Allowable Cost: The Ultimate Guide for Government Contractors and Grantees

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.

Imagine you're a small business owner, Sarah, who just landed your first big government contract to provide IT support for a local federal agency. It's a “cost-reimbursement” contract, meaning the government has agreed to pay you back for the expenses you incur while doing the work, plus a fee. You're ecstatic. To celebrate and get the project started right, you buy top-of-the-line computers for your two new hires, take the whole team out for a celebratory steak dinner, and even run a few local radio ads to announce your company's big win. You diligently submit your invoices, including these receipts, expecting a full reimbursement. A few weeks later, you get a letter back from the government's `contracting_officer_co`. They’ve paid for the computers, but rejected the costs for the steak dinner and the radio ads. Confused and worried, you ask, “Why? Weren't these legitimate business expenses?” Sarah just ran into the critical concept of allowable cost. In the world of government funding, not every legitimate business expense is a bill the government is willing to pay. An allowable cost is an expense that is recognized as valid and reimbursable under the specific terms of a government contract or grant. It’s the government’s way of ensuring taxpayer money is spent reasonably, efficiently, and directly on the intended public purpose.

  • The Golden Rule: For a cost to be an allowable cost, it must generally meet three core tests: it must be reasonable, allocable to the specific government project, and compliant with all relevant laws and regulations, like the `federal_acquisition_regulation_far`.
  • Your Bottom Line: Understanding the rules of allowable cost is not just about compliance; it's about financial survival. Misclassifying costs can lead to non-payment, financial penalties, and even damage to your company's reputation, making it harder to win future contracts.
  • Documentation is Everything: The government doesn't just take your word for it. You must maintain meticulous records—timesheets, receipts, invoices—to prove that every dollar you claim as an allowable cost was spent appropriately.

The Story of Allowable Cost: A Historical Journey

The concept of “allowable cost” didn't emerge from ancient legal scrolls; it's a distinctly modern invention, born from the massive expansion of government spending in the 20th century. Before World War II, most government procurement involved buying fixed-price goods—so many boots, so many rifles. The government paid the agreed-upon price, and the contractor's internal costs were their own business. The sheer scale and complexity of wartime production changed everything. The government needed to rapidly develop new technologies like radar and the atomic bomb. It was impossible to set a fixed price on projects where the final cost was unknowable. This led to the rise of the `cost_plus_contract`, where the government agreed to reimburse a contractor's costs and add a fee for profit. This new model created an obvious problem: what was to stop a contractor from gold-plating everything and sending the government an infinite bill? To combat this, agencies began developing “cost principles”—the first rules defining what was, and was not, a reasonable expense to charge the taxpayer. After the war, these rules became more formalized. The process culminated in two landmark regulatory frameworks that govern the landscape today:

  • The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR): Created in 1984, the `federal_acquisition_regulation_far` unified the tangled web of procurement rules from various defense and civilian agencies into a single, comprehensive code. Part 31 of the FAR, “Contract Cost Principles and Procedures,” became the bible for determining allowable costs in federal contracts.
  • The OMB Uniform Guidance: For decades, organizations receiving federal grants—non-profits, universities, local governments—faced a similar patchwork of confusing rules from different funding agencies. In 2014, the `office_of_management_and_budget_omb` issued its Uniform Guidance (officially 2 CFR Part 200), which consolidated and streamlined these rules, creating a single set of cost principles for nearly all federal grant recipients.

This evolution reflects a core tension: the government's need for innovative goods and services from the private sector versus its duty to be a responsible steward of public funds. The rules of allowable cost are the primary tool for managing that tension.

The rules for allowable costs are not found in a single law passed by Congress but are detailed in comprehensive federal regulations. These are the two key documents you must know:

  • For Government Contractors: The `federal_acquisition_regulation_far`, specifically FAR Subpart 31.2 - Contracts with Commercial Organizations. This is the primary rulebook. A key section, FAR 31.201-2, lays out the determining factors for allowability:

> “A cost is allowable only when the cost complies with all of the following requirements: (a) Reasonableness. (b) Allocability. © Standards promulgated by the CAS Board, if applicable; otherwise, generally accepted accounting principles and practices… (d) Terms of the contract. (e) Any limitations set forth in this subpart.”

  • Plain English Translation: To get reimbursed for a cost under a federal contract, you must prove it was a sensible expense (reasonableness), that it was incurred for the benefit of that specific contract (allocability), that you followed proper accounting rules (standards), that the expense wasn't forbidden by your specific contract's fine print (terms), and that it isn't on the FAR's list of specifically unallowable costs (limitations).
  • For Grantees (Non-Profits, Universities, etc.): The `omb_uniform_guidance` (2 CFR Part 200), specifically Subpart E - Cost Principles. This document largely mirrors the principles in the FAR but is tailored to the grant environment. Section §200.403 states:

> “Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal awards: (a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award… (b) Be allocable to the Federal award… (g) Be adequately documented.”

