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Direct award vs public tender Denmark 2026

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Direct Award vs Public Tender in Denmark (2026 Thresholds): When to Run an EU Procedure or Award Directly

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Every Danish contracting authority awarding a public contract in 2026 faces the same threshold question: does this contract require a full EU competitive tender, or can we lawfully award it directly? The answer changed on 1 January 2026, when the European Commission reset the EU procurement thresholds for the 2026–2027 biennium, shifting which contracts fall under mandatory EU procedures and, consequently, where a direct award vs public tender Denmark 2026 decision must be made. Municipal procurement officers, central government buyers, in-house counsel, and commercial managers on the supplier side all need a clear, defensible framework for making this call. Bidders, equally, need to know when a direct award can be challenged.

This guide delivers that framework: a dimension-by-dimension comparison, the 2026 threshold figures, and concrete recommendations for when to choose each route, and when to instruct a procurement lawyer before proceeding.

Option A, Direct Award: What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

A direct award (Danish: direkte tildeling) is the award of a public contract to a supplier without prior publication of a contract notice and without a competitive procedure. Under Denmark’s Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven), which implements the EU Public Procurement Directive 2014/24/EU, a direct award is not the default, it is an exception. The contracting authority must demonstrate that one of the exhaustively listed legal grounds applies, and the burden of proof falls entirely on the authority.

Because the grounds are interpreted strictly by the Danish Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud) and by the courts, procurement compliance Denmark requires thorough documentation even when a direct award appears straightforward. A direct award Denmark decision made without proper justification exposes the authority to annulment, damages, and reputational harm.

Lawful Grounds for Direct Award

The Danish Public Procurement Act permits a negotiated procedure without prior publication, the procedural vehicle for a direct award, only where narrow conditions are met. The principal grounds include:

  • Sole supplier / absence of competition. Only one economic operator can deliver the required goods, works, or services, and no reasonable alternative or substitute exists. The absence of competition must not result from an artificially narrow specification.
  • Extreme urgency. Unforeseeable events have created a genuine emergency that makes compliance with standard time limits impossible. The urgency must not be attributable to the authority’s own delay or poor planning.
  • Exclusive intellectual property rights. Technical reasons, including the protection of exclusive rights such as patents or copyrights, mean that only one supplier can perform the contract.
  • Additional works or services. Supplementary deliveries from the original contractor are necessary for technical or economic reasons, and changing supplier would cause significant inconvenience or substantial cost duplication. Cumulative value limits apply.
  • Framework agreement call-offs. Where a framework agreement expressly permits direct call-off (without reopening competition) and the terms for doing so are clearly set out in the framework documentation.

Practical Steps for Contracting Authorities

Before awarding directly, authorities should complete these minimum steps to create a defensible procurement file:

  • Market engagement note. Document any market check, including evidence that alternative suppliers were considered and why they were excluded.
  • Legal justification memo. Identify the specific statutory ground relied upon, cite the relevant provision of the Public Procurement Act, and attach supporting evidence (sole-supplier declarations, IP ownership proof, urgency chronology).
  • Price benchmarking. Demonstrate that the agreed price reflects market value, even in sole-supplier scenarios, comparable reference pricing strengthens the file.
  • Internal sign-off. Obtain written approval from the procurement lead and, for high-value or politically sensitive contracts, from legal counsel.

Option B, EU / Competitive Tender: What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

When a contract’s estimated value meets or exceeds the applicable EU procurement threshold, Danish contracting authorities must follow one of the formal procedures set out in the Public Procurement Act, which transposes Directive 2014/24/EU. The most common are the open procedure and the restricted procedure, though the competitive procedure with negotiation, competitive dialogue, and the innovation partnership are also available for qualifying procurements. Social and other specific services may follow the “light-touch regime” with lighter procedural requirements but still require publication.

In an open procedure, any interested economic operator may submit a tender in response to the published contract notice. All compliant tenders are evaluated. In a restricted procedure, interested operators first submit a request to participate; the authority shortlists candidates (applying pre-announced selection criteria), and only shortlisted candidates are then invited to tender. The restricted procedure adds a selection phase but allows the authority to manage the number of tenders it must evaluate, useful for complex procurements.

