[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
challenging public procurement decisions Malta 2026

How to Challenge Public Procurement and Tender Decisions in Malta (2026): a Practical Guide for Bidders & Contracting Authorities

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last updated: 29 April 2026

Malta’s public procurement landscape has entered 2026 with a series of updated circulars and Legal Notices that sharpen enforcement obligations and refine the procedures for challenging public procurement decisions Malta 2026. For bidders who believe an award or rejection was unlawful, and for contracting authorities seeking to avoid costly review proceedings, the practical stakes have never been higher. The Public Contracts Review Board (PCRB) remains the mandatory first-instance tribunal for virtually all tender challenges, yet the procedural detail that determines success or failure is scattered across government PDFs, gazette notices and evolving case law.

This guide consolidates that material into a single, step-by-step resource: from the moment a decision letter lands on your desk to the final remedy order, covering deadlines, grounds, evidence requirements, interim measures, contract variations and best-practice templates.

At a glance, key facts for 2026:

  • Filing deadline: 10 calendar days from the day after the contracting authority communicates the award or rejection.
  • First-instance tribunal: Public Contracts Review Board (PCRB).
  • Onward appeal: Court of Appeal within 20 days of delivery of the PCRB decision.
  • Key remedies: interim suspension of award, annulment, recommencement of evaluation, and (at court level) damages.
  • 2026 changes: updated procurement circulars tighten record-keeping, debrief protocols and conflict-of-interest declarations, all of which create new angles for a tender challenge Malta practitioners should note.

Quick Action Checklist for Challenging Public Procurement Decisions in Malta

Speed is the single most important factor in a successful PCRB appeal process. Missing the statutory window is fatal and cannot be cured. The checklist below organises the critical actions into two phases.

0–48 Hours After Receiving the Decision

  1. Preserve all evidence immediately. Save the award or rejection letter, the evaluation grid (if disclosed), the tender dossier, all correspondence with the contracting authority, and any internal notes or emails referencing the evaluation.
  2. Identify the trigger date. The 10-calendar-day clock starts on the day after the authority communicates the decision. Confirm the exact date of receipt and note the deadline prominently.
  3. Request a debrief. Under the procurement regulations, unsuccessful tenderers may request a written debrief explaining the reasons for rejection or the characteristics and relative advantages of the winning tender. Submit this request in writing within the first 48 hours so the response arrives before your filing deadline.
  4. Engage specialist procurement counsel. The compressed timeline leaves no room for delay. Instruct a lawyer experienced in PCRB proceedings to begin drafting the objection immediately.
  5. Assess confidentiality obligations. Check which documents are classified as commercially sensitive and which can be annexed to the objection without breaching tender conditions.

Up to 10 Calendar Days, Preparing and Filing the Objection

  1. Draft the PCRB objection (see Section 4 below for form and content requirements).
  2. Compile the evidence index. Every supporting document should be numbered, tabulated and cross-referenced to the specific ground of challenge.
  3. Decide whether to request interim measures. If the contracting authority is likely to sign the contract before the PCRB can hear the case, apply for a suspension order at the same time as filing the objection.
  4. File and serve. Deliver the objection to the PCRB Secretary and serve a copy on the contracting authority before midnight on day 10.
  5. Confirm receipt. Obtain a date-stamped acknowledgement from the PCRB office or a delivery confirmation if filing electronically.

Who Can Challenge a Tender Decision: PCRB vs Superior Courts

Understanding the correct forum is essential before filing. Maltese law channels procurement disputes through a two-tier system: the PCRB at first instance and the Court of Appeal on further appeal.

PCRB Jurisdiction and Role

The Public Contracts Review Board is an independent tribunal established under the Public Procurement Regulations. Any economic operator, defined broadly to include companies, partnerships, sole traders and consortia, that has an interest in a particular public contract and claims to have been harmed by an alleged infringement of procurement rules may lodge an objection. The PCRB has jurisdiction over both above-threshold and below-threshold tenders awarded by contracting authorities and central government bodies. Its powers extend to reviewing the legality of award decisions, cancellations, exclusions and the terms of tender documents themselves.

