Facilities & Administrative Costs

Facilities & Administrative (F&A) costs, frequently referred to as indirect costs, are expressed as a percentage applied to sponsored projects in order to recover allowable overhead costs associated with conducting projects at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ.

The university negotiates an indirect cost rate agreement with the Office of Naval Research to recover F&A costs on sponsored projects. Facilities and administrative (F&A) cost recovery rates are based on actual costs the university has incurred. F&A recovery supports general institutional costs that are incurred for common and joint objectives. These are real costs that cannot be readily identified to a particular project or activity, so they are charged indirectly.

It is ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ's policy to charge our full negotiated F&A rate on all projects, unless a sponsor has restrictions on the recovery of F&A costs. If a sponsor restricts F&A recovery, the dean or director of the department must decide whether or not to approve the proposal submission to that sponsor. If a reduced F&A rate is required by the sponsor, the sponsor's published F&A rate policy must be included with the proposal when it is submitted to OGCA for review. Note that if a sponsor allows the budgeting of ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ's full F&A rate, a voluntary waiver to reduce the rate below the negotiated rate will not be accepted.

ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ now uses a 60/40 distribution plan for all awards and activity types, regardless of the rate used.


Understanding the Facilities and Administration (F&A) Cost Calculation


Why Is F&A Recovery So Important? Explaining F&A to Faculty

Please see the following series of videos published by NCURA covering the topic of F&A recovery:

Part 1: Explaining to Your Faculty that F&A is Mechanism for Reimbursement of Costs that Have Already Been Incurred and How the F&A Rate is Calculated

Part 2: A Simple Way to Explain the Federal Research Dollar Effective F&A Rate to Your Faculty

Part 3: Explaining F&A to Your Faculty: The F&A Rate is a Weighted Average Across the University

Part 4: Explaining F&A to Your Faculty: Last Thoughts on Explaining the Benefit of F&A to Your Faculty