Both procedures require publication of a contract notice on TED (Tenders Electronic Daily), observance of minimum time limits for receipt of tenders or requests to participate, and, after the award decision, a mandatory standstill period before the contract can be signed. For above-threshold procurements, these requirements are non-negotiable. Failure to comply gives aggrieved bidders grounds to challenge the award before the Complaints Board.

Typical Calendar and Procurement Milestones

A standard open-procedure timeline in Denmark typically runs as follows:

  • Weeks 1–2: Finalise procurement documents, publish contract notice on TED and nationally.
  • Weeks 3–8: Minimum tender submission period (generally 30 days for open procedure; can be shortened in specific cases).
  • Weeks 9–12: Tender evaluation, clarification rounds, evaluation report.
  • Week 13: Award decision notification to all tenderers; mandatory standstill period begins (minimum 10 calendar days by letter, 15 days by other means under the Complaints Act).
  • Week 14+: Contract signature after standstill expires without challenge.

A restricted procedure adds 2–4 weeks for the selection phase. In total, contracting authorities should plan for 10–20+ weeks from notice publication to contract execution, depending on complexity.

Direct Award vs Public Tender, Side-by-Side Comparison (Denmark, 2026)

The following table is the centrepiece of the competitive tender vs direct award analysis. It summarises each decision dimension in one row. The 2026 threshold figures are commonly reported values; always verify against the Official Journal (EUR-Lex) and the Danish Public Procurement Act before relying on them.

Dimension Direct Award (Option A) EU / Competitive Tender (Option B)
Lawful eligibility Exception only: sole supplier, extreme urgency, exclusive IP rights, additional works, permitted framework call-off. Must satisfy objective facts and document thoroughly. Default route for contracts at or above EU thresholds. Applies all standard EU rules (TED publication, minimum time limits, standstill).
2026 threshold test Available if contract value is below the applicable EU threshold OR if an exception ground is met regardless of value. Challenge risk increases near or above thresholds. Mandatory if estimated value reaches: central government supplies/services ≈ €143,000; sub-central authorities ≈ €221,000; works (all authorities) ≈ €5,538,000; light-touch services ≈ €750,000.
Documentation & transparency No TED notice required (if below threshold). High internal documentation standard: justification memo, market check, price benchmarking. Poor records = high challenge risk. Full formal requirements: TED notice, published scoring methodology, documented evaluation, mandatory standstill notice.
Timing Fast, days to 2–4 weeks if grounds are clear and documentation is prepared. Slower, 10–20+ weeks (publication, submission windows, evaluation, standstill).
Cost (authority & bidders) Lower admin cost for authority. No bidder preparation burden. But potentially high legal/compensation exposure if challenged. Higher administrative cost (TED publication, panel evaluation). Higher bidder preparation costs. Predictable process reduces long-term risk.
Challenge risk & remedies High if exception is not clearly met. Remedies: interim suspension, damages, contract annulment, re-procurement order. Lower if procedures are followed correctly. Remedies exist but procedural compliance provides strong defence.
Enforceability Contract enforceable if lawful. If annulled, authority faces re-procurement and potential compensation to the supplier and aggrieved bidders. Firm legal footing. Award withstands judicial review when procedure is compliant.
Typical use cases Niche-market supplies, genuine emergencies, additional works within value limits, framework call-offs where terms permit. All high-value procurements, complex specifications, multi-bidder markets, politically visible contracts.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Tender vs Direct Award Pros and Cons

Cost, Procurement and External Legal Costs

The direct cost of running a procurement differs significantly between the two routes. For a direct award, the authority’s outlay is largely internal staff time. For an EU competitive tender, costs include TED publication fees, external evaluation panel time, and, frequently, external legal fees for drafting procurement documents and evaluation frameworks. The table below provides illustrative cost bands.

Cost item Direct Award EU Competitive Tender
Procurement admin & advertising €0–€2,000 (internal staff time; no TED posting) €1,000–€8,000 (TED publication, dossier preparation, evaluation panel)
Bidder preparation cost Nil or minimal €5,000–€50,000+ depending on complexity
Legal & challenge contingency Potentially high, model 10–30% of contract value as risk reserve if grounds are weak Lower, model 0–5% contingency for procedural defect claims

The paradox: the route that looks cheaper upfront (direct award) can become the most expensive if challenged. A contracting authority considering a €300,000 IT services contract should weigh a few thousand euros in tender administration against a potential damages claim in the tens of thousands.