Appeals to the Court of Appeal

A party dissatisfied with a PCRB decision may appeal to the Court of Appeal (Inferior Jurisdiction) within 20 days from the date of delivery of the PCRB decision. The Court of Appeal conducts a full review on points of law and, where appropriate, on the merits. It may confirm, vary or annul the PCRB decision and can award damages, a remedy the PCRB itself cannot order. Court of Appeal judgments create binding precedent that shapes subsequent PCRB decisions.

When Administrative Review Applies

In limited circumstances, for example, where a dispute concerns a concession contract or a matter falling outside the PCRB’s statutory remit, judicial review before the First Hall of the Civil Court may be the correct route. Industry observers expect these cases to remain rare in practice, but bidders should take legal advice early if the contract type is ambiguous. As a general rule: if the procurement is governed by the Public Procurement Regulations and involves a contracting authority, the PCRB route applies.

How to File a PCRB Appeal: Step-by-Step

The PCRB appeal process is straightforward in structure but unforgiving on detail. An objection that omits a required element or arrives one day late will be dismissed without consideration of its merits. As at 29 April 2026, the following procedural requirements apply.

Form and Required Content

The objection must be submitted in writing and should contain, at a minimum:

  • Identity of the complainant: full legal name, registration number, registered address and contact details of the economic operator.
  • Identification of the tender: tender reference number, title, contracting authority and date of the challenged decision.
  • Statement of facts: a clear, chronological narrative of the relevant events, when the tender was published, when the bid was submitted, when the award or rejection was communicated, and what the authority stated as reasons.
  • Grounds of objection: each ground should be stated separately and linked to the specific provision of the procurement regulations or tender conditions alleged to have been breached.
  • Relief sought: specify whether you seek annulment of the award, recommencement of the evaluation, annulment of the tender, or interim measures (or any combination).
  • List of annexed evidence: a numbered schedule of all documents filed in support.

Evidence and Annex Checklist

Strong objections are evidence-led. The following documents should be annexed where available:

  • Copy of the award or rejection letter.
  • The full tender dossier (including any clarifications or addenda issued by the authority).
  • The complainant’s submitted tender (or relevant extracts).
  • Any debrief correspondence received from the contracting authority.
  • Evaluation matrix or scoring sheet (if disclosed or obtainable).
  • Relevant email correspondence.
  • Expert reports or technical opinions (if the challenge involves technical specifications).
  • Proof of the date of receipt of the decision (for computing the 10-day deadline).

Filing and Service Rules

The objection must be filed with the Secretary of the Public Contracts Review Board. Filing may be made by hand delivery to the PCRB office or electronically where facilities are available. A copy must simultaneously be served on the contracting authority. The critical rule: both filing and service must be completed within 10 calendar days from the day after the decision was communicated. Weekends and public holidays count toward the 10 days, so practitioners should plan accordingly and never rely on the final day.

Comparison: PCRB vs Court of Appeal, Key Procedural Differences

Action PCRB (First Instance) Court of Appeal
When to file Within 10 calendar days from the day after the award/rejection is communicated. Within 20 days from delivery of the PCRB decision.
Typical remedies Interim measures, annulment of award, recommencement of evaluation process. May overturn PCRB orders, award damages, set aside decisions; creates binding precedent.
Suspensive effect May grant interim measures to suspend award or contract performance. Court orders can carry wider enforcement effect; often final and determinative.

Interim Measures: How to Request Suspension

If there is a real risk that the contracting authority will sign the contract before the PCRB hears the objection, the complainant should include an express request for interim measures in the objection itself. The request should explain why the balance of convenience favours suspension, typically by demonstrating that irreparable harm will result if the contract is executed, and that there is a prima facie case of illegality. The PCRB has the power to order the authority to refrain from signing or performing the contract pending determination of the objection.

Early indications suggest that panels are more willing to grant interim measures where the objection is well-evidenced and the public interest in a lawful process outweighs the urgency of proceeding with the contract.

