Budget at Completion Calculator · April 2026 · 7 min read

Project Budget Baseline Guide

The project budget baseline (also called the cost baseline) is the approved, time-phased version of the project budget. It serves as the reference point against which all cost performance is measured throughout the project lifecycle. Without a solid baseline, Earned Value Management produces meaningless numbers.

This guide explains what a budget baseline is, how it differs from the Budget at Completion (BAC), how to establish one correctly, and how to manage it when scope or cost changes occur.

Cost Baseline vs. Budget at Completion (BAC)

TermDefinitionIncludes reserves?
Cost EstimateRaw estimate of project costs before any reservesNo
Cost Baseline (= BAC)Approved time-phased budget including contingency reservesContingency only
Project BudgetCost baseline plus management reservesYes (both types)
EACCurrent forecast of total project costN/A — a forecast

In PMBOK terminology, BAC = Cost Baseline. Management reserves sit above the cost baseline and are not part of BAC. They require a change request to access.

How to Build a Project Cost Baseline

Step 1: Complete the WBS and WBS Dictionary

Every work package in the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) must be defined well enough to estimate its cost. The WBS dictionary provides the scope narrative, deliverables, and acceptance criteria for each work package.

Step 2: Estimate Costs Bottom-Up

For each work package, estimate:

Step 3: Add Contingency Reserves

Contingency reserves cover known risks (risks documented in your risk register). Calculate based on expected monetary value (EMV) of identified risks, or use a percentage of the base estimate (typically 10–20% depending on project risk level).

Cost Baseline (BAC) = Sum of all work package estimates + Contingency Reserves

Step 4: Time-Phase the Budget (Create the PV Curve)

Spread the budget across the project timeline according to the schedule. This creates the Planned Value (PV) for each reporting period — the S-curve that EVM uses as its baseline. Total PV at end = BAC.

Step 5: Get Formal Approval

The cost baseline must be formally approved by the project sponsor or change control board before execution begins. This approval makes it the official reference point.

Managing Baseline Changes

The baseline must be protected from informal changes. Every change to BAC should go through:

  1. Change request: formally document the scope change and its cost impact
  2. Impact assessment: quantify cost, schedule, and risk impacts
  3. Change control board review: approve, reject, or defer
  4. Baseline update: if approved, update both the BAC and PV curve
  5. Communication: notify all stakeholders of the updated baseline

Common Baseline Mistakes

When to Revise the Baseline

A baseline revision (re-baselining) is appropriate when:

Re-baselining resets the EVM clock — prior performance variances are absorbed into the new baseline. This should be used sparingly and only with sponsor approval.

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