Timing, Typical Lead Times

Speed is often the primary driver for considering a direct award. Where legitimate extreme urgency exists, for example, emergency repairs to critical infrastructure following an unforeseeable event, a direct award can be concluded within days, provided the justification file is prepared concurrently. For less urgent but still permissible direct awards (sole supplier, additional works), a realistic timeline is 2–4 weeks to complete documentation, internal approvals, and contract execution.

An EU open procedure, by contrast, requires a minimum of 30 days for tender submission after TED publication, plus evaluation and standstill periods. In practice, Danish authorities should plan for 10–20 weeks end to end. If the timeline is the decisive factor, confirm the urgency ground with counsel before proceeding, using time pressure alone as justification, without qualifying events, will not withstand a challenge.

Liability and Challenge Risk

This is the dimension where the direct award vs public tender Denmark 2026 decision carries the highest stakes. An unlawful direct award is one of the most serious procurement violations. Under Danish law, aggrieved bidders, operators who could have tendered had a competition been held, may bring complaints before the Complaints Board for Public Procurement. Available remedies include:

  • Interim suspension. The Complaints Board can suspend the contract award pending its decision.
  • Annulment. The Board can declare the contract without effect (ineffectiveness), particularly for unlawful direct awards above EU thresholds.
  • Damages. Aggrieved operators can claim compensation for lost profit or bid preparation costs.
  • Shortening of contract. As an alternative to full annulment, the Board may order the contract’s duration to be shortened.

To mitigate challenge risk, authorities should document every element of the exception test: sole-supplier evidence, urgency chronology, IP ownership records, and market-check results. Weak or after-the-fact justification is the single most common reason direct awards are overturned.

Enforceability and Contract Performance

A lawfully made direct award produces a fully enforceable contract. The supplier can perform, invoice, and recover payment in the ordinary way. Problems arise only if the award is later challenged and set aside, at which point the authority must re-procure, potentially compensate both the incumbent supplier (for work already done) and the complainant, and manage the operational disruption of switching contractors mid-stream. EU tender awards, when procedurally compliant, rest on firmer ground and are rarely overturned on judicial review. For high-value or long-term contracts, the enforceability advantage of a properly run competitive procedure is substantial.

Regulatory Burden and Auditability

Danish procurement law requires all contracting authorities to maintain a procurement file demonstrating compliance with transparency and equal-treatment principles, regardless of which route is chosen. For a direct award, the minimum file should contain:

  • Decision memo identifying the legal ground and citing the specific provision of the Public Procurement Act relied upon.
  • Market engagement note with evidence of alternative supplier assessment.
  • Supplier due-diligence records (exclusion-ground checks, ESPD or equivalent).
  • Price benchmarking analysis or comparable-cost evidence.
  • Internal approval chain with dates and signatories.

For EU tenders, the documentation burden is higher but more standardised, TED notices, evaluation reports, standstill correspondence, and award notices all follow established templates. Industry observers note that authorities with mature procurement functions often find the EU procedure’s structured documentation easier to audit-proof than the open-ended justification required for a direct award.

Tax Implications

The choice between a direct award and a competitive tender does not, by itself, change the VAT or withholding-tax treatment of the underlying contract. Danish VAT applies at the standard rate to supplies and services procured by public authorities, regardless of the award method. However, two tax-adjacent considerations are worth noting. First, cross-border procurements (where the supplier is established outside Denmark) may trigger reverse-charge VAT obligations, and cross-border elements also increase the likelihood that EU procurement rules apply. Second, any contract modification arising from a poorly documented direct award (for example, a price adjustment after challenge) may create tax-reporting complications. Authorities should involve tax counsel where cross-border or complex invoicing structures are present.

What Changes in 2026: EU Procurement Thresholds 2026

On 1 January 2026, the European Commission’s revised procurement thresholds took effect for the 2026–2027 biennium, as published in the Official Journal of the European Union. These thresholds determine the dividing line between contracts governed by full EU procurement rules and those that fall under national rules only. The 2026 reset adjusts the euro values to reflect currency fluctuations against the SDR (Special Drawing Right) used by the WTO Government Procurement Agreement.

