In project management, people often mix up the roles of a project expediter and a project coordinator. Both roles support the project manager, especially in workplaces where the project manager doesn’t control all resources. This happens in functional and weak matrix organizations. Understanding the difference matters because it shapes authority, responsibilities, and reporting lines.
PMI explains that these roles appear most often in organizations where functional managers hold the real power. In a balanced matrix, you must request resources and negotiate authority. In a weak matrix or functional structure, your authority drops even more, and you may work as a project coordinator or a project expediter.
You can also find coordinators and expediters in strong matrix or projectized organizations, especially on large projects. In these cases, they report to the project manager or senior management, but their authority remains limited.
In this post, I’ll explain what a project expediter does, what a project coordinator handles, and how the two roles differ in practice.
Note: You may see both “expediter” and “expeditor.” Both spellings are correct. The PMI has removed these exact titles from the PMBOK Guide 7th and 8th editions (shifting focus to principles rather than prescriptive roles). Still, the concepts remain highly relevant in real-world organizations and can appear on the current PMP exam.
What is a Project Expediter?
A project expediter, sometimes spelled “expediter,” serves as a staff assistant who keeps communication flowing across the project. This role has little to no formal authority and cannot make or enforce decisions independently.

You usually see project expediters in functional or weak matrix organizations, where the project manager also has limited authority. Their job is to support the project’s movement, not to direct people.
Key Characteristics Include:
- Coordinating information so tasks stay on track and issues reach the right people quickly.
- Tracking progress and sharing updates with the project manager or functional manager.
- Handling logistical tasks, such as following up with suppliers or confirming delivery schedules.
- Participating in discussions and offering input, but not making the final decision.
- Communicating approved decisions to contractors, vendors, and project teams.
When You See This Role:
- Large construction or manufacturing projects that require many tangible items (materials, equipment) to be delivered on time.
- Organizations where the project manager has limited staffing and delegates communications to an expediter.
Real-World Example
Imagine a construction firm building a high-rise. The expediter ensures that cement, steel beams, and formwork arrive at the site on schedule. They don’t decide which supplier to pick—that decision lies with the project manager or procurement manager—but they coordinate and chase deliveries.
What is a Project Coordinator?
A project coordinator holds more authority than a project expediter and can make a few decisions within defined limits. They usually report to a higher-level manager, such as a functional manager or a senior project manager.

