Key takeaway
At a glance
- A construction weather delay tracker helps superintendents and project managers log rain days, wind, temperature, lost hours, affected work, schedule impact, and backup notes. It is a manual project record, not an automatic weather feed or legal claim approval tool.
- Attach exported logs to project reports, schedule updates, change discussions, or internal project files after confirming contract notice requirements.
- This tracker is a manual log based on the entries visible on the page.
Reviewed by ConstructionBids.ai Team. Last updated .
About this tool
Weather Delay & Rain Day Tracker for superintendents, project managers, schedulers, and contract admins
Weather Delay & Rain Day Tracker helps superintendents, project managers, schedulers, and contract admins document weather conditions and work impacts for project records, schedule review, and owner communication. Enter project name, location, date, weather condition, precipitation, wind, temperature, lost hours, affected scope, schedule impact, and notes and get a construction weather delay log with total lost hours and CSV export you can use immediately in your bid or project file.
Built for common US construction workflows, including municipal, state, federal, commercial, and subcontractor bid documentation.
A construction weather delay tracker helps superintendents and project managers log rain days, wind, temperature, lost hours, affected work, schedule impact, and backup notes. It is a manual project record, not an automatic weather feed or legal claim approval tool.
How to use
Quick start guide
- 1Enter project and location details
- 2Add each weather event with lost hours and affected scope
- 3Review total lost hours and schedule impact notes
- 4Download the CSV log for project records
FAQ
Common questions
What does this tool do?
Use the weather delay tracker to record rain days, wind, temperature, affected scope, lost hours, schedule impact, and backup notes. It creates a manual project weather log that contractors can export and keep with project reports, schedule updates, and project documentation.
How should I apply the results?
Attach exported logs to project reports, schedule updates, change discussions, or internal project files after confirming contract notice requirements.
Is this suitable for public bids?
Yes. The inputs align with typical DOT, municipal, and federal bid requirements.
Who should use this?
Use this tool when a project team needs a clean weather delay log before updating the schedule, preparing project reports, or discussing time impacts.
Key entities
Key entities and terms
construction weather delay tracker, rain day log, weather delay log, lost work hours, schedule impact, project report
Citations
Citation-ready context
- This tracker is a manual log based on the entries visible on the page.
- Confirm contract notice terms, owner documentation rules, and approved weather data sources before relying on a delay record for a formal time extension.
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