US ProcurementApril 11, 2026Updated April 11, 202612 min read

How to Find US State & Local Government Contracts

A guide to US sub-federal procurement covering state portals, cooperative purchasing organizations like NASPO and Sourcewell, local government procurement, MBE/WBE programs, and compliance requirements.

By TenderRadar Team

The Scale of State and Local Procurement

While federal contracting dominates the headlines, state and local government procurement in the United States is actually larger in aggregate — exceeding $2 trillion annually across 50 states, over 3,000 counties, and approximately 90,000 local government entities. This market encompasses everything from road construction and public safety equipment to IT systems, professional services, healthcare, and education supplies.

Unlike the relatively uniform federal procurement system governed by the FAR, state and local procurement operates under 50 different state procurement codes, countless local ordinances, and varying levels of sophistication and transparency. This fragmentation creates both challenges and opportunities for suppliers willing to navigate the complexity.

State Procurement Portals by Region

Northeast

Northeastern states generally maintain sophisticated e-procurement systems. New York uses the NYS Procurement Services portal (NY PSCB) and the New York State Contract Reporter for publishing opportunities. Massachusetts operates COMMBUYS, a comprehensive e-procurement platform. Pennsylvania uses PA Supplier Portal (eMarketplace), and New Jersey uses NJSTART. These states typically have well-developed certified business programmes and active cooperative purchasing arrangements.

Southeast

Southern states vary widely in procurement sophistication. Florida MyFloridaMarketPlace (MFMP) is one of the most advanced state e-procurement systems in the country, with full electronic sourcing, vendor management, and spend analytics. Virginia uses eVA (Electronic Virginia), Georgia uses the Georgia Procurement Registry (GPR) and Team Georgia Marketplace. Texas, the largest state by procurement volume after California, uses the Electronic State Business Daily (ESBD) and the Centralized Master Bidders List (CMBL) through the Comptroller of Public Accounts.

Midwest

Midwestern states often emphasise cooperative purchasing and local preference. Ohio uses the Ohio Procurement Portal, Illinois uses the Illinois Procurement Gateway (BidBuy), and Michigan uses the SIGMA Vendor Self-Service portal. Many Midwestern states participate actively in cooperative purchasing organisations, which can provide efficient multi-state market access.

West

Western states include some of the largest procurement markets. California, the single largest state purchaser, uses Cal eProcure (formerly BidSync) for publishing opportunities, with the Department of General Services (DGS) managing state contracts. Washington uses the Washington Electronic Business Solution (WEBS), Oregon uses OregonBuys, and Colorado uses the Bid Information Distribution System (BIDS). These states often have progressive sustainability and social equity requirements in procurement.

Cooperative Purchasing Organisations

Cooperative purchasing is one of the most efficient routes to state and local government market access. These organisations conduct competitive procurements on behalf of their members, creating contracts that thousands of government entities can use without running their own procurements.

NASPO ValuePoint

The National Association of State Procurement Officials (NASPO) operates NASPO ValuePoint, which establishes cooperative contracts led by individual states on behalf of all participating states. A NASPO ValuePoint contract can provide access to government buyers in dozens of states through a single competitive process. These contracts cover major categories including IT, vehicles, office supplies, and professional services. The lead state runs the competitive procurement, and other states execute participation addenda to access the contract.

Sourcewell (formerly NJPA)

Sourcewell is a government organisation that conducts cooperative procurements for over 50,000 member agencies including cities, counties, school districts, and higher education institutions across all 50 states. Sourcewell contracts are particularly popular for vehicles, heavy equipment, technology, and facility products. Winning a Sourcewell contract can dramatically expand your addressable market because any participating member can purchase directly from the contract without further competition.

OMNIA Partners

OMNIA Partners is the largest cooperative purchasing organisation in the US, serving both public sector and private sector members. Their public sector division offers competitively solicited contracts across categories including facilities, technology, office solutions, and professional services. OMNIA contracts are established through a lead public agency and are available to any public sector entity.

Other Cooperatives

Additional cooperatives include E&I Cooperative Services (focused on higher education), US Communities (now part of OMNIA Partners), and various regional cooperatives. Many school districts and higher education institutions prefer cooperative purchasing routes, making these organisations particularly important for education sector suppliers.

Local Government Procurement

Local governments — cities, counties, special districts, and authorities — collectively represent the largest segment of sub-federal procurement. Local procurement processes vary enormously based on the entity size and sophistication. Large cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Houston have procurement departments rivalling those of some states, with formal competitive bidding requirements, e-procurement systems, and certified business programmes.

Smaller localities may rely on simpler processes: informal quotations for purchases under their competitive threshold (often $25,000-$100,000, varying by jurisdiction), formal sealed bids or RFPs above threshold, and purchasing from cooperative contracts or state contracts where authorised. Many local governments publish opportunities on their websites, regional purchasing portals, or third-party platforms like BidNet or Bonfire.

