Top 30 Interview Questions & Answers for Cost Control Engineer

Below are the Top 30 Cost Control Engineer Interview Questions & Answers, all crafted using concepts from AACE International’s Recommended Practices (RPs), Skills & Knowledge of Cost Engineering (S&K), and standard Project Controls methodologies.

This set is suitable for interviews in EPC, Construction, Oil & Gas, Infrastructure, and Manufacturing sectors.
Answers are detailed, practical, and aligned with AACE standards—especially RP 10R-90, 11R-88, 31R-03, 34R-05, 42R-08, 52R-06, 84R-13, and S&K 7th Edition.


TOP 30 COST CONTROL ENGINEER INTERVIEW QUESTIONS & AACE-BASED ANSWERS


1. What is Cost Control according to AACE?

Answer:
AACE defines cost control as a continuous process of monitoring cost performance, comparing actual cost against planned cost, analyzing variances, forecasting future performance, and recommending corrective actions.
It involves:

  • Budgeting
  • Measuring job cost performance
  • Analyzing deviations
  • Forecasting (EAC/ETC)
  • Implementing corrective actions
    (Ref: AACE S&K – Cost Control Section)

2. What is a Cost Baseline?

Answer:
The Cost Baseline is the time-phased budget developed from the approved estimate. It represents the planned expenditure across the project duration.
It is used as the benchmark for variance analysis.
(Ref: RP 10R-90 – Cost Engineering Terminology)


3. Explain Cost Variance (CV).

Answer:
CV = EV – AC

  • Positive CV → under budget
  • Negative CV → over budget
    This is an Earned Value metric to evaluate cost performance.
    (Ref: RP 84R-13 – EVM Basics)

4. What is Earned Value (EV)?

Answer:
EV is the budgeted value of the work actually completed to date.
It integrates scope, cost, and schedule into one performance measure.
(Ref: RP 84R-13)


5. What is the Cost Performance Index (CPI)?

Answer:
CPI = EV / AC

  • CPI > 1.0 → cost-efficient
  • CPI < 1.0 → cost overrun trend
    CPI is one of the most reliable metrics for forecasting final cost.
    (Ref: AACE EVM Principles)

6. Explain Estimate at Completion (EAC).

Answer:
Most common formula in AACE:
EAC = BAC / CPI
It predicts the total cost at project completion assuming current performance continues.
(Ref: RP 84R-13)


7. What is Estimate to Complete (ETC)?

Answer:
ETC = EAC – AC
It indicates the future cost required to finish the remaining work.
(Ref: AACE EVM Guide)


8. What is the difference between Budget and Forecast?

Answer:

  • Budget: Approved plan
  • Forecast: Updated prediction
    Forecast reflects actual performance, trends, risks, and changes.
    (Ref: AACE S&K – Forecasting)

9. What is Change Management?

Answer:
AACE defines it as the controlled process of identifying, evaluating, approving, and implementing modifications to project scope, cost, or schedule.
(Ref: RP 86R-14 – Change Management)


10. What is a Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)?

Answer:
A hierarchical decomposition of project scope.
It is the foundation for:

  • Cost coding
  • Estimating
  • Planning
  • Performance measurement
    (Ref: AACE RP 36R-08 – WBS Development)

11. What is Cost Coding Structure?

Answer:
AACE recommends a standardized cost structure linking:

  • WBS
  • Resource codes
  • Cost accounts
    This ensures consistent cost tracking across cost centers.
    (Ref: AACE S&K – Cost Coding)

12. What is Value of Work Done (VOWD)?

Answer:
AACE defines VOWD as the best estimate of physical progress, often used in procurement-heavy industries like Oil & Gas.
Used when EV is not appropriate.
(Ref: AACE VOWD Guidelines – RP 58R-10)


13. What is a Cost Account?

Answer:
Smallest work unit where:

  • Scope
  • Budget
  • Schedule
  • Responsibility
    are assigned.
    This is the control point for performance measurement.
    (Ref: RP 31R-03 – Cost Account Management)

