Understanding EU Public Procurement
The European Union operates one of the world's largest and most transparent public procurement markets, worth over EUR 2 trillion annually. EU procurement rules ensure that government contracts above certain value thresholds are open to competition from businesses across all EU and EEA member states. These rules are enshrined in a series of directives that member states transpose into national law, creating a unified — though not identical — procurement framework across 30+ countries.
For suppliers, this means enormous opportunity: a single set of core rules governs access to contracts from Helsinki to Lisbon. But navigating the system requires understanding its key building blocks — the legal framework, the central publication platform (TED), the standardised procedures, and the qualification mechanisms.
The Legal Framework: EU Procurement Directives
EU public procurement is governed by three main directives, all adopted in 2014 and in force since 2016:
- Directive 2014/24/EU — the "Classic" directive covering procurement by central and sub-central government authorities
- Directive 2014/25/EU — the "Utilities" directive covering entities operating in water, energy, transport, and postal services
- Directive 2014/23/EU — the "Concessions" directive covering the award of works and services concessions
In addition, Directive 2009/81/EC governs defence and security procurement, with more flexible rules reflecting the sensitivity of those sectors.
These directives set out mandatory rules for contracts above specific value thresholds. Below those thresholds, national rules apply — though the EU Treaty principles of transparency, equal treatment, and non-discrimination still govern all public spending.
TED: Tenders Electronic Daily
TED (ted.europa.eu) is the official publication platform for EU procurement notices. Every contract that exceeds EU thresholds must be published on TED, making it the single most important tender database for cross-border procurement in Europe.
TED publishes approximately 700,000 contract notices per year, representing an estimated EUR 670 billion in procurement value. Notice types include:
- Prior Information Notices (PIN) — early announcements of upcoming procurements, published up to 12 months in advance
- Contract Notices (CN) — the formal call for competition, inviting tenders or requests to participate
- Contract Award Notices (CAN) — published after a contract is awarded, showing who won and at what value
- Corrigenda — corrections or amendments to previously published notices
Since 2023, TED has been migrating to the eForms standard — a structured, XML-based notice format that replaces the legacy TED schema. eForms provide richer, more machine-readable data and are now mandatory for new notices in most member states.
Procurement Procedures
EU directives define several procurement procedures, each suited to different circumstances:
Open Procedure
The most common procedure, accounting for roughly 75% of all above-threshold contracts. Any interested supplier may submit a tender. The contracting authority evaluates all tenders against published criteria without a prior selection phase. Minimum deadline: 35 days from publication (reducible to 15 days with a PIN).
Restricted Procedure
A two-stage process: suppliers first submit a request to participate, the authority shortlists candidates (minimum 5), and only shortlisted firms are invited to tender. Useful when the authority expects many bidders and wants to reduce evaluation burden.
Competitive Procedure with Negotiation
Similar to restricted, but after receiving initial tenders, the authority may negotiate with bidders to improve their offers. Available only when the authority can justify that the open or restricted procedure would not deliver a satisfactory outcome — for example, where specifications cannot be established with sufficient precision.
Competitive Dialogue
Designed for complex contracts where the authority cannot define technical specifications or commercial terms in advance. After a selection phase, the authority conducts structured dialogue sessions with shortlisted candidates to develop one or more solutions, then invites final tenders. Common in PPP projects, complex IT systems, and infrastructure concessions.
Innovation Partnership
Introduced by the 2014 directives, this procedure allows authorities to partner with suppliers to develop a genuinely innovative product or service that does not yet exist on the market. The partnership covers both R&D and subsequent commercial-scale purchase — eliminating the need for a separate procurement after the development phase.
Negotiated Procedure Without Publication
A last-resort procedure available only in tightly defined circumstances — for example, when only one supplier can deliver the required product (genuine exclusivity), in cases of extreme urgency, or for additional deliveries from an existing supplier where changing would cause disproportionate technical difficulty.
CPV Codes: Classifying What You Buy and Sell
The Common Procurement Vocabulary (CPV) is a standardised classification system used across all EU procurement. Every tender notice includes one or more CPV codes describing the subject of the contract. Understanding CPV codes is essential for suppliers: they are the primary mechanism for filtering relevant opportunities on TED and on national portals.
CPV codes are 8-digit numbers plus a check digit (e.g., 72000000-5 for "IT services"). The hierarchy runs from broad divisions (first two digits) through groups, classes, and categories down to very specific items. Suppliers should identify the CPV codes most relevant to their products or services and use them to set up search alerts.
EU Procurement Thresholds
EU rules only apply above specific value thresholds, which are revised every two years. For the 2024-2025 period, key thresholds include:
- Central government supplies/services: EUR 143,000
- Sub-central government supplies/services: EUR 221,000
- All authorities — works contracts: EUR 5,538,000
- Utilities — supplies/services: EUR 443,000
- Concessions: EUR 5,538,000
These thresholds apply to the estimated total contract value, including options and renewals. Splitting contracts to stay below thresholds is explicitly prohibited. When a procurement is divided into lots, the aggregate value of all lots determines whether EU rules apply.
ESPD: The European Single Procurement Document
The ESPD is a standardised self-declaration form that suppliers use to demonstrate they meet exclusion and selection criteria. It replaces the need to submit full certificates and documentation at the tender stage — a major simplification, especially for SMEs and cross-border bidders.
The ESPD covers:
- Exclusion grounds — criminal convictions, tax debts, insolvency, professional misconduct
- Selection criteria — economic/financial standing, technical/professional ability, quality assurance, environmental management
Only the winning bidder is required to provide full supporting evidence. The eESPD (electronic ESPD) is available via the European Commission's online service, allowing suppliers to create, reuse, and submit their ESPD electronically.
e-Certis is a companion tool that maps the certificates and evidence required in each member state to the ESPD criteria — invaluable for cross-border bidders who need to know which documents to obtain from their home country.
Cross-Border Access and Remedies
EU law guarantees that suppliers from any EU/EEA member state can bid for public contracts in any other member state on equal terms. Contracting authorities may not impose nationality requirements, require local establishment, or apply discriminatory technical specifications.
If you believe a procurement procedure has been conducted unlawfully, the Remedies Directives (89/665/EEC and 92/13/EEC, as amended) provide legal recourse:
- Standstill period: A mandatory 10-day waiting period between award notification and contract signature, giving unsuccessful bidders time to challenge the decision
- Review bodies: Each member state must designate independent review bodies (courts or administrative tribunals) to hear procurement complaints
- Remedies available: Interim measures (suspension of the procedure), setting aside unlawful decisions, and damages
- Ineffectiveness: In the most serious cases (e.g., direct award without publication), a contract can be declared ineffective — essentially voided
Practical Tips for Winning EU Tenders
- Monitor early: Use Prior Information Notices and buyer engagement events to prepare before the formal notice is published
- Get your ESPD ready: Prepare a template ESPD that you can adapt for each tender — this saves significant time
- Understand the evaluation criteria: EU tenders must specify whether award is based on price only or best price-quality ratio (BPQR). Read the criteria carefully and structure your tender to score well on each one
- Consider consortia: If a contract is too large for your firm alone, EU rules explicitly allow joint bidding by groups of suppliers. Partner with complementary firms to strengthen your bid
- Use TenderRadar: Rather than manually searching TED and 27 national portals, use TenderRadar to get AI-matched tender alerts tailored to your company profile