The commonly reported 2026 threshold values for Directive 2014/24/EU procurements are:

Contract type 2026 threshold (€, excl. VAT)
Supply & service contracts, central government ≈ €143,000
Supply & service contracts, sub-central authorities (municipalities, regions) ≈ €221,000
Works contracts, all contracting authorities ≈ €5,538,000
Social and other specific services (light-touch regime) ≈ €750,000

Important: Always verify the exact figures against the Official Journal (EUR-Lex) and the Danish Public Procurement Act on retsinformation.dk before relying on these numbers. Thresholds are exclusive of VAT and apply to the total estimated contract value, including any options and renewals.

The practical effect of the 2026 reset is that some contracts which fell below the previous thresholds now cross into EU territory, and some that were previously above may drop below. A municipal IT maintenance contract valued at €215,000, for example, would have required an EU procedure under the previous thresholds but may now fall just below the sub-central threshold, making a direct award theoretically available (subject to meeting an exception ground). Authorities must recalculate threshold positions for every new procurement using the 2026 figures.

Denmark implements these thresholds through the Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven), which is updated to reflect each biennial threshold revision. Below-threshold procurements are governed by Part III of the Act and by the Danish Tender Act (Tilbudsloven) for certain works contracts, which impose lighter but still meaningful transparency and equal-treatment obligations.

Decision Framework: When to Use Direct Award, When to Run a Competitive Tender

This section translates the analysis into actionable decision rules. Use the lists below as a first-pass screening tool, then confirm with legal counsel before proceeding.

Choose direct award when:

  • The contract value is below the applicable 2026 EU threshold AND a recognised exception ground is clearly met.
  • Genuine, documented extreme urgency exists (unforeseeable event, not the authority’s own delay).
  • Only one supplier can perform the contract due to verified technical exclusivity or IP ownership.
  • The contract is for additional works or services from the existing contractor, within cumulative value limits and meeting the conditions in the Public Procurement Act.
  • A framework agreement expressly authorises direct call-off and the terms for doing so are set out in the framework documents.
  • The authority has completed and documented a market check, price benchmarking, and a legal justification memo before the award.

Choose EU / competitive tender when:

  • The estimated contract value reaches or exceeds the applicable 2026 EU threshold.
  • Multiple qualified suppliers exist in the market (even if one is preferred).
  • The procurement is high-value, politically visible, or likely to attract cross-border interest.
  • The authority wants to demonstrate value for money and eliminate challenge risk.
  • Previous procurement of similar services attracted complaints or media attention.
  • The contract is for a long duration with significant cumulative spend.
  • There is any doubt about whether a direct-award exception genuinely applies.
If your priority is… Choose
Speed and urgent delivery (with documented extreme urgency) Direct award, but document thoroughly and obtain immediate legal sign-off
Reducing legal and annulment risk for high-value contracts EU / competitive tender
Avoiding bidder challenge in contested or multi-supplier markets EU / competitive tender
Preserving continuity with an existing contractor for minor additional works Direct award, if cumulative value limits are met and documented
Demonstrating value for money and accountability on high spend EU / competitive tender
Procuring in a niche market with a verified sole supplier Direct award, with independent evidence of sole-supplier status

If in doubt, run these five quick checks:

  1. Threshold test. Does the contract value reach the 2026 EU threshold? If yes, EU procedure is almost certainly required.
  2. Exception fit. Does a specific, documented exception ground genuinely apply?
  3. Market test. Have you checked whether alternative suppliers exist? Can you prove it?
  4. Documentation. Is the justification file complete before award, not retrospective?
  5. Counsel trigger. Does any red flag below apply? If so, engage a lawyer before deciding.

Red flags requiring immediate counsel:

  • Cross-border suppliers or potential cross-border interest in the contract.
  • Exclusive IP claims that have not been independently verified.
  • Aggregate procurement value approaching or exceeding the threshold (including options and renewals).
  • Previous complaints or challenges from suppliers on similar procurements.
  • Political sensitivity or media visibility of the procurement.

