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Compare office fit-out quotes in Edinburgh

Edinburgh fit-out contractors navigate constraints that do not apply anywhere else in the UK. Georgian listed buildings in the New Town, Historic Environment Scotland consent requirements, and the contrast between sensitive city-centre stock and more modern Leith and Fountainbridge offices make this a market where specification and contractor experience matter as much as price. RFXapp collects their bids and standardises them so you can compare what they actually include, not just the bottom-line number.

If you are looking for the best contractors in Edinburgh, the most reliable shortlist is one built around your own requirements and tested with a structured brief - not a generic ranked list. RFXapp helps you find and collect quotes from the right suppliers, and analyse them so you can compare what they actually offer, not just the headline price.

What do you need to buy? Describe it in your own words.

What to consider before you go to market

Getting comparable quotes starts with a well-scoped brief. These are the things most businesses overlook until they're already in the process.

Category A vs Category B scope

Cat A is the blank canvas your landlord hands over: raised floors, ceiling grid, basic M&E to the floor plate. Cat B is everything you add: partitions, joinery, AV, kitchen, finishes. Know exactly what your landlord has provided before you brief contractors, or you will end up paying for things you already own or missing items entirely from the scope.

Listed building and Historic Environment Scotland consent

A significant proportion of Edinburgh city-centre office stock sits within listed buildings or Conservation Areas. Works that would require only a Building Warrant in a modern building may also need Listed Building Consent from the City of Edinburgh Council, and Historic Environment Scotland has a formal role in applications affecting Category A-listed properties. This adds several weeks to the pre-construction phase and constrains some finishes and fixings. Contractors who have not worked in this context will underestimate the process.

M&E capacity in older buildings

Georgian and Victorian commercial buildings in Edinburgh's New Town and Old Town were not designed for modern office electrical loads. Electrical distribution boards, HVAC systems, and riser capacities are frequently at or near their limits. A contractor who quotes without an M&E survey is quoting on assumptions. Commission the survey independently before tendering so that every contractor is working from the same known conditions.

Building Warrants and landlord consent

In Scotland, structural and significant M&E works require a Building Warrant from the local authority rather than the English building regulations approval process. This is separate from landlord consent - you typically need both for any substantive fit-out work. Scottish commercial leasehold operates under Scots law, and landlord consent for alterations follows a different legal mechanism to the English Licence to Alter, though the practical requirement (written permission before you start) is the same. Your contractor should understand both processes.

Lead times on key materials

Glazed partition systems are typically 10-14 weeks from order. Bespoke joinery is 8-12 weeks. Some specialist flooring is 6-8 weeks. A contractor who hasn't ordered long-lead items by week three of a 12-week programme will delay your move-in. When comparing quotes, ask each contractor for their procurement schedule, not just the build programme.

Dilapidations and exit obligations

Your commercial lease almost certainly contains reinstatement clauses requiring you to return the space to its original condition when you leave. In a listed building, reinstatement can be particularly costly if bespoke or non-standard finishes have been installed. Before you specify anything permanent or structural, get your solicitor to confirm what the reinstatement obligation actually covers under your Scottish commercial lease.

Hidden costs that catch Edinburgh businesses out

These are the items that make two quotes look comparable on paper but £40,000 apart by the time you're on site.

Listed building consent delays not accounted for in the programme

Where works affect a listed building's fabric - even something as seemingly minor as cutting through a historic wall for cabling - Listed Building Consent may be required in addition to a Building Warrant. The consent process at City of Edinburgh Council can take eight to twelve weeks, and Historic Environment Scotland's involvement on Category A properties extends this further. A contractor who hasn't factored this into the programme will hand you an overrun before work has even started. Clarify consent requirements with the council and your contractor before signing anything.

Asbestos and hazardous materials

Any pre-2000 commercial building in Edinburgh requires a refurbishment and demolition asbestos survey before destructive works begin - this is a legal requirement under the Control of Asbestos Regulations, not optional. Older Georgian and Victorian stock is particularly likely to contain asbestos in floor tiles, ceiling void insulation, and pipe lagging. Licensed remediation typically costs £5,000-£40,000 and adds four to eight weeks to your programme. Commission the survey yourself before going to market so every contractor is quoting on the same known conditions.

Variations pricing agreed at the point of need

Change orders and unforeseen works get priced at the moment of maximum inconvenience - when you're mid-project and can't switch contractors. Without a pre-agreed day-work rate and a capped variation mechanism in the contract, you are negotiating from a position of zero leverage. This is where most fit-out budgets actually blow out, not in the original quote.

Questions that separate good contractors from great ones

Asking is only half the job. Below each question is what a good answer sounds like, and what should give you pause. Questions marked * are mainly relevant for larger structural projects - for a straightforward refresh (repainting, new carpet, some furniture) you can skip those.

"Who specifically will be managing our project - can we have a quick call with them before we sign?"
Why ask it: The person who wins the job and the person who runs it are rarely the same. Even a 15-minute call tells you whether the actual PM understands your brief and communicates clearly.

Good answer: They name a specific person and offer to arrange a call within the week. The PM can speak to your brief without being briefed in front of you.

Red flag: "We'll allocate a project manager once contracts are signed." That means whoever is pitching has no idea who it will be.
"At what rate would you price day-works if unforeseen issues come up on site?"*
Why ask it: Variations get priced at the moment of maximum inconvenience - when you're mid-project and can't switch. Pre-agreeing the rate removes most of the pain.

