Our Expert in Greece
No results available
Greece’s public procurement landscape is undergoing its most significant overhaul in a decade, driven by a convergence of national legislation and EU-level regulatory updates that demand immediate action from bidders, contracting authorities and their advisers. The Greece public procurement reforms now in force, anchored by Law 5218/2025, which restructured procurement design and integrity requirements, and Law 5290/2026, which overhauled bid challenge remedies and procedural timelines, have fundamentally changed how PPP, privatisation and high-value tenders are prepared, submitted and contested.
Compounding those statutory changes, updated EU procurement thresholds took effect on 1 January 2026, reclassifying whether certain contracts fall under EU or national rules, while the Public Procurement Acceleration measures that came into force on 1 July 2026 have compressed standstill periods and evaluation deadlines across the board. This guide translates each reform into concrete action steps, checklists and risk-mitigation strategies for every participant in a Greek public tender.
Four overlapping developments are reshaping tender compliance in Greece. Bidders who fail to adapt risk disqualification, missed deadlines or forfeited challenge rights. Here is what matters most:
Immediate action items for bidders:
Understanding when each reform takes effect, and what transitional provisions apply, is essential for pipeline planning. The table below sets out the four milestones in chronological order, together with the immediate practical consequence for bidders and contracting authorities.
| Date | Reform / Measure | Immediate Effect for Bidders |
|---|---|---|
| 11 July 2025 | Law 5218/2025, reform of procurement design, integrity measures, evaluation criteria and PPP contract-performance requirements | Bidders must update compliance packs; contracting authorities must redesign prequalification and evaluation weightings for all tenders published after the effective date |
| 1 January 2026 | Updated EU procurement thresholds take effect across all Member States | Reclassify every tender in the pipeline: some contracts move above the EU threshold (full EU rules apply), others drop below (national rules only); lot-splitting strategies must be reconsidered |
| 2026 | Law 5290/2026, amendments to remedies, standstill periods, electronic communication for bid challenges, and procedural acceleration provisions | Shortened pre-contractual challenge windows; fully electronic filing for bid disputes; adjusted standstill periods alter mobilisation planning |
| 1 July 2026 | Public Procurement Acceleration measures enter into force | Compressed e-procurement timelines and faster evaluation deadlines; bidders and authorities must re-forecast schedules, governance approvals and due-diligence windows |
Industry observers expect that the transitional period, particularly for tenders already advertised before 1 July 2026, will generate ambiguity. The likely practical effect is that any procurement notice published on or after 1 July 2026 will be subject to the full acceleration regime, while tenders already at evaluation stage will proceed under the prior timelines. However, bidders should confirm the applicable regime on a case-by-case basis by reviewing the specific tender notice and any ministerial circulars issued by the contracting authority.
Law 5218/2025, passed on 11 July 2025, represents the most comprehensive reform of Greece’s public procurement framework since the transposition of the 2014 EU Procurement Directives. The law amended key provisions of Law 4412/2016 (the primary Greek procurement statute) and introduced new requirements addressing procurement design, transparency, integrity and sustainability. Its scope covers public works, supply and service contracts as well as concessions and PPPs in Greece.
Central to the reform is a reinforcement of integrity measures aligned with the Code of Conduct published by the National Transparency Authority (AEAD). Contracting authorities must now implement documented conflict-of-interest management procedures, and bidders are required to submit enhanced integrity declarations at prequalification stage. The law also strengthens the role of the Hellenic Single Public Procurement Authority (EAADHSY) in overseeing compliance and issuing binding guidance.
For PPPs in Greece and privatisation tenders managed by HRADF (the Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund), Law 5218/2025 introduced several design-level changes that contracting authorities must implement and bidders must reflect in their submissions:
The commercial consequences of Law 5218/2025 extend beyond compliance paperwork. Bid bonds and performance securities must now reference the updated statutory provisions. Tender financing covenants in PPP project-finance documentation should be reviewed to ensure they align with the new contract-performance requirements, particularly the KPI-linked payment mechanisms that contracting authorities are expected to adopt. Early indications suggest that lenders and sponsors active in Greek infrastructure are already revising their standard term sheets to incorporate the new performance-security language, and consortia should ensure that their internal consortium agreements allocate responsibility for meeting the enhanced integrity declarations and ESG prequalification requirements.