When to Engage a Procurement Lawyer for This Decision

Not every procurement decision requires external legal advice, but the direct award vs public tender Denmark 2026 decision frequently does, because the consequences of getting it wrong are severe and often irreversible. Engage a procurement lawyer when:

  • The estimated contract value is within 20% of the applicable EU threshold (above or below), and you need a definitive threshold calculation including options, renewals, and lot aggregation.
  • You are relying on the extreme-urgency or sole-supplier exception and need an independent assessment of whether the legal test is met.
  • A supplier has already signalled that it may challenge the award or has requested disclosure of the authority’s procurement file.
  • The contract involves cross-border elements, complex IP arrangements, or a supplier relationship that raises conflict-of-interest concerns.
  • The procurement is politically sensitive, high-profile, or involves a contract modification that may constitute a new award under EU case law.

When instructing counsel, prepare a brief covering: the estimated contract value (including all options), the procurement history for this category, the proposed legal ground for direct award, the results of any market engagement, the intended timeline, and any prior supplier contact or complaint history. This enables the lawyer to give targeted advice quickly.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rikke Lange at NP Advokater, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Plesner, New public procurement thresholds
  2. Business in Denmark (Virk), Public Procurement Act guidance
  3. Danish Competition & Consumer Authority (KFST), Public procurement guidance
  4. DLA Piper Denmark, Public procurement practice
  5. Reyda.ai, EU procurement thresholds 2026
  6. Jorpex, EU procurement thresholds 2026
  7. Tendify, Public procurement glossary: direct award
  8. Mercell, Framework call-offs explained
  9. TED (Tenders Electronic Daily), EU procurement notices portal

FAQs

What is the EU threshold for tenders (2026)?
For the 2026–2027 biennium, the commonly reported EU procurement thresholds under Directive 2014/24/EU are approximately €143,000 for central government supply and service contracts, €221,000 for sub-central authorities, €5,538,000 for works contracts, and €750,000 for light-touch-regime services. These values are exclusive of VAT. Always verify against the Official Journal (EUR-Lex) and the Danish Public Procurement Act before applying them.
A direct award is the conclusion of a public contract with a supplier without a prior competitive procedure or publication of a contract notice. In Denmark, it is lawful only where a specific exception applies, such as sole supplier, extreme urgency, exclusive IP rights, additional works within value limits, or a permitted framework call-off. The contracting authority bears the burden of proving the exception is met.
In an open procedure, any interested operator may submit a tender in response to the published notice, and all compliant tenders must be evaluated. In a restricted procedure, operators first submit requests to participate; the authority shortlists candidates using pre-announced criteria, and only shortlisted operators are invited to tender. The restricted procedure gives the authority more control over the number of tenders but adds a selection phase and extends the timeline.
Engage a lawyer when: the contract value is close to the EU threshold; you are relying on a narrow exception ground for direct award; a supplier has signalled a potential challenge; the procurement involves cross-border elements or complex IP; or the award is politically sensitive. Early legal input is far less costly than defending a challenge after the fact.
Yes. Aggrieved operators can file a complaint with the Danish Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud). Remedies include interim suspension of the contract, a declaration that the contract is without effect (ineffectiveness), damages for lost profit or bid costs, and shortening of the contract term. Unlawful direct awards above EU thresholds are particularly vulnerable to annulment.
Partially. If an authority proceeds with a direct award and it is later found unlawful, the Complaints Board may annul the contract and order re-procurement. The authority may also owe damages to the supplier whose contract is terminated and to the aggrieved operator who should have had the chance to compete. Conversely, if an authority runs a full EU procedure unnecessarily, the primary cost is time and administrative effort, there is no legal sanction for “over-procuring.” When in doubt, the safer route is always the competitive tender.
Yes. Contracts below the EU thresholds are not exempt from all rules. Part III of the Danish Public Procurement Act imposes transparency and equal-treatment requirements on below-threshold contracts with a clear cross-border interest. The Tender Act (Tilbudsloven) applies additional rules to certain works contracts. Authorities must still justify the chosen award method and maintain a procurement file.
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Direct Award vs Public Tender in Denmark (2026 Thresholds): When to Run an EU Procedure or Award Directly

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