[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 2, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 2CFR225 App E]

[Page 141-146]

                     TITLE 2--GRANTS AND AGREEMENTS

   CHAPTER II--OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET CIRCULARS AND GUIDANCE

PART 225_COST PRINCIPLES FOR STATE, LOCAL, AND INDIAN TRIBAL GOVERNMENTS
(OMB CIRCULAR A	87)--Table of Contents

    Sec. Appendix E to Part 225--State and Local Indirect Cost Rate
                                Proposals

                            Table of Contents

A. General
B. Definitions
1. Indirect cost rate proposal
2. Indirect cost rate
3. Indirect cost pool
4. Base
5. Predetermined rate
6. Fixed rate
7. Provisional rate
8. Final rate
9. Base period
C. Allocation of Indirect Costs and Determination of Indirect Cost Rates

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1. General
2. Simplified method
3. Multiple allocation base method
4. Special indirect cost rates
D. Submission and Documentation of Proposals
1. Submission of indirect cost rate proposals
2. Documentation of proposals
3. Required certification
E. Negotiation and Approval of Rates
F. Other Policies
1. Fringe benefit rates
2. Billed services provided by the grantee agency
3. Indirect cost allocations not using rates
4. Appeals
5. Collections of unallowable costs and erroneous payments
6. OMB assistance
A. General.
    1. Indirect costs are those that have been incurred for common or
joint purposes. These costs benefit more than one cost objective and
cannot be readily identified with a particular final cost objective
without effort disproportionate to the results achieved. After direct
costs have been determined and assigned directly to Federal awards and
other activities as appropriate, indirect costs are those remaining to
be allocated to benefitted cost objectives. A cost may not be allocated
to a Federal award as an indirect cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose, in like circumstances, has been assigned to a Federal
award as a direct cost.
    2. Indirect costs include the indirect costs originating in each
department or agency of the governmental unit carrying out Federal
awards and the costs of central governmental services distributed
through the central service cost allocation plan (as described in
Appendix C to this part) and not otherwise treated as direct costs.
    3. Indirect costs are normally charged to Federal awards by the use
of an indirect cost rate. A separate indirect cost rate(s) is usually
necessary for each department or agency of the governmental unit
claiming indirect costs under Federal awards. Guidelines and
illustrations of indirect cost proposals are provided in a brochure
published by the Department of Health and Human Services entitled ``A
Guide for State and Local Government Agencies: Cost Principles and
Procedures for Establishing Cost Allocation Plans and Indirect Cost
Rates for Grants and Contracts with the Federal Government.'' A copy of
this brochure may be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20401.
    4. Because of the diverse characteristics and accounting practices
of governmental units, the types of costs which may be classified as
indirect costs cannot be specified in all situations. However, typical
examples of indirect costs may include certain State/local-wide central
service costs, general administration of the grantee department or
agency, accounting and personnel services performed within the grantee
department or agency, depreciation or use allowances on buildings and
equipment, the costs of operating and maintaining facilities, etc.
    5. This appendix does not apply to State public assistance agencies.
These agencies should refer instead to Appendix D to this part.
    B. Definitions.
    1. ``Indirect cost rate proposal'' means the documentation prepared
by a governmental unit or subdivision thereof to substantiate its
request for the establishment of an indirect cost rate.
    2. ``Indirect cost rate'' is a device for determining in a
reasonable manner the proportion of indirect costs each program should
bear. It is the ratio (expressed as a percentage) of the indirect costs
to a direct cost base.
    3. ``Indirect cost pool'' is the accumulated costs that jointly
benefit two or more programs or other cost objectives.
    4. ``Base'' means the accumulated direct costs (normally either
total direct salaries and wages or total direct costs exclusive of any
extraordinary or distorting expenditures) used to distribute indirect
costs to individual Federal awards. The direct cost base selected should
result in each award bearing a fair share of the indirect costs in
reasonable relation to the benefits received from the costs.
    5. ``Predetermined rate'' means an indirect cost rate, applicable to
a specified current or future period, usually the governmental unit's
fiscal year. This rate is based on an estimate of the costs to be
incurred during the period. Except under very unusual circumstances, a
predetermined rate is not subject to adjustment. (Because of legal
constraints, predetermined rates are not permitted for Federal
contracts; they may, however, be used for grants or cooperative
agreements.) Predetermined rates may not be used by governmental units
that have not submitted and negotiated the rate with the cognizant
agency. In view of the potential advantages offered by this procedure,
negotiation of predetermined rates for indirect costs for a period of
two to four years should be the norm in those situations where the cost
experience and other pertinent facts available are deemed sufficient to
enable the parties involved to reach an informed judgment as to the
probable level of indirect costs during the ensuing accounting periods.
    6. ``Fixed rate'' means an indirect cost rate which has the same
characteristics as a predetermined rate, except that the difference
between the estimated costs and the actual, allowable costs of the
period covered by the