Law 5290/2026 targets the procedural infrastructure of bid challenges in Greece. The amendments address four key areas that directly affect how bidders contest, or defend, award decisions:
For bidders considering a challenge, the practical implication is clear: preparation must begin before the award decision is published. A bid challenge evidence pack, including comparative scoring analysis, procedural irregularity documentation and witness statements, should be assembled in parallel with the tender submission itself. For winning bidders defending an award, the shortened timelines mean that mobilisation decisions (site access, subcontractor commitments, financing drawdowns) must be calibrated against the realistic prospect of a challenge filing within the compressed window.
The reforms to bid challenges in Greece under Law 5290/2026 also affect legal costs. Mandatory electronic filing reduces certain administrative expenses but increases the need for specialised e-procurement litigation capabilities. Industry observers expect that the number of speculative or tactical challenges may decline as a consequence of the tighter windows and faster rulings, but well-prepared challenges from serious bidders are likely to become more, not less, common.
The procurement thresholds 2026, effective 1 January 2026, revised the financial values that determine whether a Greek public contract is subject to full EU procurement rules (advertising in the Official Journal, full procedural requirements, EU-wide standstill) or only to national rules under Law 4412/2016. These threshold adjustments, made by European Commission delegated regulation, apply uniformly across all EU Member States but have jurisdiction-specific consequences depending on the typical contract values in each country’s pipeline.
The table below illustrates how three hypothetical Greek PPP and privatisation contracts are reclassified under the updated thresholds:
| Contract Type | Estimated Value | Pre-2026 Classification | Post-1 Jan 2026 Classification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regional waste-management PPP | €5.1 million | Above EU threshold, full EU rules | Above EU threshold, full EU rules (no change) |
| Municipal IT services concession | €5.35 million | Below EU concession threshold, national rules only | Above revised EU concession threshold, full EU rules now apply |
| Port infrastructure maintenance (works) | €5.25 million | Above prior EU works threshold, full EU rules | Below revised EU works threshold, national rules only |
Bidders should follow a straightforward decision flow: (1) determine the contract type (works, supplies, services or concession); (2) calculate the estimated contract value using the methodology prescribed by Law 4412/2016 (as amended); (3) compare the value against the applicable 2026 threshold; (4) apply the corresponding procedural regime. Where a contract falls just above or below the threshold, particular care is required, contracting authorities must not artificially split lots to circumvent EU rules, and bidders should scrutinise lot-division strategies for potential challenge grounds.
The Public Procurement Acceleration measures, which entered into force on 1 July 2026, represent the government’s response to persistent criticism that Greek procurement timelines, particularly for infrastructure, energy and privatisation projects, were among the slowest in the EU. The measures target three specific bottlenecks:
For bidders participating in PPPs in Greece or privatisation Greece tenders, the acceleration measures demand a fundamental re-planning of internal governance and bid-preparation workflows:
The following checklist consolidates the action items arising from the Greece public procurement reforms into a single, actionable framework. Each item is mapped to the responsible team member and a recommended deadline relative to the tender submission date.
