Services

Cost to Cure Reporting

Cost to Cure

Cost-to-Cure & Capital Planning Reports

Cost-to-cure reporting bridges the gap between physical observations and financial decision-making. Core Building Inspections provides transaction-oriented cost-to-cure analyses that translate building deficiencies into clear, defensible capital expectations.

Our reports identify material repairs and capital items, categorize them by urgency, and present budget- level cost opinions appropriate for underwriting, escrow requirements, and post-closing planning. We intentionally avoid inflated scopes or contractor-style bids. Our objective is to provide accurate, realistic cost ranges aligned with how lenders and investors actually use cost data. Cost-to-cure reporting can be delivered as a standalone service or integrated into a Property Condition Assessment.

Commercial Cost Reports & Capital Needs Assessments

Serving New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware & New York

A Commercial Cost Report—often referred to as a Capital Needs Assessment (CNA) or Cost-to-Cure Report—is a critical financial planning tool used in commercial real estate transactions to quantify near-term repairs, deferred maintenance, and long-term capital expenditures. At Core Building Inspections, we prepare clear, defensible Cost Reports that help lenders, investors, buyers, and property owners understand what a building will cost to own—not just what it looks like today.

We prepare Cost Reports for commercial properties throughout the Philadelphia metropolitan area, across South, Central, and North New Jersey, Northern Delaware, and select markets in New York. Our reports are commonly relied upon during acquisitions, refinancing, underwriting, and long-term asset planning.

What Is a Commercial Cost Report?

A Commercial Cost Report is a structured summary of probable costs associated with repairing, replacing, or maintaining major building systems over a defined planning horizon. These reports translate physical observations into financial terms so stakeholders can make informed decisions.
Cost Reports are often developed in conjunction with:

  • Property Condition Assessments (PCA)
  • ADA Accessibility Surveys
  • Pre-purchase due diligence
  • Lender underwriting reviews
  • Asset management and reserve planning

Rather than listing generic repair items, a well-prepared Cost Report prioritizes items based on urgency, remaining useful life (RUL), and material risk to ownership.

Why Cost Reports Matter in Commercial Real Estate

In commercial real estate, physical condition directly impacts:

  • Loan terms
  • Capital reserves
  • Purchase negotiations
  • Asset valuation
  • Risk exposure

Lenders and investors are less concerned with cosmetic issues and more focused on capital-intensive systems such as roofs, HVAC, pavement, and building envelope components. A Cost Report provides a financial roadmap for addressing those systems over time.

Without a Cost Report, buyers and lenders are often forced to rely on assumptions—creating risk, uncertainty, and pricing friction.

What Our Cost Reports Typically Include

Each Cost Report prepared by Core Building Inspections is tailored to the subject property, but commonly includes the following components:

Immediate Repairs

Items that require near-term attention due to:

  • Safety concerns
  • Active deterioration
  • Impacts to building performance

These items are typically considered Year 0 or near-term capital needs.

Deferred Maintenance

Repairs that have been postponed but are not yet causing failure. Deferred maintenance items are often cost-effective to address proactively to avoid accelerated deterioration.

Capital Replacement Items

Major building components nearing the end of their useful life, such as:

  • Roof systems
  • HVAC equipment
  • Electrical components
  • Parking lots and paving
  • Exterior wall systems

These items are scheduled based on Estimated Useful Life (EUL) and Remaining Useful Life (RUL) projections.

Budgetary Cost Estimates

We provide planning-level cost estimates for identified items. These estimates are intended for budgeting and decision-making—not contractor bidding—and are based on:

  • Observed conditions
  • Regional construction costs
  • Industry standards
  • Professional judgment

All costs are clearly labeled as estimates.

How Cost Reports Are Developed

Our Cost Reports are grounded in real-world building performance, not generic spreadsheets. The process typically includes:

  1. Review of site observations and system conditions
  2. Evaluation of age, condition, and serviceability
  3. Assignment of Estimated Useful Life (EUL)
  4. Projection of Remaining Useful Life (RUL)
  5. Identification of repair vs. replacement scenarios
  6. Development of budgetary cost allowances

This methodology aligns with how lenders, investors, and asset managers actually use Cost Reports.

ASTM Alignment and Lender Expectations

While Cost Reports themselves are not governed by a single ASTM standard, they are often prepared as part of, or in support of, an ASTM E2018-18 Property Condition Assessment.
Our Cost Reports are structured to complement ASTM-aligned PCAs and are designed to be:

  • Easily reviewed by credit committees
  • Consistent with underwriting assumptions
  • Clear in scope and limitations
  • Defensible during due diligence

We avoid speculative or inflated costs and focus on reasonable, supportable planning values.

Who Uses Commercial Cost Reports?

Our Cost Reports are commonly used by:

  • Commercial lenders and credit unions
  • Private and institutional investors
  • Buyers and acquisition teams
  • Attorneys and advisors
  • Owner-operators and asset managers

They are particularly valuable for:

  • Acquisition underwriting
  • Loan renewals and refinancing
  • Capital reserve planning
  • Negotiating purchase price adjustments
  • Portfolio-level asset planning

Property Types We Commonly Evaluate

We prepare Cost Reports for a wide range of commercial properties, including:

  • Office buildings
  • Retail centers and strip malls
  • Industrial and flex buildings
  • Mixed-use properties
  • Owner-occupied commercial facilities

Each property type presents unique capital considerations, which are reflected in our reporting approach.

Geographic Coverage

Core Building Inspections provides Commercial Cost Reports throughout:

  • Philadelphia Metro Area
    (Philadelphia, Bucks, Montgomery, Chester, and Delaware Counties)
  • All of New Jersey
    (South, Central, and North Jersey)
  • Northern Delaware
  • Select markets in New York

Our regional experience allows us to apply realistic cost assumptions based on common construction practices and building types in these markets.

Why Choose Core Building Inspections for Cost Reports?

Cost Reports require more than basic estimating—they require judgment, context, and restraint. Overstated costs can kill deals; understated costs create long-term risk.
Clients choose Core Building Inspections because:

  • We specialize in commercial buildings only
  • Our cost estimates are practical and defensible
  • We understand lender and investor expectations
  • We clearly distinguish between repairs and capital items
  • Our reports integrate seamlessly with PCAs and ADA surveys

Our goal is to provide decision-ready financial insight, not generic numbers.

Frequently asked questions

No. These are budget-level opinions for planning and underwriting.

Yes. Our format aligns with lender and credit-committee expectations.

Yes. We regularly structure cost-to-cure data for escrow and holdback purposes.

No. Cost Reports provide budgetary planning estimates, not bid pricing.

They are intended to be reasonable planning tools based on available information and typical market conditions. Actual costs may vary.

Many lenders require or strongly prefer cost information to accompany PCAs, especially for older properties or larger loan amounts.

Yes. Cost Reports are often updated following repairs, renovations, or changes in ownership strategy.

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