The budget justification is a categorical description for the proposed costs. Generally, it explains staffing and supply/service consumption patterns, the methods used to estimate/calculate (including escalation or inflation factors) and other details such as lists of items that make up the total costs for a category. The budget justification should address each of major cost categories (salaries, fringe benefits, travel equipment, supplies, other direct costs and indirect costs), as well as any additional categories required by the sponsor.
A thorough written justification that explains both the necessity and the basis for the proposed costs must accompany the budget. The justification section is critical as it enables the principal investigator to emphasize the importance of essential project costs. A budget that is adequately and appropriately justified is the best way to assure a positive cost analysis by the sponsor.
Helpful Tips
- When constructing a budget justification, follow the same order as that in the itemized budget or sponsors budget form, so reviewers can easily compare the two documents.
- Check to see if the sponsor limits the page length for the justification.
- Be sure everything in your budget justification is referenced in the proposal description/narrative as well-and be sure everything mentioned in your proposal description that would incur cost is explained in the budget and budget justification!
- Double check what expenses the sponsor will and will not allow, as these differ from sponsor to sponsor.
- Remember, all costs must be reasonable, allowable, and allocable.
- Allowable refers to costs that may be charged to a grant or contract.
- Allocable refers to the ability to dispense and/or distribute group costs to grant projects bases on the benefit to the program.
- Reasonable refers to actions a prudent business person would employ.