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📦 Material Receiving Playbook

Verify deliveries against purchase orders, inspect condition, document damage, and organize storage. What you don't catch at the truck becomes an expensive problem later.


Why Material Receiving Matters

IssueCost When Caught at DeliveryCost When Caught Later
Wrong material shippedFree replacement — carrier's problemRework + delay + expediting
Damaged materialFile claim immediately, carrier liableYou own it — replacement at your cost
Short shipmentNotify supplier, ship balanceProduction delay, schedule impact
Wrong quantity orderedReturn excess or adjust orderStorage costs, waste, restocking fees
The 5-Minute Inspection Saves 5 Days of Rework

It takes 5 minutes to inspect a delivery at the truck. It takes 5 days to unravel the mess when you discover the wrong material after it's been installed.


Roles and Responsibilities

RoleResponsibilities
Receiving Person (Laborer/Foreman)Inspect delivery, compare to PO, document condition, sign delivery ticket with notes
ForemanVerify material matches upcoming work, direct storage location, report issues
Project EngineerMaintain delivery log, process claims, coordinate with suppliers
SuperintendentApprove storage locations, review delivery schedule, escalate problems

Step-by-Step Process

Step 1: Prepare for the Delivery

Before the truck arrives:

  1. Know what's coming — Review the delivery schedule and purchase order
  2. Prepare the receiving area — Clear, level, accessible by truck/forklift
  3. Have equipment ready — Forklift, crane, or labor available to unload
  4. Print the PO — Have a copy to compare against the delivery

Step 2: Verify Against the Purchase Order

At the truck, check:

CheckWhat to CompareAction if Wrong
Material typePO description vs. actual productRefuse delivery, notify supplier
QuantityPO quantity vs. packing list vs. actual countNote shortage on delivery ticket, accept partial
Size / dimensionsPO specs vs. actual measurementsRefuse if wrong, accept if usable (note on ticket)
Color / finishPO specs vs. actualRefuse if wrong (especially finish materials)
Grade / ratingPO specs vs. product labelsRefuse if wrong (structural, fire-rated, etc.)
ManufacturerPO / approved submittal vs. actualRefuse if unapproved manufacturer
CertificationsMill certs, test reports, compliance docsNote missing certs, request from supplier

Step 3: Inspect Condition

Visual inspection before unloading:

  • Packaging intact — no tears, punctures, or water damage
  • No visible damage to product (dents, cracks, bends, breaks)
  • Material is dry (no water damage indicators)
  • Items properly secured during transport (no shifting damage)
  • Temperature-sensitive items maintained properly (adhesives, sealants in winter)

During unloading:

  • Check each unit/bundle/pallet as it comes off the truck
  • Open random packages to verify contents (especially for concealed items)
  • Count actual pieces (don't rely only on packing list)
  • Check for hidden damage (items at bottom of pallets)

Step 4: Document Everything

Photos (minimum 5 per delivery):

  1. Truck and delivery ticket together
  2. Overall condition of material on the truck (before unloading)
  3. Close-up of product labels / identification
  4. Any damage or discrepancies
  5. Material staged in storage location

On the delivery ticket, write:

  • Date and time of delivery
  • Condition: "Received in good condition" OR detailed notes on any issues
  • Quantity: Actual count if different from packing list
  • Missing items: "Short 12 pieces of 2x6x16" or similar
  • Damage: "3 sheets of drywall damaged — water damage to packaging, refused"
  • Your name, signature, and "Subject to inspection" (if you can't fully inspect immediately)
Never Sign a Clean Delivery Ticket for Damaged Goods

Once you sign the delivery ticket without noting damage, the carrier is off the hook. Always note damage, shortages, or discrepancies ON the delivery ticket before signing. Write "Subject to inspection" if you can't fully inspect on the spot.

Step 5: Process Discrepancies

IssueImmediate ActionFollow-Up
Damaged materialNote on delivery ticket, photograph, refuse if unusableFile claim with carrier within 24 hours
Short shipmentNote on delivery ticket, accept what's thereNotify supplier, request balance delivery date
Wrong materialRefuse delivery, note on ticketNotify supplier, request correct shipment
Concealed damage (found later)Photograph, notify carrier and supplier immediatelyFile concealed damage claim (time limits apply — usually 5–15 days)
Missing certificationsAccept material, note "certs pending"Request from supplier, do not install until received

Step 6: Organize Storage

Material TypeStorage Requirements
Lumber and wood productsOff ground on dunnage, covered from rain, ventilated
Drywall / gypsumIndoor storage, flat on floor or edge, off concrete
Steel and rebarOff ground on dunnage, can be outdoor if acceptable per spec
Pipe and fittingsOrganized by size, caps on open ends, off ground
Electrical / mechanical equipmentIndoor, climate-controlled if required per manufacturer
Adhesives, sealants, coatingsTemperature-controlled per manufacturer requirements
Concrete accessoriesOrganized by type, protected from weather
Finish materials (tile, flooring, counters)Indoor, climate-controlled, protected from damage

Storage best practices:

  • Store in or near the area where it will be installed (reduce double-handling)
  • Keep aisles clear for equipment access
  • Label storage areas clearly
  • First-in, first-out for perishable items (adhesives, sealants)
  • Secure high-value items (theft prevention)

Delivery Log

Track every delivery to the project:

DateSupplierPO #DescriptionQty OrderedQty ReceivedConditionNotes
02/10ABC SupplyPO-0422x6x16 SPF #2500488GoodShort 12 — balance due 02/14
02/11Delta SteelPO-038W12x26 beams88GoodMill certs received
02/12Best DoorsPO-045HM door frames24243 damaged3 refused — claim filed

Common Mistakes

MistakeConsequenceFix
Signing without inspectingCan't claim damage laterAlways inspect before signing — or write "Subject to inspection"
No photosNo evidence for damage claimsPhoto every delivery, especially damage
Not checking against POWrong material installedPO in hand at every delivery
Storing material on bare groundWater damage, warping, contaminationDunnage under everything, covers over weather-sensitive items
No delivery log"When did that arrive?" — can't track shortagesLog every delivery same day
Not filing damage claims promptlyClaim denied (past deadline)File within 24 hours for visible damage, 5 days for concealed

Metrics

MetricTargetFrequency
Deliveries inspected at receipt100%Per delivery
Delivery discrepancy rateunder 5% of deliveriesMonthly
Damage claim filing (within 24 hrs)100%Per occurrence
Material waste rateunder 3% of material costMonthly
Delivery log current100% logged same dayDaily

ResourceLink
Material Delivery TrackerDelivery Log
Material Management GuideFull Guide
Equipment Inspection ChecklistEquipment Checklist