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consortium vs subcontractor Greece

Consortium vs Subcontractor in Greece: Which Is the Right Choice for Bidding on Public Tenders

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Every bidder targeting a Greek public tender faces the same structural question: should you form a consortium (joint bid) and accept joint-and-several liability, or bid alone and rely on subcontractors for the capacity you lack? The answer when choosing between a consortium vs subcontractor in Greece turns on five concrete variables, eligibility thresholds, liability exposure, cost, timing, and post-award enforceability, all of which shifted materially after the 2025–2026 procurement reforms tightened integrity requirements and ESPD practice on the ESIDIS platform. This article delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison, a side-by-side decision table, and a practical framework so you can make that call before the submission deadline closes.

Option A: Consortium / Joint Bid, What It Is, How It Works, When It Applies

Legal Forms and Tender Mechanics

Greek procurement law permits groups of economic operators to submit a joint bid without first forming a legal entity. The standard vehicle is the koinopraxia (temporary business association or consortium), which is expressly recognised under Greece’s transposition of Directive 2014/24/EU. Contracting authorities may not require a consortium to adopt a specific legal form at the bidding stage, though they may require legal incorporation after award if necessary for contract performance. In practice, most public tenders, from infrastructure works to IT services, accept bids from consortia on equal terms with single-entity bidders.

The consortium must designate a lead partner (ekprosopos) who serves as the single point of contact with the contracting authority and who typically submits all documentation through ESIDIS, the national e-procurement platform.

How Awards Are Made and Who Signs

When a consortium wins, the contract is awarded to the consortium as a collective entity, not solely to the lead partner. Each member is named in the award decision. In typical contracting-authority practice, visible in tender documents issued by entities such as the IOM Greece office and the Heraklion Port Authority, the lead partner signs on behalf of the consortium, but all members are bound. The contracting authority retains a direct contractual relationship with each consortium member, and standard tender clauses make all members jointly and severally liable for the full scope of the contract. This means any single member can be held responsible for the totality of performance obligations and any resulting damages.

Pros and Cons

  • Pros: Combines technical and financial capacity to meet eligibility thresholds that no single member could satisfy alone; enables risk-sharing across partners; preferred vehicle for PPP and large infrastructure tenders; demonstrates integrated delivery capability to the contracting authority.
  • Cons: Triggers joint-and-several liability for all members; requires a detailed consortium agreement before submission; increases governance complexity; any member’s exclusion ground (e.g., tax arrears, criminal record) can disqualify the entire bid.

Practical Checklist for a Consortium Bid

Before submitting a joint bid, the consortium agreement should address at minimum:

  • Lead partner authority. Scope of the lead partner’s power to bind members and make contractual decisions.
  • Liability allocation. Internal apportionment of joint-and-several liability, indemnity obligations, and liability caps between members.
  • Performance security. Which member(s) procure bid bonds and performance guarantees, and the contribution split.
  • Termination and step-in. Procedures if a member defaults, including step-in rights, replacement mechanics, and escrow/retention provisions.
  • Dispute resolution. Governing law, arbitration or court jurisdiction for intra-consortium disputes.

Option B: Bidding Alone and Relying on Subcontractors, What It Is, How It Works, When It Applies

Subcontractor Definitions and Role in Greek Tenders

A subcontractor in Greek public procurement is a third-party entity that performs a defined portion of the contract under the prime contractor’s responsibility. Subcontractors may be nominated at the bid stage (where the tender requires disclosure) or appointed post-award with contracting-authority approval. The subcontracting rules in Greece distinguish between ordinary subcontracting, where the prime contractor merely outsources execution, and capacity lending, where the prime contractor relies on the subcontractor’s economic, financial, or technical capacity to meet qualification criteria. In practice, contracting authorities classify subcontractors as nominated (disclosed in the bid), specialist (holding qualifications the prime lacks), or domestic (local firms required by specific procurement conditions).