  • Plain English Translation: For grant recipients, the core idea is the same. The cost must be necessary, reasonable, directly tied to the grant's purpose, and, critically, you must have the paperwork to prove it.

While the core principles are federal, their application varies depending on the type of organization and funding. State and local grants often adopt the federal standards but can add their own unique restrictions.

Entity Type Governing Regulation Key Focus Area What It Means For You
For-Profit Federal Contractor `federal_acquisition_regulation_far` Part 31 Strict separation of direct and indirect costs; detailed list of unallowable costs (e.g., lobbying, entertainment). You need a sophisticated accounting system capable of tracking costs to specific projects and segregating unallowable expenses. Audits by the `defense_contract_audit_agency_dcaa` are common.
Non-Profit Grant Recipient `omb_uniform_guidance` (2 CFR 200) Emphasis on ensuring costs further the non-profit's mission and the grant's objective. Rules on fundraising costs are critical. Your accounting must clearly show how grant funds are used for program activities versus general fundraising or administrative costs.
University/Educational Institution `omb_uniform_guidance` (2 CFR 200) Complex rules for allocating faculty salaries, facilities, and administrative (F&A) costs across research grants and educational activities. You must conduct detailed studies to justify your F&A (or `indirect_cost`) rate and have robust systems for tracking faculty effort.
State Grant Recipient (e.g., Texas) State Administrative Code + Federal Rules (if federal pass-through funds) Often mirrors federal rules but may have lower caps on administrative costs or specific state-level prohibitions. You must comply with both the federal rules (if applicable) and any additional, often stricter, state requirements. Always read the state grant agreement carefully.

Think of allowability as a three-legged stool. If any one leg is missing, the entire claim collapses. A cost must be reasonable, allocable, AND compliant to be considered allowable.

Element: Reasonableness

This is the “common sense” test. The FAR defines a reasonable cost as one that “does not exceed that which would be incurred by a prudent person in the conduct of competitive business.” It's not about finding the absolute cheapest option, but about acting responsibly. To determine reasonableness, an auditor will ask:

  • Is this a cost that a well-managed business would typically incur?
  • Did you follow your own established company policies and procedures?
  • Did you act with “arm's length” bargaining? (e.g., you didn't overpay for supplies from a company owned by your brother-in-law).
  • Did you consider your responsibilities to the government and the public?

Hypothetical Example: You need to fly an engineer from Boston to San Diego for a project meeting.

  • Reasonable: Booking a standard economy class ticket two weeks in advance.
  • Likely Unreasonable: Booking a first-class ticket the day before the flight for triple the price. While a legitimate business trip, the *amount* of the cost is not prudent. The government would likely only reimburse you for the cost of a reasonably priced economy ticket.

Element: Allocability

A cost is allocable if it is charged to a specific contract or grant based on the benefit received. In other words, you have to connect the dots between the expense and the government project. A cost is allocable if it:

  • Is incurred specifically for the government contract. This is a `direct_cost`.
  • Benefits both the contract and other work, and can be distributed between them in reasonable proportion to the benefits received. This is an `indirect_cost` (like overhead or G&A).
  • Is necessary to the overall operation of the business, although a direct relationship to any particular cost objective cannot be shown. This is also part of your `indirect_cost` pool.

Hypothetical Example: Your company has two projects: a federal contract (Project A) and a commercial job (Project B).

  • Direct Cost (Allocable): You buy a specialized software license that will only be used for Project A. The entire cost of that license is allocable to the government contract.
  • Indirect Cost (Allocable): You pay the monthly rent for your office where employees working on both Project A and Project B sit. The rent is a necessary business expense. You can allocate a portion of the rent to Project A based on a fair method, such as the percentage of office space used by Project A employees.
  • Not Allocable: You buy tickets to a baseball game for an employee who only works on the commercial Project B. This cost provides no benefit to the government contract (Project A) and therefore cannot be charged to it, even as overhead.

Element: Compliance with Standards and Terms

This is the “read the fine print” leg of the stool. Even if a cost is reasonable and allocable, it can still be unallowable if it violates a specific rule. This includes:

  • The Terms of Your Specific Contract/Grant: Your agreement might have special clauses that prohibit certain costs.
  • Cost Accounting Standards (CAS): A set of 19 more rigorous accounting rules that apply to larger government contractors.
  • Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP): The baseline accounting standards for all businesses.
  • Specific Prohibitions in FAR 31.205: This is the government's “forbidden list.” It identifies dozens of cost types that are explicitly unallowable.