While the coordinator role shares many tasks with the expediter, the key difference lies in decision-making authority. Coordinators help the project manager monitor and control the work more actively.
Key Characteristics Includes:
- Helps the project manager track the schedule, budget, risks, and resources.
- Can assign tasks within a set boundary and escalate issues when needed.
- Reports to a higher-level manager in weak matrix structures where authority is shared.
- In strong matrix or projectized environments, supports the project manager directly and may guide small teams.
When This Role is Used:
- Medium-sized IT implementation where the coordinator drives day-to-day execution while the project manager retains strategic control.
- In sites with high project complexity but limited resources, the coordinator becomes a critical ‘right-hand’ to the project manager.
Real-World Example
In an IT roll-out across multiple regional offices, the project coordinator might approve overtime for a local team to meet a milestone, escalate issues, and lead status meetings—even though the full project approval still rests with the project manager.
Side-by-Side Comparison: Project Expediter Vs Project Coordinator
| Parameter | Project Expediter | Project Coordinator |
| Authority Level | None or very little – cannot make/enforce decisions | Limited authority – can make some tactical decisions |
| Primary Focus | Communication, reporting, logistics | Monitoring, control, partial decision-making |
| Decision-Making | Provides input only | Can approve minor changes or allocate resources |
| Reporting Line | Usually, to a functional manager | To a manager (often the PM in a weak matrix) |
| Typical Organization Type | Functional / Weak Matrix | Weak matrix (can also support in Strong Matrix/Projectized) |
| Common Tasks | Status reports, supplier follow-up, and meeting coordination | Schedule tracking, risk logging, resource coordination |
| PMP Exam Relevance | Seen in weak-matrix questions | Seen in a weak matrix with slightly more power |
In Which Organizational Structures Do These Roles Appear?
These roles are most common in:
- Functional Organizations: Project management is part-time; the “project manager” is effectively an expediter.
- Weak Matrix: Power stays with functional managers; the project lead is either an expediter or coordinator.
- Balanced/Strong Matrix or Projectized: These roles can exist as support staff reporting directly to a full-authority project manager.
With the rise of hybrid and agile projects, many traditional industries (manufacturing, construction, engineering) still use these titles exactly as described in PMI literature.
Salary Data (United States)
| Role | Average Base Salary | Total Pay (with bonus/overtime) | Top Industries | Source |
| Project Coordinator | $74,904 | $82,000 – $95,000 | IT, Healthcare, Finance | Glassdoor, Indeed, Salary.com |
| Project Expediter | $77,595 | $85,000 – $105,000 | Construction, Manufacturing | Glassdoor (Logistics-focused) |
| Senior Project Coordinator | $92,000+ | $100,000+ | All | Levels.fyi, 2025 data |
International note: In the UK/Europe, coordinators average £35,000–£55,000; in Australia, AU$90,000–$120,000.
FAQs
Q1. Is a project expediter the same as a project coordinator?
No. The expediter has no decision-making authority and focuses on communication/logistics, while the coordinator has limited authority.
Q2. Which role has more authority: expediter or coordinator?
The project coordinator has more authority and can make some decisions; the expediter cannot.
Q3. Can a project expediter become a project manager?
Yes, many use it as a stepping stone; gaining experience in logistics and communication lays strong foundations for full PM roles.
Q4. What is the average salary difference?
Coordinators earn $62k-$85k, and expediters earn $65k-$90k in the U.S., with variations by industry and location.
Summary
The project expediter and project coordinator each play an important part in keeping work on track. Both stay connected with the project manager or higher management and step in when support is needed. They help manage communication, follow-ups, and day-to-day operations, keeping the project moving even when challenges arise. When the project manager is busy or dealing with emergencies, these roles can take on a few delegated responsibilities. In some cases, coordinators can even assume the project manager’s role for short periods to maintain progress.
Here is where this blog post on the project expediter and project coordinator ends. If you have something to share, you can do so through the comments section below.
Further Reading:

I am Mohammad Fahad Usmani, B.E. PMP, PMI-RMP. I have been blogging on project management topics since 2011. To date, thousands of professionals have passed the PMP exam using my resources.

Dear Mr. Fahad,
A project coordinator may typically be found in what type of organization?
A) Weak Matrix
B) Strong Matrix
C) Functional
D) Projectized
Can you please guide the correct answer with reason?
Source: passionatepm
Please read the following blog post:
https://pmstudycircle.com/2015/11/project-expediter-vs-project-coordinator/
As we have to choose one option. Answer should be weak matrix.
Dear , you mention that project coordinators and project expediters can exist in projectized organizatin and they report to PM , but according to Head First PMP , page 44 , project coordinators and expediters dont exist in a projectized organization , pls can you explain to us which idea about them is correct ?
In projectized organization, the project manager will have the highest power. Here, a project manager can or cannot have the coordinator or expediter.
You are right Praveen, and the blog post is updated.
Hi Fahad,
I am curious to know why are you saying PE and PC report to PM. PMOK Guide is silent on this. PMBOK guide only says PC reports to a “higher level manager”. Generally accepted meaning of “higher level manager” is someone who has a higher position than a PM or FM.
BR
Praveen Malik
Fahad, this is pretty much good to understand concept. I think, the project lead/team lead etc mentions in different organisations/companies do either expediter/coordinator jobs . In the PMP exam, the expediter questions asked will be something like this. There was a meeting with CEO, customer etc and in the end of the meeting the person shared the minutes of meetings to stakeholders. What is his role? Ans: Expediter. My two cents :-)
Thanks for your comment, but the information given in your question is insufficient to reach on a conclusion. An expediter communicate the MOM but a person who share the MOM is not necessarily an expediter.