Qualification and ESPD: Relying on Subcontractor Capacity

Under EU and Greek rules, a bidder may rely on a subcontractor’s capacity to satisfy selection criteria, turnover thresholds, specialist certifications, or past-project experience, provided the bidder proves the subcontractor’s resources will actually be available for contract performance. In practice, this requires:

  • A completed ESPD (European Single Procurement Document) for each capacity-lending subcontractor, submitted through ESIDIS.
  • A binding commitment letter from the subcontractor confirming it will make the relevant resources available.
  • Supporting evidence (certificates, financial statements, reference lists) upon request during the verification phase.
  • The subcontractor must itself be free of mandatory exclusion grounds, if the subcontractor is excluded, the bidder loses that capacity and may be disqualified.

Contracting authorities may require the prime contractor to replace a subcontractor whose capacity was relied upon if that subcontractor later falls within exclusion grounds. The ESPD subcontractor vs consortium distinction is critical: in a consortium, each member qualifies in its own right; in capacity lending, the subcontractor’s credentials flow through the prime contractor’s bid but the subcontractor does not become a party to the public contract.

Pros and Cons

  • Pros: Prime contractor avoids sharing joint-and-several liability with a co-bidder; retains full control over contract management; simpler governance structure; can replace subcontractors (with authority approval) more easily than restructuring a consortium.
  • Cons: Prime contractor bears sole contractual liability to the contracting authority; capacity-lending requirements are scrutinised more strictly post-2025 reforms; subcontractor failure creates direct performance risk that falls entirely on the prime; less credible for very large or multi-discipline tenders.

Practical Checklist for Subcontracting

  • Flow-down clauses. Mirror the prime contract’s obligations, deadlines, and quality standards in the subcontract.
  • Step-in rights. Reserve the right to step into the subcontractor’s work or appoint a replacement upon material breach.
  • ESPD and integrity compliance. Obtain and verify the subcontractor’s ESPD declarations before submission.
  • Performance security. Require a subcontractor performance bond or retention mechanism aligned to the subcontracted scope value.

Consortium vs Subcontractor in Greece: Side-by-Side Comparison

The following table compares the two options across the ten dimensions that most frequently determine the right structure for a Greek public tender bid. Use it as a rapid reference before diving into the detailed analysis below.

Dimension Consortium (Option A) Subcontractor (Option B)
Eligibility & ESPD Each member qualifies in its own right; combined capacity meets thresholds directly Prime must demonstrate own eligibility or rely on capacity lending with binding commitment from subcontractor
Who signs & award mechanics Contract awarded to consortium as a whole; lead partner signs on behalf of all members Contract awarded to prime contractor alone; subcontractor has no direct contractual relationship with authority
Joint liability & indemnities All members jointly and severally liable to contracting authority for full contract scope Prime contractor solely liable to contracting authority; can seek recourse against subcontractor only under subcontract
Performance security / bid bonds Bond typically issued jointly or by lead partner on behalf of consortium; cost shared per consortium agreement Bond issued by prime contractor alone; may require separate subcontractor performance guarantee
Cost & fees Higher legal setup costs (consortium agreement, JV formation); shared bond costs Lower setup costs; higher risk-premium if capacity lending is challenged
Timing / speed to market Longer lead time, negotiating consortium agreement and coordinating ESPD submissions across members Faster, single entity submits; subcontractor ESPD can be collected in parallel
Enforceability & quality control Direct contractual control between members via consortium agreement; authority can enforce against any member Prime has contractual control over subcontractor; authority has no direct recourse against subcontractor
Regulatory / reporting burden Each member submits own ESPD and integrity declarations; ongoing reporting obligations shared Prime handles all reporting; must monitor subcontractor’s ongoing compliance with exclusion grounds
Dispute resolution & claims Intra-consortium disputes governed by consortium agreement; disputes with authority involve all members Disputes with authority involve prime only; subcontractor disputes are a separate commercial matter
Suitability for PPPs / large infrastructure Strongly preferred, demonstrates integrated capacity, risk-sharing, and financial depth Rarely sufficient alone for large PPPs; acceptable for specialist scope under a defined percentage of total contract value