Sample opening paragraph for an objection (template wording):

“The undersigned, [Company Name] (C-[Registration Number]), an economic operator that submitted a tender in response to [Tender Reference and Title] issued by [Contracting Authority], hereby files this objection before the Public Contracts Review Board pursuant to the Public Procurement Regulations. The objection is filed within the prescribed period, the decision having been communicated on [Date]. The Complainant respectfully seeks the annulment of the award decision and, pending determination, requests interim measures suspending the conclusion of the contract.”

Grounds to Challenge: Statutory Bases and Practical Examples

An objection succeeds or fails on its grounds. Maltese procurement law recognises a broad range of challengeable irregularities, each requiring specific evidence. Below are the grounds most frequently argued before the PCRB, organised by stage of the procurement process.

Pre-Award Grounds

  • Discriminatory or disproportionate specifications. Where the tender dossier contains technical requirements that favour a particular product or supplier without objective justification, any economic operator may challenge the specifications before the award is made. Evidence typically includes comparable product datasheets and expert opinion showing that the specification excludes competitive alternatives.
  • Conflict of interest. If a member of the evaluation committee has a financial, familial or professional connection to one of the bidders, the entire evaluation may be vitiated. The 2026 procurement circulars reinforce the obligation on contracting authorities to conduct and document conflict-of-interest checks, a development that creates new tender challenge Malta grounds where declarations are incomplete or absent.
  • Irregularities in evaluation scoring. This is the most common ground. The complainant must show that the evaluation committee applied criteria not stated in the tender dossier, misapplied the stated weighting, or made arithmetical errors. Obtaining the evaluation matrix through the debrief process is essential.
  • Incorrect exclusion. Where a bidder has been excluded for alleged non-compliance with eligibility or selection criteria, the objection should demonstrate that the exclusion was based on a misreading of the tender documents or that the alleged deficiency was immaterial.

Post-Award and Cancellation Grounds

  • Unlawful cancellation of a tender. Contracting authorities sometimes cancel and re-issue tenders to avoid awarding to a particular bidder or to rewrite specifications. Cancellation is lawful only where the authority can demonstrate genuine, objective reasons. A challenge on tender cancellation grounds requires evidence that the stated reasons were pretextual or that the cancellation circumvented the evaluation outcome.
  • Failure to respect stated award criteria. If the authority awards the contract to a tenderer whose offer did not satisfy the mandatory requirements or scored lower under the stated criteria, this constitutes a clear ground of objection.

Manifest Error and Material Breach

A residual but powerful ground is manifest error of assessment, an error so obvious that no reasonable evaluation committee, properly directed, could have reached the same conclusion. This ground carries a high evidential threshold: the complainant must show that the error goes beyond a mere difference of technical opinion. Supporting evidence typically includes independent expert reports and detailed cross-referencing of the winning tender against the stated criteria.

Checklist, evidence that convinces the PCRB:

  • Date-stamped award or rejection letter (proves timeline compliance).
  • Full evaluation matrix and scoring breakdown.
  • Debrief correspondence and any clarification answers.
  • Tender dossier (including all addenda and Q&A).
  • Complainant’s own submitted tender (to rebut alleged non-compliance).
  • Independent technical or financial expert report.
  • Conflict-of-interest declarations (or evidence of their absence).
  • Correspondence showing procedural irregularities (emails, minutes).

Public Procurement Remedies: What the PCRB Can Order

The PCRB has a range of remedial powers. Understanding these remedies, and their practical limitations, is critical for calibrating expectations before filing.

Interim Measures

As discussed above, the PCRB may order the contracting authority to suspend the award or refrain from executing the contract. Interim measures are temporary and last only until the PCRB delivers its final decision. They are the most tactically important remedy because, once a contract is signed and substantially performed, annulment becomes far more difficult to achieve in practice. A request for interim measures should be included in the objection from the outset.

Final Remedies

On the merits, the PCRB may:

  • Annul the award decision and order the contracting authority to re-evaluate tenders or recommence the procurement process from a specified stage.
  • Annul the tender entirely where the irregularity is so fundamental that no lawful award can be made on the existing dossier.
  • Order recommencement of the evaluation by a differently constituted committee, particularly where conflict of interest is established.
  • Dismiss the objection if the grounds are not substantiated, the most common outcome where evidence is thin.