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rate is carried forward as an adjustment to the rate computation of a
subsequent period.
    7. ``Provisional rate'' means a temporary indirect cost rate
applicable to a specified period which is used for funding, interim
reimbursement, and reporting indirect costs on Federal awards pending
the establishment of a ``final'' rate for that period.
    8. ``Final rate'' means an indirect cost rate applicable to a
specified past period which is based on the actual allowable costs of
the period. A final audited rate is not subject to adjustment.
    9. ``Base period'' for the allocation of indirect costs is the
period in which such costs are incurred and accumulated for allocation
to activities performed in that period. The base period normally should
coincide with the governmental unit's fiscal year, but in any event,
shall be so selected as to avoid inequities in the allocation of costs.
    C. Allocation of Indirect Costs and Determination of Indirect Cost
Rates.
    1. General.
    a. Where a governmental unit's department or agency has only one
major function, or where all its major functions benefit from the
indirect costs to approximately the same degree, the allocation of
indirect costs and the computation of an indirect cost rate may be
accomplished through simplified allocation procedures as described in
subsection 2 of this appendix.
    b. Where a governmental unit's department or agency has several
major functions which benefit from its indirect costs in varying
degrees, the allocation of indirect costs may require the accumulation
of such costs into separate cost groupings which then are allocated
individually to benefitted functions by means of a base which best
measures the relative degree of benefit. The indirect costs allocated to
each function are then distributed to individual awards and other
activities included in that function by means of an indirect cost
rate(s).
    c. Specific methods for allocating indirect costs and computing
indirect cost rates along with the conditions under which each method
should be used are described in subsections 2, 3 and 4 of this appendix.
    2. Simplified method.
    a. Where a grantee agency's major functions benefit from its
indirect costs to approximately the same degree, the allocation of
indirect costs may be accomplished by classifying the grantee agency's
total costs for the base period as either direct or indirect, and
dividing the total allowable indirect costs (net of applicable credits)
by an equitable distribution base. The result of this process is an
indirect cost rate which is used to distribute indirect costs to
individual Federal awards. The rate should be expressed as the
percentage which the total amount of allowable indirect costs bears to
the base selected. This method should also be used where a governmental
unit's department or agency has only one major function encompassing a
number of individual projects or activities, and may be used where the
level of Federal awards to that department or agency is relatively
small.
    b. Both the direct costs and the indirect costs shall exclude
capital expenditures and unallowable costs. However, unallowable costs
must be included in the direct costs if they represent activities to
which indirect costs are properly allocable.
    c. The distribution base may be total direct costs (excluding
capital expenditures and other distorting items, such as pass-through
funds, major subcontracts, etc.), direct salaries and wages, or another
base which results in an equitable distribution.
    3. Multiple allocation base method.
    a. Where a grantee agency's indirect costs benefit its major
functions in varying degrees, such costs shall be accumulated into
separate cost groupings. Each grouping shall then be allocated
individually to benefitted functions by means of a base which best
measures the relative benefits.
    b. The cost groupings should be established so as to permit the
allocation of each grouping on the basis of benefits provided to the
major functions. Each grouping should constitute a pool of expenses that
are of like character in terms of the functions they benefit and in
terms of the allocation base which best measures the relative benefits
provided to each function. The number of separate groupings should be
held within practical limits, taking into consideration the materiality
of the amounts involved and the degree of precision needed.
    c. Actual conditions must be taken into account in selecting the
base to be used in allocating the expenses in each grouping to
benefitted functions. When an allocation can be made by assignment of a
cost grouping directly to the function benefitted, the allocation shall
be made in that manner. When the expenses in a grouping are more general
in nature, the allocation should be made through the use of a selected
base which produces results that are equitable to both the Federal
Government and the governmental unit. In general, any cost element or
related factor associated with the governmental unit's activities is
potentially adaptable for use as an allocation base provided that: it
can readily be expressed in terms of dollars or other quantitative
measures (total direct costs, direct salaries and wages, staff hours
applied, square feet used, hours of usage, number of documents
processed, population served, and the like), and it is common to the
benefitted functions during the base period.
    d. Except where a special indirect cost rate(s) is required in
accordance with subsection 4, the separate groupings of indirect costs
allocated to each major function shall