| Checklist Item | Responsible Team Member | Deadline (Relative to Submission) |
|---|---|---|
| Update compliance matrix to reflect Law 5218/2025 and Law 5290/2026 requirements | Legal / compliance lead | Immediately (before next tender) |
| Reclassify all pipeline tenders against EU procurement thresholds 2026 | Commercial / bid manager | Immediately |
| Prepare enhanced integrity declarations (AEAD Code of Conduct alignment) | Legal / compliance lead | Submission minus 4 weeks |
| Draft social-impact and innovation narrative for technical proposal | Technical / ESG lead | Submission minus 6 weeks |
| Review and update financial-capacity evidence (annual accounts, bank references, insurance certificates) | Finance lead | Submission minus 4 weeks |
| Revise bid bond and performance security wording to reference updated statutory provisions | Legal / project finance lead | Submission minus 3 weeks |
| Update consortium agreement (joint-liability clauses, integrity obligations, lead-member responsibilities) | Legal lead + consortium partners | Submission minus 5 weeks |
| Prepare bid challenge evidence pack (template) in parallel with bid submission | Disputes / litigation lead | Submission minus 2 weeks |
| Re-forecast project schedule to reflect acceleration-measure timelines | Project manager / bid manager | Immediately upon tender notice publication |
| Verify electronic-filing capability for potential bid challenges (Law 5290/2026) | Disputes lead / IT | Submission minus 4 weeks |
Bidders should maintain a compliance matrix that maps every tender requirement to the corresponding legal provision and the evidence document submitted. Below is an excerpt structure:
| Tender Requirement | Legal Basis | Evidence Document Submitted | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Integrity declaration (conflict of interest) | Law 5218/2025, Art. [X]; AEAD Code of Conduct | Signed declaration + corporate governance policy | Complete / Pending / N/A |
| Financial capacity (minimum turnover) | Law 4412/2016, Art. 75 (as amended by Law 5218/2025) | Audited accounts (last 3 years) + bank reference letter | Complete / Pending / N/A |
| Social/innovation criteria response | Law 5218/2025, Art. [Y] | Technical proposal, Section [Z] | Complete / Pending / N/A |
Under the compressed timelines introduced by Law 5290/2026, preparing a bid challenge evidence pack in advance is no longer optional. The recommended contents include:
The OECD’s 2025 report on managing public procurement risks in Greece emphasised that the most common grounds for successful bid challenges are ambiguous compliance statements, incomplete evidence of financial or technical capacity, and failures in consortium governance documentation. To minimise risk under the new regime, bidders should ensure that every compliance statement is unambiguous and directly traceable to a specific tender requirement. Consortium governance documents, including the joint-venture or consortium agreement, power-of-attorney for the lead member, and subcontractor declarations, must be updated to reflect the enhanced integrity and joint-liability provisions of Law 5218/2025.
Data-room discipline is equally critical. Under the enhanced transparency provisions, any document submitted during tender compliance in Greece becomes part of the procurement record and is potentially accessible to challengers. Bidders should assume that every submission will be scrutinised and avoid inconsistencies between the financial model, technical proposal and compliance declarations.
If a winning bidder faces a challenge under the reformed regime, the following steps should be taken immediately:
Authorities running PPP and privatisation tenders must also adapt their internal processes to the Greece public procurement reforms. The AEAD’s Code of Conduct for integrity in public procurement provides a practical framework, and the following table summarises recommended actions and their benefits:
| Action | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Update procurement plans to reflect acceleration-measure timelines | Avoids statutory deadline breaches and EAADHSY escalation |
| Redesign prequalification criteria to include ESG and integrity requirements (Law 5218/2025) | Ensures legal compliance and attracts higher-quality bidders |
| Implement documented conflict-of-interest management procedures (AEAD Code of Conduct) | Reduces challenge risk and aligns with National Transparency Authority guidance |
| Assign meaningful weight to social and innovation criteria in evaluation | Complies with Law 5218/2025 and supports EU innovation-procurement policy objectives |
| Train evaluation committees on the new electronic-communication and standstill rules | Prevents procedural errors that could invalidate an award decision |
| Publish all procurement documents on ESIDIS and Diavgeia in real time | Meets enhanced transparency obligations and reduces Freedom of Information challenges |
The Greece public procurement reforms of 2025–2026 are not incremental adjustments, they represent a structural shift in how PPP, privatisation and high-value tenders are designed, evaluated, awarded and challenged. Bidders, sponsors and contracting authorities who act now will secure a compliance advantage and reduce the risk of costly bid challenges or disqualification. The following next steps should be prioritised:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nikolas Avgouleas at Fortsakis Diakopoulos & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 21 minutes ago
posted 27 minutes ago
posted 43 minutes ago
posted 49 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
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.
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 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.
Send welcome message