How to Find Government Tenders in Canada
Canada's public procurement market exceeds CAD 100 billion annually, with the federal government accounting for approximately CAD 25 billion. This guide covers CanadaBuys, PSPC processes, trade agreement obligations, and practical strategies for winning contracts across federal, provincial, and municipal levels.
By TenderRadar Team
Procurement Landscape
Canada operates a transparent and well-regulated public procurement system spanning federal, provincial, territorial, and municipal levels. The federal government, primarily through Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC), spends approximately CAD 25 billion annually on goods, services, and construction. When provincial, territorial, and broader public sector entities (hospitals, universities, school boards, Crown corporations) are included, total public procurement exceeds CAD 100 billion. Canada is a signatory to the WTO GPA and maintains comprehensive trade agreements (CETA, CUSMA, CPTPP) that open procurement to international suppliers. The Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) ensures internal market access across provinces.
~CAD 25B federal, ~CAD 100B+ total
Annual procurement value
Approximately 13% of GDP
Share of GDP
Legal Framework
- Financial Administration Act — legal foundation for federal contracts
- Government Contracts Regulations — sets competitive requirements
- Treasury Board Contracting Policy — detailed procedural rules
- Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) — internal trade obligations
- CETA (Canada-EU), CUSMA, CPTPP — international trade agreement procurement chapters
- Provincial procurement acts (e.g., Ontario BPS Procurement Directive, Quebec procurement rules)
Official Procurement Portals
CanadaBuys
Canada's official federal procurement portal, replacing the former BuyAndSell platform. CanadaBuys publishes all federal tender notices, standing offers, supply arrangements, and contract award notices. Suppliers can search opportunities by category, department, and region, and set up email notifications for relevant tenders.
Visit portalMERX
A leading electronic tendering platform widely used by provincial, territorial, and broader public sector organisations. MERX aggregates opportunities from multiple jurisdictions and provides bid document distribution, plan rooms for construction, and supplier notification services.
Visit portalProvincial Portals
Each province and territory operates its own procurement systems. Ontario uses the Ontario Tenders Portal (OTP), Quebec uses the Système électronique d'appel d'offres (SEAO), British Columbia uses BC Bid, and Alberta uses the Alberta Purchasing Connection. Municipal governments often publish on their own websites or through MERX.
Visit portalGETS (Government Electronic Tendering Service)
Integrated into CanadaBuys, GETS ensures that all federal procurements subject to trade agreement obligations are published in accordance with CFTA, CETA, CUSMA, and CPTPP requirements. It guarantees that covered opportunities reach the widest possible supplier base.
Visit portalProcurement Thresholds
| Category | Threshold () |
|---|---|
| Supplies | |
| Services | |
| Works |
Thresholds are updated periodically. PSPC maintains standing offers and supply arrangements for common goods and services, which departments can call up without separate competitive processes.
Key Sectors & Opportunities
Information Technology
The federal government is a major IT buyer, with ongoing digital transformation initiatives driving demand for cloud services, cybersecurity, application development, and IT professional services. Shared Services Canada (SSC) consolidates IT infrastructure procurement across departments.
Defence & Security
The Department of National Defence and Canadian Coast Guard procure equipment, vessels, aircraft, and maintenance services. Canada's defence investment plan includes major capital projects worth tens of billions. The Industrial and Technological Benefits (ITB) policy requires defence contractors to invest in Canada.
Infrastructure & Construction
Federal and provincial infrastructure programmes fund roads, bridges, transit, water systems, and public buildings. Infrastructure Canada and provincial ministries of transportation are key buyers. Green infrastructure and climate adaptation are growing priorities.
Healthcare
While healthcare is primarily provincial, federal entities like Indigenous Services Canada, the Public Health Agency, and Veterans Affairs procure medical supplies, equipment, and services. Provincial health authorities manage large hospital and clinical procurement portfolios.
Natural Resources & Environment
Canada's resource economy drives procurement in environmental assessment, remediation, forestry management, and mining services. Federal and provincial environmental agencies procure consulting, monitoring, and cleanup services. Clean energy transition is creating new opportunities.
Professional & Consulting Services
Management consulting, policy research, translation, engineering, and scientific services represent a substantial share of federal procurement. PSPC manages several standing offers and supply arrangements for professional services categories.
Tips for Suppliers
Register on CanadaBuys and Provincial Portals
Obtain a Procurement Business Number (PBN)
Understand Standing Offers and Supply Arrangements
Leverage Trade Agreements
Pursue Indigenous and Social Procurement
Build Bilingual Capacity
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to be a Canadian company to bid on government tenders?
Not for most federal procurements. Canada's trade agreements (WTO GPA, CETA, CUSMA, CPTPP) grant suppliers from signatory countries the right to bid on covered procurements above specified thresholds. For procurements below trade agreement thresholds or those with national security exceptions, preference may be given to Canadian suppliers. Some provincial procurements may have local content requirements.
What is the difference between a standing offer and a supply arrangement?
A standing offer is a pre-agreed offer from a supplier that the government can accept (call up) at any time for specified goods or services at pre-set prices. A supply arrangement is a method of supply that pre-qualifies suppliers but requires a secondary competitive process for each call-up. Both are managed by PSPC and reduce procurement timelines for routine purchases.
How do I find provincial and municipal tenders?
Provincial tenders are posted on province-specific portals: BC Bid (British Columbia), Alberta Purchasing Connection, SaskTenders (Saskatchewan), MERX (Ontario, Atlantic provinces), and SEAO (Quebec). Municipal tenders are often posted on MERX or individual city procurement websites. Biddingo and other aggregators also compile sub-national opportunities.
What is the Industrial and Technological Benefits (ITB) policy?
The ITB policy applies to defence and major Crown procurements valued at CAD 100 million or more. It requires winning contractors to undertake business activity in Canada equal to the contract value. This can include direct work, investments in R&D, or supply chain development in Canada. The policy aims to leverage defence spending to build Canadian industrial capacity.
How does the bid challenge process work in Canada?
The Canadian International Trade Tribunal (CITT) handles bid complaints for federal procurements covered by trade agreements. Complaints must be filed within 10 working days of learning the grounds for complaint. The CITT can recommend remedies including re-evaluation, re-solicitation, or compensation. Provincial procurement review mechanisms vary by jurisdiction.
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