14. What is Rebaseline or Revised Baseline?

Answer:
Creating a new baseline to reflect approved changes or major deviations.
Requires formal approval.
(Ref: RP 52R-06 – Baseline Development)


15. What is Commitment?

Answer:
Any legally binding financial liability (POs, subcontracts, LPOs) that obligates future cash outflow.
Commitment tracking is essential for forecasting.
(Ref: AACE S&K – Cost Accounting)


16. What is the difference between Direct and Indirect Cost?

Answer:

  • Direct: Costs directly tied to scope (labor, materials).
  • Indirect: Supporting costs (overheads, supervision).
    (Ref: AACE Terminology – RP 10R-90)

17. What is a Cost Trend?

Answer:
A process of identifying early deviations between budget and actual/forecast so corrective action can be taken.
Actively used in EPC industry.
(Ref: RP 65R-11 – Cost Trend Program)


18. What is Cash Flow in cost control?

Answer:
It is the time-phased projection of cash inflows and outflows.
AACE emphasizes linking it with schedule and commitments.
(Ref: AACE S&K – Financial & Cash Flow)


19. What is Risk Contingency?

Answer:
Contingency is the cost buffer assigned to cover quantified risks.
It is NOT for scope changes.
(Ref: RP 40R-08 – Contingency Estimating)


20. What is Management Reserve (MR)?

Answer:
Budget reserved for unknown-unknowns (unpredictable risks).
Controlled only by top management.
(Ref: RP 64R-11 – Management Reserve)


21. What is EVM and why is it important?

Answer:
Earned Value Management integrates:

  • Scope
  • Schedule
  • Cost
    It provides early warning signals and objective performance measurement.
    (Ref: RP 84R-13)

22. How do you measure Physical Progress?

Answer:
AACE recommends:

  • Fixed formula
  • Weighted milestones
  • Units completed
  • Percent complete
  • Engineering deliverables
    Choice depends on activity nature.
    (Ref: RP 84R-13)

23. What is Productivity?

Answer:
Productivity = Output / Input
AACE uses productivity analysis for forecasting actual performance.
(Ref: AACE S&K – Productivity & Performance)


24. What is a Change Order?

Answer:
A formal written document authorizing adjustment to:

  • Scope
  • Time
  • Cost
    Should follow the change control workflow.
    (Ref: RP 108R-16 – Change Order Preparation)

25. How do you forecast EAC using a manual method?

Answer:
AACE offers:
EAC = AC + (Remaining Work / Efficiency Factor)
Where efficiency factor = CPI or a composite of CPI & SPI.
(Ref: RP 84R-13)


26. What is a Cost Report?

Answer:
AACE recommends cost reports include:

  • Budget vs Actual
  • Cost Variance
  • CPI/SPI
  • Forecast (EAC/ETC)
  • Commitments
  • Cash flow
  • Change order status
    (Ref: AACE Reporting Guidelines)

27. What is a Control Budget?

Answer:
Control Budget = Original Budget + Approved Changes
It excludes Management Reserve.
(Ref: RP 42R-08 – Control Accounts)


28. How do you control procurement costs?

Answer:
Using AACE guidelines:

  • Tracking commitments
  • VOWD for deliveries
  • Expediting delivery
  • Tracking payment milestones
  • Vendor progress validation
    (Ref: RP 58R-10 – VOWD)

29. What is the main role of a Cost Control Engineer?

Answer:
According to AACE:
“Monitor cost performance, analyze variances, manage trends, forecast final cost, and support decision-making to keep the project within budget.”
(Ref: S&K – Cost Control Functions)


30. Why should companies hire you as a Cost Control Engineer?

Answer (AACE-aligned):

  • Strong understanding of AACE principles
  • Ability to apply EVM, forecasting, variance analysis
  • Knowledge of WBS, cost accounts, contingency, change management
  • Experience in preparing cost reports and dashboards
  • Ability to support accurate financial decision-making
  • Commitment to ethical and professional standards of AACE