Good answer: A specific day-work rate (e.g. £450-550 per operative per day) and a clear explanation of what triggers a variation vs what they absorb. Some will also offer a capped variation percentage upfront - that's a good sign.

Red flag: "We'll price variations as they come up" or any reluctance to name a rate. That's a blank cheque.
"Have you managed Building Warrant applications and listed building consent in Edinburgh before, and can you handle this for our project?"*
Why ask it: In Scotland, Building Warrants replace the English building regulations approval process, and listed building work requires separate consent. A contractor unfamiliar with Edinburgh's processes will either slow you down or leave you to manage the consents yourself.

Good answer: They have specific recent Edinburgh experience, name the consents required for your scope, and confirm they manage the applications as part of their service.

Red flag: Vague answers about "sorting out the planning" or any suggestion that consents are your responsibility to chase.
"Walk me through when you'd order the items with the longest lead times on this project."*
Why ask it: Glazed partitions take 10-14 weeks. Bespoke joinery is 8-12 weeks. A contractor who orders these late will delay your move-in date regardless of how smoothly everything else goes.

Good answer: They immediately reference specific items and when orders need to be placed relative to programme start. This shows they've thought about procurement, not just construction.

Red flag: A blank look, or "we'll order once we're on site." That's how a 12-week project becomes 18 weeks.
"Tell me about a recent project where something didn't go to plan - what happened and how did you handle it?"
Why ask it: Every fit-out hits problems. This question isn't about finding a contractor with a perfect record - it's about finding one who communicates honestly and fixes things quickly.

Good answer: A specific story, told candidly, that shows they caught the problem early, told the client immediately, and had a plan ready. The detail matters more than the outcome.

Red flag: "All our projects run smoothly" or a story where the problem was always someone else's fault. Nobody believes the first answer, and the second tells you something important about how disputes will go.
"What's your defects liability period, and who handles snagging after handover?"
Why ask it: Fit-outs always have snags. The question isn't whether they'll appear - it's how fast they get fixed once you're trying to use the space.

Good answer: 12 months minimum, a named person or small team dedicated to aftercare, and a clear process for logging and responding to defects (e.g. 48-hour response, 5-day fix).

Red flag: "The site manager handles it" with no further detail. If the site manager has moved to the next project, your snags will wait weeks for a response.

Where you have more negotiating room than you think

Fit-out contractors have more flexibility on price and terms than they lead with. These are the levers that actually work once you have competing quotes in front of you.

5-10% savings

Portfolio rights

A well-executed fit-out in a desirable Edinburgh location - particularly a sensitively done Georgian or listed building - is genuinely valuable marketing material for a contractor. Offering them photography rights and permission to use the project in their portfolio, before you sign, is worth real money to them. Get a written reduction in return for the agreement, not a vague promise of "goodwill".

5-15% savings

Programme flexibility

Contractors price risk into tight programmes and inconvenient start dates. If you can genuinely offer flexibility on when the project starts - even a four-week window - you become a gap-filler between their other jobs, which is worth a meaningful discount. This only works if the flexibility is real; contractors quickly learn when clients are bluffing.

15-25% savings

FF&E procurement

Furniture, fixtures, and equipment - desks, chairs, kitchen appliances, AV screens - attract a contractor markup of 20-30% when they procure it. Asking them to exclude FF&E from their scope and procuring it yourself through trade suppliers removes a significant margin layer. The contractor builds and installs; you buy the materials. Works best when your brief is clear enough that they're comfortable pricing the install separately.

2-5% savings

Early retention release

Standard construction contracts retain 5% of the contract sum for 12 months after practical completion as security against defects. Contractors, particularly smaller ones, treat this as a cash flow problem. Offering to release retention at six months in exchange for a price reduction, or eliminating it in exchange for a bank-backed defects warranty, is a legitimate trade. Only offer this if you're confident in the contractor's quality.

Prevents overruns

Cap and pre-agree variations

Negotiate a day-work rate and a maximum variation percentage (typically 10-15% of contract value) before signing. Any variations above that threshold require your written approval before work starts. This doesn't save money on the original price - it prevents the contract from drifting 20% over budget once you're on site and have no leverage. It's the most important commercial protection you can put in a fit-out contract.

Faster move-in

Milestone-linked payments

Rather than time-based drawdowns, tie payment milestones to specific deliverables: practical completion of partitions, sign-off of M&E first fix, practical completion of kitchen. Contractors who need regular cash flow will prioritise hitting those milestones. It also gives you a clear basis for withholding payment if something is genuinely incomplete at a milestone, rather than relying on end-of-project disputes.

From "I need to find a fit-out contractor" to deal done

1

Describe what you need

Write your requirements in your own words - scope, location, timeline, any constraints. RFXapp turns it into a structured brief and prompts you for anything that will help contractors quote accurately.

2

Invite your contractors

Add the contractors you've already shortlisted, or let RFXapp find local options. They reply by normal email - no portal, no registration.

3

Compare quotes side by side

RFXapp reads every response and standardises the quotes into a side-by-side view - inclusions, exclusions, assumptions and all.

4

Negotiate and appoint

RFXapp drafts targeted negotiation emails based on the gaps between quotes. You review and send. Then award the contract from your dashboard.

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