Hypothetical Example: As part of a marketing push, you hire a firm to lobby members of Congress to increase your agency's budget, which would hopefully lead to more work for you. The cost is reasonable (the lobbying firm charged a fair market rate) and you might argue it's allocable (it benefits your whole business, including the government side). However, FAR 31.205-22 expressly makes lobbying costs unallowable. Therefore, the claim will be rejected.

  • The Contractor/Grantee: Your organization. Your responsibility is to propose costs, perform the work, maintain meticulous records, and certify that the costs you claim are allowable.
  • The Contracting Officer (CO) or Grant Officer: The government official with the legal authority to enter into, administer, and terminate contracts/grants. They are the final arbiter of what the government will pay for. They rely on auditors and technical staff to make informed decisions.
  • The Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA): The primary auditing agency for the Department of Defense and many civilian agencies. If you have a significant `cost_reimbursement_contract`, you can expect to meet the DCAA. Their role is to audit your accounting systems, proposals, and incurred cost claims to ensure they comply with the FAR. Their findings are advisory to the `contracting_officer_co`, but carry enormous weight.
  • The Grant Manager/Program Officer: For grantees, this is your day-to-day contact at the funding agency. They monitor your programmatic progress and are the first line of review for your financial reports.

Step 1: Read and Understand Your Contract or Grant Agreement

This is the most critical step. Before you spend a single dollar, read the entire funding document. Pay special attention to the sections on cost principles, financial reporting, and any special clauses that might limit or prohibit certain types of spending. If you don't understand something, ask the `contracting_officer_co` or Grant Officer for clarification in writing.

Step 2: Set Up a Compliant Accounting System

You cannot manage allowable costs with a shoebox full of receipts. Your accounting system must be able to:

  1. Segregate `direct_cost` from `indirect_cost`.
  2. Assign direct costs to the specific projects they benefit.
  3. Pool indirect costs (like rent, utilities, management salaries) into logical groups (e.g., Overhead, G&A).
  4. Exclude unallowable costs from any billings to the government. You should have separate accounts specifically for unallowable costs like entertainment or alcohol.

Step 3: Implement Strong Timekeeping and Documentation Policies

Labor is often the largest single cost. You must have a robust timekeeping system where every employee records their time worked on specific projects every single day. For other costs, the rule is simple: if it isn't documented, it didn't happen. Keep every receipt, invoice, and travel report. Notes on a receipt explaining the business purpose can be invaluable during an audit years later.

Step 4: Know the Unallowable "Forbidden List"

Study FAR 31.205 (for contractors) or 2 CFR 200.420-476 (for grantees). While there are dozens, some of the most common unallowable costs include:

  1. Alcoholic Beverages
  2. Entertainment Costs (amusement, social activities, etc.)
  3. Interest on Borrowing (with a few exceptions)
  4. Lobbying and Political Activity Costs
  5. Bad Debts
  6. Fines, Penalties, and Mischarging Costs
  7. Advertising and Public Relations (except for specific types like recruiting personnel required for the contract)
  8. Donations and Contributions

Step 5: Prepare for Audits and Incurred Cost Submissions

If you have a cost-reimbursement contract, you will likely have to submit an `incurred_cost_submission_ics` annually. This is a complex report that details all your direct and indirect costs for the year and calculates your final, actual `indirect_cost` rates. The DCAA will audit this submission. Being organized and having your documentation in order from day one will make this process infinitely smoother.

  • Time Sheets: The single most important source document for labor costs. Must be filled out daily by the employee, signed, and approved by a supervisor. It must clearly separate time by project or cost objective.
  • Vendor Invoices and Receipts: For anything you buy—materials, supplies, subcontracts, travel—you need the original invoice or receipt. It should be annotated with the project number and a description of the purpose.
  • Incurred Cost Submission (ICS): For contractors, this is the annual true-up report submitted to the government (using a template often called the “ICE Model”). It is the basis for the DCAA's audit and the final determination of your indirect rates for a given year.

This area of law is less about landmark court cases and more about the practical application of rules during audits. Here are some common scenarios where companies get into trouble.

