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The S-Curve in Construction Scheduling, Explained Simply

Project Assure · Schedule analysis

What Is an S-Curve in Construction?

An S-curve is a graphical representation of cumulative progress (cost, hours, or quantities) plotted against time. It is called an S-curve because the shape typically resembles the letter “S” – slow start, rapid middle, slow finish. In construction scheduling, it is the most common way to visualise planned versus actual performance.

The curve is built by summing the budgeted cost (or man-hours) for each period and plotting the cumulative total. The result shows how much work should be complete at any point in time according to the baseline schedule.

Planned vs Earned vs Actual Curves

To get the full picture, you need three curves:

Comparing these three curves tells you if you are ahead/behind schedule (EV vs PV) and under/over budget (EV vs AC).

What the Shape Tells You About Progress

The S-curve shape is not accidental. It reflects the natural lifecycle of a project:

If your actual curve deviates from the planned S-shape, you can diagnose issues:

How to Build an S-Curve from a Primavera P6 Schedule

You can generate an S-curve from P6 using earned value reports or by exporting resource/cost data. Here is a step-by-step method:

  1. Export the schedule: In P6, go to Activities view, add columns for Budgeted Total Cost (or Budgeted Units) and Planned/Actual dates.
  2. Calculate cumulative values per period: Use a spreadsheet to sum costs for each time period (e.g., weekly) based on the activity dates.
  3. Plot cumulative cost vs time: Create a line chart with time on the X-axis and cumulative cost on the Y-axis.
  4. Repeat for actuals: Use actual start/finish dates and actual costs to plot the actual curve.

Alternatively, you can use a free tool like Project Assure – a browser-based Primavera P6 XER analyser. It automatically generates S-curves (planned vs earned vs actual) from your XER file, with no upload required.

Common Pitfalls When Using S-Curves

Practical Example

Imagine a 12-month, $12M project. The planned S-curve shows $1M in month 1, $3M by month 3, $6M by month 6, $9M by month 9, and $12M by month 12. At month 6, your actual curve shows only $4M earned. That indicates you are behind schedule – you should have completed $6M worth of work. The cost variance (EV – AC) might reveal if you are also over budget.

By monitoring the S-curve monthly, you can spot trends early and take corrective action.

Linking S-Curves to Earned Value Management

The S-curve is the foundation of EVM. Key metrics derived from it:

MetricFormulaMeaning
Schedule Variance (SV)EV – PVNegative = behind schedule
Cost Variance (CV)EV – ACNegative = over budget
Schedule Performance Index (SPI)EV / PV<1 = behind schedule
Cost Performance Index (CPI)EV / AC<1 = over budget

These metrics are best visualised as S-curves over time.

Conclusion

The S-curve is a simple yet powerful tool for construction schedule analysis. It turns raw schedule data into a visual story of progress. By understanding its shape and comparing planned vs actual curves, you can quickly assess project health. Tools like Project Assure make this analysis accessible to anyone with a P6 XER file – no complex setup required.

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Frequently asked questions

What does an S-curve show in construction?

An S-curve shows cumulative progress (cost, hours, or quantities) over time. It compares planned vs actual performance, helping you see if you are ahead or behind schedule and under or over budget.

How do you read an S-curve?

The vertical axis shows cumulative value (e.g., cost), and the horizontal axis shows time. The planned curve is your baseline. If the actual curve is below the planned curve, you are behind schedule; if above, ahead. The slope indicates the rate of progress.

What is the difference between planned, earned, and actual S-curves?

Planned (PV) is the budgeted cost of work scheduled. Earned (EV) is the budgeted cost of work performed. Actual (AC) is the actual cost incurred. Comparing EV vs PV gives schedule variance; EV vs AC gives cost variance.

Can I generate an S-curve from Primavera P6?

Yes. You can export cost or resource data from P6 and plot cumulative values in a spreadsheet. Alternatively, use a tool like Project Assure that automatically generates S-curves from a P6 XER file.

Why is it called an S-curve?

Because the cumulative progress curve typically forms an 'S' shape: slow at the start (mobilisation), steep in the middle (peak work), and flattening at the end (completion).