Top three decision drivers: (1) whether your firm can meet the eligibility thresholds on its own, (2) whether you are prepared to accept joint-and-several liability, and (3) whether the tender’s scale and complexity demand integrated delivery or specialist support. For PPP and major infrastructure tenders, the consortium structure is the default expectation. For specialist scope representing a minor share of total contract value, subcontracting is typically the leaner and faster option.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Eligibility and ESPD Mechanics

The 2025–2026 reforms tightened how contracting authorities verify capacity claims on the ESIDIS platform. For a consortium, each member completes a separate ESPD, and their combined qualifications, turnover, staffing, certifications, past-project references, are aggregated to meet the tender’s selection criteria. This is straightforward: the authority sees each member’s credentials directly.

For capacity lending via a subcontractor, the prime contractor must submit the subcontractor’s ESPD alongside its own, plus a binding commitment letter. Early indications suggest that authorities are requesting more granular evidence post-reform, not just a generic letter but a detailed resource-availability schedule linked to the contract timeline. If the subcontractor falls within an exclusion ground at any stage, the prime must replace it or face disqualification.

  • Consortium: Combined qualification is seamless; each member stands on its own credentials.
  • Subcontractor: Capacity lending is permitted but subject to stricter documentary scrutiny and replacement risk.

Liability and Risk Allocation

This is the dimension that most sharply separates the two options. In a consortium bidding as consortium Greece, all members accept joint and several liability to the contracting authority. The authority can pursue any single member for the full contract value, regardless of that member’s actual scope of work. Internal risk allocation happens only through the consortium agreement, which has no binding effect on the authority.

  • Consortium: Joint-and-several liability to the authority; internal apportionment depends entirely on the quality of the consortium agreement. Parent-company guarantees may be required for financially weaker members.
  • Subcontractor: Prime contractor bears sole liability to the authority. Recourse against the subcontractor is limited to the subcontract terms, and enforcing those terms is a private commercial matter, not a public-law obligation. The public tender liability Greece framework places the full weight on the prime.

Cost and Tax Implications

The cost profiles differ significantly, primarily driven by legal setup fees and security instruments.

Cost Item Consortium (Option A) Subcontractor (Option B)
Legal setup (agreement drafting, JV formation) Higher, consortium agreement requires multi-party negotiation; legal fees typically range from €5,000–€25,000+ Lower, standard subcontract template with flow-down clauses; legal fees typically €2,000–€8,000
Bid bond Shared among members per consortium agreement; single instrument issued Borne entirely by prime contractor
Performance guarantee Typically 5%–10% of contract value; cost shared 5%–10% of contract value; borne by prime; may also require subcontractor performance bond
Joint-liability insurance premium May apply, consortium members insure against cross-liability exposure Not required, but prime’s PI/PL premiums may increase if relying on capacity lending
VAT / tax flow-through Each member invoices per its scope allocation; VAT registered individually Prime invoices authority; subcontractor invoices prime; standard VAT chain applies

Note: Legal fee ranges reflect market indicators for mid-to-large Greek public tenders. Actual fees vary by contract value and complexity. Bond percentages are set by individual tender documents; the ranges above reflect common contracting-authority practice.

Timing and Operational Risk

Forming a consortium takes longer. Negotiating the consortium agreement, coordinating multiple ESPD submissions, aligning insurance and bond arrangements, and securing internal corporate approvals from each member can consume weeks. For urgent tenders with short submission windows, this creates material risk of missing the deadline.

  • Consortium: Typical lead time of 4–8 weeks for agreement negotiation alone; ESPD coordination adds further time.
  • Subcontractor: Prime can prepare its bid independently and collect the subcontractor’s ESPD and commitment letter in parallel; typical additional lead time of 1–2 weeks.

Enforceability and Contract Management

In a consortium, each member has a direct obligation to the contracting authority. If one member underperforms, the authority can pursue any other member. This creates powerful mutual accountability, but also means a well-performing member may bear consequences for another’s failure. The consortium agreement’s step-in and termination clauses are the primary defence.