Notably, the PCRB cannot award monetary damages. If a bidder seeks compensation for lost profits or wasted tender preparation costs, the only route is an appeal or separate proceedings before the ordinary courts.

Appealing PCRB Decisions to the Court of Appeal

Either party, the complainant or the contracting authority, may appeal the PCRB’s decision to the Court of Appeal within 20 days of delivery. The Court conducts a full rehearing, not merely a review on points of law. It may substitute its own findings, award damages, and issue orders binding on both parties. Industry observers expect the Court of Appeal to play an increasingly prominent role in procurement litigation as case volumes rise and PCRB decisions are tested more frequently.

Post-Award Issues: Contract Variation and Re-Tender Risk in Malta

Not every procurement dispute arises at the award stage. Significant legal risk also attaches to modifications made after a contract has been signed. Understanding when a contract variation Malta rules allow, and when they trigger an obligation to re-tender, is essential for both contracting authorities and vigilant competitors.

Permitted Variations

Maltese procurement rules, implementing the EU Directives, allow certain modifications to existing public contracts without re-competition. Broadly, a variation is permitted where:

  • It was provided for in the original tender documents through clear, precise and unequivocal review clauses.
  • Additional works, services or supplies have become necessary and a change of contractor is not practicable for economic or technical reasons, provided the increase does not exceed prescribed thresholds.
  • The modification is de minimis, below both the relevant EU threshold and a specified percentage of the original contract value.

The Material Change Test and Its Consequences

A modification is unlawful and triggers a re-tendering obligation where it is material, that is, where it renders the contract substantially different in character from the one originally procured. Indicators of materiality include: a significant extension of the contract scope, a substantial increase in contract value not covered by review clauses, a change to the economic balance in favour of the contractor, or the introduction of conditions that, if included originally, would have attracted additional bidders. The likely practical effect is that contracting authorities must conduct a rigorous materiality assessment, documented in writing, before approving any variation.

How Bidders Can Challenge Unlawful Variations

An economic operator that would have tendered for the modified scope, or that considers the variation to be a de facto new contract, may report the irregularity to the Department of Contracts or file an objection with the PCRB where the variation constitutes an unlawful direct award. The reporting irregularities procedure available through contracts.gov.mt provides an accessible channel for raising concerns. If the PCRB finds the variation unlawful, it may declare the modification ineffective and order a fresh procurement process.

Avoiding Challenges: Procurement Best Practice for Contracting Authorities

For contracting authorities, the most cost-effective strategy is to conduct the procurement so rigorously that challenges are unlikely to succeed, or are not filed at all. The 2026 procurement circular updates reinforce several obligations that, if followed, substantially reduce PCRB exposure.

Drafting Tips

  • Define award criteria and their weightings with precision. Ambiguity in scoring methodology is the single most common source of successful objections.
  • Ensure technical specifications are non-discriminatory and refer to standards rather than proprietary products.
  • Include clear review clauses for any foreseeable contract variations.
  • Require and verify conflict-of-interest declarations from every evaluation committee member before evaluation begins.

Award and Debrief Protocol

  • Issue standstill letters promptly, clearly stating the reasons for the award and the identity of the winning tenderer.
  • Respond to debrief requests within the statutory timeframe, providing sufficient detail to demonstrate that the evaluation was conducted lawfully.
  • Maintain a complete audit trail: committee meeting minutes, individual scoring sheets, consensus records and any correspondence with bidders during evaluation.
  • Obtain legal sign-off on the award recommendation before it is communicated, particularly for high-value or sensitive tenders.

Practical Templates and Annexes for Challenging Public Procurement Decisions Malta 2026

Having the right templates ready before a dispute arises saves critical hours during the 10-day filing window. The following resources support a structured, evidence-led objection.

Sample Objection Wording

The sample opening paragraph provided in Section 4 above can be adapted to any tender challenge. The objection should follow a standard structure: (1) complainant identification, (2) tender identification, (3) facts in chronological order, (4) grounds of objection (each numbered and linked to the regulation breached), (5) evidence schedule, (6) relief sought, and (7) interim measures request.