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be aggregated and treated as a common pool for that function. The costs
in the common pool shall then be distributed to individual Federal
awards included in that function by use of a single indirect cost rate.
    e. The distribution base used in computing the indirect cost rate
for each function may be total direct costs (excluding capital
expenditures and other distorting items such as pass-through funds,
major subcontracts, etc.), direct salaries and wages, or another base
which results in an equitable distribution. An indirect cost rate should
be developed for each separate indirect cost pool developed. The rate in
each case should be stated as the percentage relationship between the
particular indirect cost pool and the distribution base identified with
that pool.
    4. Special indirect cost rates.
    a. In some instances, a single indirect cost rate for all activities
of a grantee department or agency or for each major function of the
agency may not be appropriate. It may not take into account those
different factors which may substantially affect the indirect costs
applicable to a particular program or group of programs. The factors may
include the physical location of the work, the level of administrative
support required, the nature of the facilities or other resources
employed, the organizational arrangements used, or any combination
thereof. When a particular award is carried out in an environment which
appears to generate a significantly different level of indirect costs,
provisions should be made for a separate indirect cost pool applicable
to that award. The separate indirect cost pool should be developed
during the course of the regular allocation process, and the separate
indirect cost rate resulting therefrom should be used, provided that:
the rate differs significantly from the rate which would have been
developed under subsections 2. and 3. of this appendix, and the award to
which the rate would apply is material in amount.
    b. Although 2 CFR part 225 adopts the concept of the full allocation
of indirect costs, there are some Federal statutes which restrict the
reimbursement of certain indirect costs. Where such restrictions exist,
it may be necessary to develop a special rate for the affected award.
Where a ``restricted rate'' is required, the procedure for developing a
non-restricted rate will be used except for the additional step of the
elimination from the indirect cost pool those costs for which the law
prohibits reimbursement.
    D. Submission and Documentation of Proposals.
    1. Submission of indirect cost rate proposals.
    a. All departments or agencies of the governmental unit desiring to
claim indirect costs under Federal awards must prepare an indirect cost
rate proposal and related documentation to support those costs. The
proposal and related documentation must be retained for audit in
accordance with the records retention requirements contained in the
Common Rule.
    b. A governmental unit for which a cognizant agency assignment has
been specifically designated must submit its indirect cost rate proposal
to its cognizant agency. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) will
periodically publish lists of governmental units identifying the
appropriate Federal cognizant agencies. The cognizant agency for all
governmental units or agencies not identified by OMB will be determined
based on the Federal agency providing the largest amount of Federal
funds. In these cases, a governmental unit must develop an indirect cost
proposal in accordance with the requirements of 2 CFR 225 and maintain
the proposal and related supporting documentation for audit. These
governmental units are not required to submit their proposals unless
they are specifically requested to do so by the cognizant agency. Where
a local government only receives funds as a sub-recipient, the primary
recipient will be responsible for negotiating and/or monitoring the sub-
recipient's plan.
    c. Each Indian tribal government desiring reimbursement of indirect
costs must submit its indirect cost proposal to the Department of the
Interior (its cognizant Federal agency).
    d. Indirect cost proposals must be developed (and, when required,
submitted) within six months after the close of the governmental unit's
fiscal year, unless an exception is approved by the cognizant Federal
agency. If the proposed central service cost allocation plan for the
same period has not been approved by that time, the indirect cost
proposal may be prepared including an amount for central services that
is based on the latest federally-approved central service cost
allocation plan. The difference between these central service amounts
and the amounts ultimately approved will be compensated for by an
adjustment in a subsequent period.
    2. Documentation of proposals. The following shall be included with
each indirect cost proposal:
    a. The rates proposed, including subsidiary work sheets and other
relevant data, cross referenced and reconciled to the financial data
noted in subsection b of this appendix. Allocated central service costs
will be supported by the summary table included in the approved central
service cost allocation plan. This summary table is not required to be
submitted with the indirect cost proposal if the central service cost
allocation plan for the same fiscal year has been approved by the
cognizant agency and is available to the funding agency.
    b. A copy of the financial data (financial statements, comprehensive
annual financial

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report, executive budgets, accounting reports, etc.) upon which the rate
is based. Adjustments resulting from the use of unaudited data will be
recognized, where appropriate, by the Federal cognizant agency in a
subsequent proposal.
    c. The approximate amount of direct base costs incurred under
Federal awards. These costs should be broken out between salaries and
wages and other direct costs.
    d. A chart showing the organizational structure of the agency during
the period for which the proposal applies, along with a functional
statement(s) noting the duties and/or responsibilities of all units that
comprise the agency. (Once this is submitted, only revisions need be
submitted with subsequent proposals.)
    3. Required certification. Each indirect cost rate proposal shall be
accompanied by a certification in the following form:

