The basic considerations for determining the allowability of costs are:
- Costs must be reasonable. This is defined as the action a prudent person would have taken under the circumstances.
- Costs must be allocable to sponsored agreements under the principles and methods described in the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards issued by the Office of Management and Budget (Uniform Guidance). Costs are incurred to benefit the specific sponsored project and able to be assigned to the project with a high degree of accuracy.
- Costs must be given consistent treatment through the application of generally accepted accounting principles appropriate to the circumstances. Similar costs are normally treated as either Direct or Indirect across the University.
Generally Allowable Costs which may be charged to grants, contracts, and other agreements is the Uniform Guidance prepared by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The document identifies costs that may be charged as indirect costs. While not all of the projects sponsored at Lamar University are federally funded, and while not all sponsors allow the inclusion of indirect costs in a project budget, the distinction between direct and indirect costs must be maintained consistently throughout the University.
Generally Unallowable Costs identify costs which cannot be included in the budget, although they would qualify as direct costs according to Uniform Guidance. Sponsors may also limit the dollar amount in certain budget categories. For example, limitations on salaries or minimums for participant costs maybe set in place by the sponsor. Many federal agencies also limit payment to individual consultants.
For either Indirect (F&A) costs or direct costs, the federal government identifies specific activities or transactions that are not allowed to be charged to sponsored research, either as a direct cost or an F&A cost. The following costs have been specifically identified by the government as generally unallowable on government grants and contracts.
The list below is not all-inclusive. Individual agency and program requirements may list other "unallowable" costs.
- Advertising for general promotion of the University, including printed materials, promotional items, memorabilia, gifts, souvenirs
- Advertising for recruitment purposes that includes color or is excessive in size
- Alcoholic beverages
- Alumni or fundraising activities
- Antiques
- Bad debt write-offs
- Charitable contributions
- Commencement expenses
- Decorative objects for private offices
- Entertainment
- Fine/original art
- Fines and penalties
- First-class/business-class air travel differentials
- Flowers
- Gifts, prizes, and awards
- Goods for services for personal use
- Lobbying
- Memberships in airline travel clubs
- Memberships in civic, social, community organizations or country clubs
- Faculty and exempt staff salary in excess of base rates paid by the institution
- Social events