  • The Situation: A small defense contractor holds its annual holiday party at a fancy downtown hotel. It includes an open bar, a live band, and an expensive dinner for all employees and their spouses. The total cost is $20,000. The company's accountant includes this cost in the company's G&A overhead pool, meaning a portion of it gets billed to the government.
  • The Finding: An auditor flags the cost. Under FAR 31.205-13, costs of “entertainment, including amusement, diversion, and social activities” are unallowable. The entire $20,000 is rejected.
  • The Impact on You: While employee morale activities are important, lavish social events are considered unallowable entertainment. Modest costs for coffee, snacks, or occasional employee recognition awards may be allowable, but a big party is almost certainly not.
  • The Situation: A non-profit receives a federal grant to run a one-year public health campaign. They purchase a three-year, 10-user license for a high-end graphic design software suite for $5,000. Two of the users work exclusively on the federal grant. The other eight work on other non-profit activities. The non-profit charges the entire $5,000 cost to the grant.
  • The Finding: The cost is deemed improperly allocated. Only a portion of the cost benefits the federal award. An auditor would likely only allow 2/10ths (for the two users) of 1/3rd (for the one year of the grant period) of the cost. So, ($5,000 * 0.2 * 0.33) = $330 is allowable, not $5,000.
  • The Impact on You: You must have a fair and logical basis for allocating costs that benefit multiple projects or activities. You cannot charge a cost to the government just because it's a convenient source of funds.
  • The Situation: A contractor's CEO takes a Program Manager from a federal agency out to an expensive lunch to discuss the contractor's performance and potential future work. The CEO submits the $250 receipt as a “business development” expense and includes it in the G&A pool.
  • The Finding: This cost is unallowable for multiple reasons. First, it could be seen as entertainment. Second, and more importantly, costs aimed at marketing and selling to the government that are not related to submitting a specific bid or proposal are often considered unallowable marketing or lobbying under FAR 31.205-1 and 31.205-22.
  • The Impact on You: The line between allowable business development (e.g., writing a proposal) and unallowable marketing can be thin. When in doubt, assume costs related to schmoozing government officials are unallowable.

The world of work is changing, and the government's cost principles are often slow to catch up. This creates gray areas and debates:

  • Remote Work Costs: Are employee home internet bills, ergonomic chairs for home offices, or increased utility costs allowable `indirect_cost`? Many contractors are grappling with how to treat these new costs fairly and consistently.
  • Cybersecurity: As cyber threats grow, companies are spending more on advanced security tools, insurance, and personnel. Are these costs `direct_cost` to specific high-security contracts, or are they a general G&A expense? The DCAA and contractors are actively debating the proper allocation.
  • Employee Wellness and Morale: Companies increasingly see wellness programs, mental health support, and flexible work perks as necessary to attract and retain talent. While a holiday party is unallowable, is a subscription to a mindfulness app or a gym membership subsidy allowable as an employee relations cost? The rules are often unclear.

The future of allowable cost will be shaped by technology and evolving federal priorities.

  • AI-Powered Accounting: Expect to see AI tools that can automatically scan receipts, flag potentially unallowable keywords (e.g., “alcohol,” “golf”), and suggest proper cost allocations. This could streamline compliance but will also give auditors more powerful tools to find errors.
  • Focus on New Priorities: As the government prioritizes issues like climate change, domestic supply chains, and cybersecurity, we may see new regulations that explicitly make certain costs allowable to encourage investment in these areas. For example, the cost of conducting a carbon footprint audit or paying a premium for American-made materials could become specifically designated as allowable.
  • Data-Driven Audits: Instead of sampling transactions, auditors will be able to analyze 100% of a contractor's data, using algorithms to spot anomalies in timekeeping, travel expenses, and cost allocations. This will require contractors to have even more robust and transparent systems.
  • `allocability`: The principle that a cost must be assigned to the specific contract or grant that it benefits.
  • `cost_accounting_standards_cas`: A set of 19 detailed accounting rules that apply to larger federal contractors.
  • `cost_plus_contract`: A contract where the government pays the contractor's total allowable costs plus a fee or profit.
  • `cost_reimbursement_contract`: A type of contract where a contractor is paid for all of its allowed expenses to a set limit, plus an additional payment to allow the company to make a profit.
  • `defense_contract_audit_agency_dcaa`: The government agency responsible for performing audits of contractors for the Department of Defense and other federal agencies.
  • `direct_cost`: A cost that can be identified specifically with a single, final cost objective (e.g., one specific contract).
  • `federal_acquisition_regulation_far`: The primary set of rules in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations governing all federal executive agency acquisitions.
  • `general_and_administrative_g&a`: A type of `indirect_cost` that represents the costs of running the business as a whole, such as executive salaries, accounting, and legal fees.
  • `incurred_cost_submission_ics`: An annual report contractors must submit detailing their actual indirect costs for the year to finalize their billing rates.
  • `indirect_cost`: A cost that benefits multiple projects or the business as a whole and cannot be easily identified with a single contract (e.g., rent, utilities).
  • `office_of_management_and_budget_omb`: The agency that oversees the implementation of the federal budget and federal regulations.
  • `overhead`: A type of `indirect_cost` associated with supporting a specific function, such as the costs of running a manufacturing facility that benefits all projects built there.
  • `reasonableness`: The principle that a cost must be one that a “prudent person” would pay in a competitive business situation.
  • `unallowable_cost`: A cost that cannot be billed to the government under any circumstances, as defined by regulation or the contract terms.