  • Consortium: Strong mutual enforceability; authority has direct recourse against all members; consortium agreement governs internal disputes.
  • Subcontractor: Prime has contractual control via the subcontract; authority has no direct recourse against the subcontractor. If the subcontractor fails, the prime must cure the default at its own expense and risk. Step-in rights under the subcontract are enforceable only through private litigation or arbitration.

Regulatory Burden and Integrity Compliance

The AEAD’s Code of Conduct for integrity in public procurement, finalised in 2025, imposes specific obligations on all participants in a tender, including consortium members and subcontractors whose capacity is relied upon. Each must submit integrity declarations confirming absence of conflicts of interest, compliance with anti-corruption rules, and adherence to competition law.

  • Consortium: Each member independently completes integrity declarations; one member’s integrity failure disqualifies the entire consortium.
  • Subcontractor: The subcontractor must also submit integrity declarations when relied upon for capacity lending; prime bears responsibility for monitoring ongoing compliance but is not automatically disqualified if the subcontractor can be replaced.

The 2025 OECD report on managing public procurement risks in Greece highlighted that integrity enforcement is increasing, industry observers expect contracting authorities to apply the AEAD Code of Conduct more rigorously through 2026 and beyond.

What Changes in 2026: Procurement Reforms That Affect the Consortium vs Subcontractor Decision

Several concrete changes implemented in 2025 and applied in 2026 tender practice alter the calculus when choosing between a consortium vs subcontractor in Greece:

  • Strengthened integrity declarations. The AEAD Code of Conduct now requires all economic operators, consortium members and capacity-lending subcontractors alike, to submit detailed integrity declarations covering conflicts of interest, anti-corruption compliance, and beneficial-ownership transparency.
  • Stricter ESPD verification on ESIDIS. Contracting authorities increasingly require uploaded supporting evidence (not just self-declarations) at the submission stage, particularly for capacity-lending arrangements. The likely practical effect is that subcontractor-based bids face more documentary scrutiny than before.
  • Enhanced exclusion-ground monitoring. Authorities are conducting real-time checks against national databases for tax compliance, social-security standing, and criminal records, affecting both consortium members and nominated subcontractors.
  • PPP-specific joint-liability emphasis. For PPP tenders procured through HRADF or sectoral authorities, tender documents increasingly require explicit joint-liability undertakings from consortium members at the pre-qualification stage, not just at award.

Action checklist for bidders in 2026:

  • Revise existing consortium agreement templates to include the AEAD integrity declaration requirements.
  • Verify lead-partner signing instructions against the specific tender’s ESIDIS submission requirements.
  • Conduct pre-submission exclusion-ground checks on all consortium members and capacity-lending subcontractors.
  • For PPP bids, prepare joint-liability undertakings for the pre-qualification stage.

Decision Framework: When to Choose a Consortium vs Subcontractor in Greece

Choose a consortium when:

  • No single member meets the tender’s economic or technical eligibility thresholds alone.
  • The tender is a PPP, concession, or large infrastructure project where contracting authorities expect integrated delivery capability.
  • Risk-sharing across multiple parties is commercially necessary given the contract value and performance exposure.
  • The contracting authority’s tender documents require or strongly favour a joint bid.
  • The scope of work spans multiple disciplines that require equal-partner commitment, not subordinate support.
  • You need to demonstrate combined financial capacity (turnover, credit lines, parent guarantees) to meet high thresholds.
  • The contract duration exceeds five years and integrated governance across partners adds credibility.
  • You want each party’s credentials to stand independently rather than relying on capacity-lending scrutiny.

Choose subcontractors when:

  • You meet the eligibility thresholds on your own and only need specialist expertise for a defined portion of the scope.
  • The subcontracted work represents a minority share of the total contract value.
  • You want to avoid joint-and-several liability with a third party.
  • You need to bid quickly and cannot afford weeks of consortium-agreement negotiation.
  • The subcontractor’s role is clearly delineated and can be replaced without disrupting the overall contract.
  • You want full contractual control over the delivery chain without sharing governance authority.
  • The tender does not require or prefer consortium structures.
  • The contract is short-term or narrowly scoped, making consortium formation disproportionate.
If Your Priority Is… Choose…
Meeting high eligibility thresholds you cannot reach alone Consortium
Minimising liability exposure to third-party default Subcontractor
Bidding on a PPP or major infrastructure tender Consortium
Speed, submitting within a tight deadline Subcontractor
Retaining full operational control Subcontractor
Demonstrating integrated multi-discipline delivery Consortium
Keeping legal setup costs low Subcontractor
Sharing risk on a high-value, long-duration contract Consortium