Evidence Index Template

Prepare a table with the following columns: Exhibit Number | Document Title | Date | Relevance (linked to Ground No.) | Pages. Number exhibits sequentially (e.g., RS-1, RS-2) and cross-reference each exhibit in the body of the objection. A well-organised evidence index signals professionalism and makes the PCRB panel’s task easier, which, in practice, increases the likelihood that all supporting material is actually considered.

Timeline Calendar

Create a one-page calendar running from the date of the decision letter to the filing deadline, marking: (a) day of receipt, (b) 48-hour internal review target, (c) debrief request date, (d) counsel instruction date, (e) draft objection completion target, and (f) filing and service deadline. Distribute the calendar to everyone involved in the objection process on day one.

Conclusion

Challenging public procurement decisions Malta 2026 requires precision, speed and well-organised evidence. The 10-calendar-day filing deadline is immovable, the grounds must be tied to specific regulatory breaches, and the evidence must be indexed and cross-referenced to each ground. For contracting authorities, robust documentation and transparent evaluation processes remain the best defence. Whether you are a bidder preparing an objection or a procurement officer seeking to minimise dispute risk, specialist legal advice tailored to Maltese procurement law is essential. Explore the Contract practice area on Global Law Experts or browse the Malta lawyer directory to connect with experienced procurement counsel.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information on Maltese public procurement law as at 29 April 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Specific cases require analysis by qualified Maltese counsel, and readers should seek professional guidance before taking action.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr Richard Sladden at Sladden & Sladden Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Public Contracts Review Board, New Objections
  2. MITA Procurement, Appeals & Resources
  3. Contracts.gov.mt, Reporting Irregularities in Relation to Tender Process
  4. Contracts.gov.mt, Participating in Public Tenders: Rules and Procedures
  5. WH Partners, Public Procurement 2026: Malta Chapter
  6. AE Legal, Public Procurement in Malta (Part 3)
  7. Lexology, Malta Procurement Case Law Summary
  8. The Shift News, Procurement Reporting (January 2026)

FAQs

How do you appeal a public procurement decision in Malta?
File a written objection with the Public Contracts Review Board within 10 calendar days from the day after the contracting authority communicated the award or rejection. The objection must set out the grounds, include supporting evidence and specify the relief sought. A copy must be served on the contracting authority within the same deadline.
Common grounds include irregularities in the evaluation scoring, conflict of interest on the evaluation committee, discriminatory technical specifications, incorrect exclusion of a bidder, failure to apply the stated award criteria, unlawful cancellation of the tender, and manifest error of assessment.
The deadline is 10 calendar days from the day after the decision is communicated. Required documents include a signed statement of objection setting out facts and grounds, an evidence index, copies of the tender dossier, the rejection or award letter, debrief correspondence, and proof of the date of receipt.
Yes, but only within narrow limits. Variations are permitted where provided for in the original tender documents through clear review clauses, where additional works are strictly necessary, or where the change is de minimis. Material changes, those that substantially alter the contract’s scope, value or economic balance, trigger an obligation to re-tender.
The PCRB may grant interim measures suspending the award, annul the award decision, order recommencement of the evaluation, or annul the entire tender. It cannot award monetary damages; for compensation, a party must appeal to the Court of Appeal or pursue separate civil proceedings.
There is no fixed statutory deadline for the PCRB to deliver its decision. In practice, straightforward cases may be determined within a few weeks of the final hearing, while complex matters, particularly those involving voluminous technical evidence or multiple parties, can take several months. Interim measures, where granted, remain in effect until the final decision is issued.
An appeal must be filed within 20 days from delivery of the PCRB decision. The Court of Appeal conducts a full rehearing and may award damages in addition to confirming or overturning the PCRB’s order.
A debrief allows the unsuccessful bidder to understand the reasons for the award decision, including the characteristics and relative advantages of the winning tender. The information obtained in the debrief often forms the evidential foundation of a successful objection and should be requested immediately upon receipt of the decision letter.
Swiss VAT changes 2026 checklist
By Global Law Experts

posted 40 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Challenge Public Procurement and Tender Decisions in Malta (2026): a Practical Guide for Bidders & Contracting Authorities

Send welcome message

Custom Message