                      Certificate of Indirect Costs

    This is to certify that I have reviewed the indirect cost rate
proposal submitted herewith and to the best of my knowledge and belief:
    (1) All costs included in this proposal [identify date] to establish
billing or final indirect costs rates for [identify period covered by
rate] are allowable in accordance with the requirements of the Federal
award(s) to which they apply and 2 CFR part 225, Cost Principles for
State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments (OMB Circular A-87).
Unallowable costs have been adjusted for in allocating costs as
indicated in the cost allocation plan.
    (2) All costs included in this proposal are properly allocable to
Federal awards on the basis of a beneficial or causal relationship
between the expenses incurred and the agreements to which they are
allocated in accordance with applicable requirements. Further, the same
costs that have been treated as indirect costs have not been claimed as
direct costs. Similar types of costs have been accounted for
consistently and the Federal Government will be notified of any
accounting changes that would affect the predetermined rate.
    I declare that the foregoing is true and correct.

 Governmental Unit:_____________________________________________________

 Signature:_____________________________________________________________

 Name of Official:______________________________________________________

 Title:_________________________________________________________________

 Date of Execution:_____________________________________________________

    E. Negotiation and Approval of Rates.
    1. Indirect cost rates will be reviewed, negotiated, and approved by
the cognizant Federal agency on a timely basis. Once a rate has been
agreed upon, it will be accepted and used by all Federal agencies unless
prohibited or limited by statute. Where a Federal funding agency has
reason to believe that special operating factors affecting its awards
necessitate special indirect cost rates, the funding agency will, prior
to the time the rates are negotiated, notify the cognizant Federal
agency.
    2. The use of predetermined rates, if allowed, is encouraged where
the cognizant agency has reasonable assurance based on past experience
and reliable projection of the grantee agency's costs, that the rate is
not likely to exceed a rate based on actual costs. Long-term agreements
utilizing predetermined rates extending over two or more years are
encouraged, where appropriate.
    3. The results of each negotiation shall be formalized in a written
agreement between the cognizant agency and the governmental unit. This
agreement will be subject to re-opening if the agreement is subsequently
found to violate a statute, or the information upon which the plan was
negotiated is later found to be materially incomplete or inaccurate. The
agreed upon rates shall be made available to all Federal agencies for
their use.
    4. Refunds shall be made if proposals are later found to have
included costs that are unallowable as specified by law or regulation,
as identified in Appendix B to this part, or by the terms and conditions
of Federal awards, or are unallowable because they are clearly not
allocable to Federal awards. These adjustments or refunds will be made
regardless of the type of rate negotiated (predetermined, final, fixed,
or provisional).
    F. Other Policies.
    1. Fringe benefit rates. If overall fringe benefit rates are not
approved for the governmental unit as part of the central service cost
allocation plan, these rates will be reviewed, negotiated and approved
for individual grantee agencies during the indirect cost negotiation
process. In these cases, a proposed fringe benefit rate computation
should accompany the indirect cost proposal. If fringe benefit rates are
not used at the grantee agency level (i.e., the agency specifically
identifies fringe benefit costs to individual employees), the
governmental unit should so advise the cognizant agency.
    2. Billed services provided by the grantee agency. In some cases,
governmental units provide and bill for services similar to those
covered by central service cost allocation plans (e.g., computer
centers). Where this occurs, the governmental unit should be guided by
the requirements in Appendix C to this part relating to the development
of billing rates and documentation requirements, and should advise the
cognizant agency of any billed services. Reviews of these types of
services (including reviews of costing/billing methodology, profits or
losses, etc.) will be made on a case-by-case basis as warranted by the
circumstances involved.

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    3. Indirect cost allocations not using rates. In certain situations,
a governmental unit, because of the nature of its awards, may be
required to develop a cost allocation plan that distributes indirect
(and, in some cases, direct) costs to the specific funding sources. In
these cases, a narrative cost allocation methodology should be
developed, documented, maintained for audit, or submitted, as
appropriate, to the cognizant agency for review, negotiation, and
approval.
    4. Appeals. If a dispute arises in a negotiation of an indirect cost
rate (or other rate) between the cognizant agency and the governmental
unit, the dispute shall be resolved in accordance with the appeals
procedures of the cognizant agency.
    5. Collection of unallowable costs and erroneous payments. Costs
specifically identified as unallowable and charged to Federal awards
either directly or indirectly will be refunded (including interest
chargeable in accordance with applicable Federal agency regulations).
    6. OMB assistance. To the extent that problems are encountered among
the Federal agencies and/or governmental units in connection with the
negotiation and approval process, OMB will lend assistance, as required,
to resolve such problems in a timely manner.

                        PARTS 226	229 [RESERVED]