When to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

Not every tender requires bespoke legal advice on structure. But several specific triggers should prompt you to engage a public procurement lawyer in Greece before submitting your bid:

  • Contract value exceeds €5 million. The liability exposure and bond requirements at this scale make consortium-agreement drafting or subcontract structuring a matter of material financial risk.
  • The tender is a PPP, concession, or HRADF-procured project. These tenders carry unique joint-liability, pre-qualification, and financing requirements that demand specialist procurement advice.
  • Cross-border consortium members are involved. Differences in corporate authorisation, applicable exclusion-ground regimes, and governing law for the consortium agreement require multi-jurisdictional coordination.
  • You are relying on capacity lending and the contracting authority has flagged enhanced verification. A lawyer can structure the binding commitment and evidence package to withstand scrutiny.
  • You anticipate a tender challenge or need to challenge a competitor’s qualification. Post-award review proceedings before the AEPP (Single Authority for Public Procurement) and administrative courts operate under strict deadlines.

For complex structuring, Greece public procurement specialists can draft consortium agreements, review ESPD submissions, and represent bidders in pre-contractual dispute proceedings.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Gov.gr, Public Procurement Guidance
  2. IOM Greece, Invitation to Bid (ITB) Tender Document
  3. Heraklion Port Authority, Subcontract and Exclusion Rules Regulation
  4. AEAD, Code of Conduct for Integrity in Public Procurement (Greece)
  5. OECD, Managing Public Procurement Risks in Greece (2025)
  6. European Commission, Public Procurement
  7. University of Athens, Academic Paper on Consortium Practices and Bid Rigging

FAQs

What is the difference between a subcontractor and a consortium?
A consortium is a group of companies that jointly submit a bid and share contractual responsibility, including joint-and-several liability, to the contracting authority. A subcontractor performs a defined portion of work under the prime contractor’s direction, with no direct contractual relationship with the authority.
All consortium members are jointly and severally liable to the contracting authority for the full scope of the contract. The authority can pursue any single member for the entire obligation, regardless of that member’s allocated share of work.
Yes. Greek and EU procurement rules allow a bidder to rely on a subcontractor’s economic, financial, or technical capacity by submitting the subcontractor’s ESPD and a binding commitment letter. However, the subcontractor must be free of exclusion grounds, and contracting authorities are applying stricter documentary verification from 2026.
A consortium is strongly preferred for PPPs and large infrastructure tenders where the contracting authority requires integrated delivery capability, combined financial depth, and shared risk. Subcontracting alone is rarely sufficient to satisfy pre-qualification requirements for PPPs in Greece.
Structural changes after award are highly restricted. Converting a single-entity contract into a consortium arrangement would typically require a contract modification that contracting authorities are reluctant to approve and that may trigger re-procurement obligations under Greek and EU law.
Key clauses include internal liability apportionment, indemnity and hold-harmless obligations between members, liability caps linked to each member’s scope share, step-in rights upon member default, termination triggers, and a dispute resolution mechanism (typically arbitration under Greek law or ICC rules).
Foreign companies from EU/EEA states participate on equal terms. Non-EU companies may participate if covered by an international agreement or if the specific tender permits third-country participation. All participants, domestic or foreign, must satisfy the same exclusion-ground checks and integrity declaration requirements.
A consortium does not require formal legal incorporation to bid. However, negotiating and executing the consortium agreement typically takes four to eight weeks. For urgent tenders, parties can use a short-form agreement for the bid stage and negotiate a full agreement before contract signing, but this carries risk if key terms remain unresolved.
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Consortium vs Subcontractor in Greece: Which Is the Right Choice for Bidding on Public Tenders

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