MBE/WBE and Disadvantaged Business Programmes

State and local governments operate a wide array of certified business programmes, generally more expansive than federal small business programmes. Common certifications include:

Minority Business Enterprise (MBE): Businesses at least 51% owned and controlled by one or more minority group members. State and local MBE programmes often have specific utilisation goals — for example, requiring prime contractors to subcontract a percentage of work to MBEs. Certification is typically obtained through the state or through the National Minority Supplier Development Council (NMSDC).

Women Business Enterprise (WBE): Businesses at least 51% owned and controlled by one or more women. Certification is available through state programmes or the Women Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC). Many jurisdictions combine MBE and WBE goals into MWBE programmes.

Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE): The federal DBE programme applies to state and local transportation contracts funded by the US Department of Transportation (USDOT). DBE certification is required to participate in airport, transit, and highway contracting goals. DBE certification is obtained through the Unified Certification Programme (UCP) in each state.

Small Local Business Enterprise (SLBE) and Local Business Enterprise (LBE): Many cities and counties offer preferences to businesses headquartered or operating within their jurisdiction. These programmes can provide bid preferences, set-asides, or evaluation points that give local businesses a competitive advantage.

Prevailing Wage Requirements

State and local construction and service contracts often include prevailing wage requirements. At the federal level, the Davis-Bacon Act requires prevailing wages on federally funded construction projects. Many states have their own prevailing wage laws (sometimes called little Davis-Bacon acts) that apply to state-funded projects. These laws require contractors to pay workers at rates determined by the relevant government entity, typically based on local union rates. Compliance is mandatory and heavily audited — violations can result in debarment and financial penalties.

Buy American and Local Preference

Many states and localities have enacted their own domestic preference laws, separate from federal Buy American requirements. These may require or prefer products manufactured in the United States, in the specific state, or within the local jurisdiction. Infrastructure projects funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act carry Build America, Buy America (BABA) requirements that mandate domestic sourcing for iron, steel, manufactured products, and construction materials. Suppliers must track these requirements carefully, as they vary by jurisdiction and funding source.

Strategies for State and Local Success

Winning state and local work requires a different approach than federal contracting. Start by identifying your highest-priority states and localities based on market size, competitive landscape, and local preference alignment. Register on relevant state procurement portals and set up opportunity alerts. Pursue cooperative purchasing contracts as a force multiplier — a single Sourcewell or NASPO ValuePoint award can open doors across the country. Obtain relevant certifications (MBE, WBE, DBE, SLBE) in your target jurisdictions. Build relationships with procurement officers, as state and local procurement often involves more direct engagement than federal procurement. And pay close attention to local compliance requirements — prevailing wage, insurance, bonding, and licensing requirements vary significantly by jurisdiction and can disqualify otherwise strong bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is cooperative purchasing and why is it important?

Cooperative purchasing allows government entities to buy from pre-competed contracts established by purchasing cooperatives like NASPO ValuePoint, Sourcewell, and OMNIA Partners. For suppliers, a single cooperative contract can provide access to thousands of government buyers across multiple states without each entity running a separate procurement. It is one of the most efficient routes to scale in state and local markets.

How do state MBE/WBE programmes differ from federal small business programmes?

State and local MBE/WBE programmes focus specifically on minority and women ownership, while federal programmes cover a broader range of socially and economically disadvantaged categories. State programmes often have specific utilisation goals on individual contracts and may include city/county-level local preference elements. Certification processes and eligibility criteria vary by state, and national certifications (NMSDC for MBE, WBENC for WBE) are often recognised alongside state certifications.

Do I need to register in every state where I want to do business?

Generally yes — each state maintains its own vendor registration system, and you must be registered to receive solicitation notifications and be eligible for award. However, cooperative purchasing contracts can provide market access across multiple states through a single competitive process. Prioritise registration in your highest-value target states and supplement with cooperative contracts for broader coverage.

What are prevailing wage requirements and when do they apply?

Prevailing wage laws require contractors on government construction and service contracts to pay workers at locally determined wage rates, typically based on union scales. The federal Davis-Bacon Act applies to federally funded construction, and about 30 states have their own prevailing wage laws for state-funded projects. Non-compliance can result in contract termination, financial penalties, and debarment.

How does Buy American apply at the state level?

Many states have enacted their own domestic preference laws requiring or favouring products manufactured in the US or within the state. The federal Build America, Buy America (BABA) Act adds requirements for federally funded infrastructure projects. These requirements vary significantly by state and by the funding source of each project — suppliers should verify domestic content requirements for each solicitation they pursue.

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