every change in a revision, not just the RFI-related modifications
  • Proper RFI documentation supports change order requests and protects against disputes
  • Early RFI submission and thorough tracking are essential for project success

Last updated: 2026-02-04