[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
can you negotiate in public procurement

Our Expert in Denmark

Can You Negotiate in Public Procurement in Denmark? When It's Allowed, Equality Rules & Practical Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 40 minutes ago

Whether you can you negotiate in public procurement is one of the most common questions asked by both contracting authorities and suppliers operating in Denmark. The short answer is: yes, but only under specific procedures, and always subject to strict equality and transparency safeguards rooted in the Danish Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven) and the underlying EU directives. With updated procurement thresholds 2026 taking effect on 1 January 2026 and new supplier unique identifier registration rules applying from 1 April 2026, the compliance landscape for negotiation in procurement Denmark has shifted significantly. This guide walks through every legal basis, practical step, and complaint-risk mitigation strategy that authorities and bidders need for the current procurement cycle.

  • Key takeaway 1: Negotiation is never allowed in an open or restricted procedure, only clarification of tenders is permitted.
  • Key takeaway 2: The competitive procedure with negotiation, competitive dialogue, and certain framework agreement call-offs expressly permit structured negotiation rounds.
  • Key takeaway 3: Every negotiation must satisfy the principles of equal treatment, non-discrimination, proportionality, and transparency, or the award risks being overturned by the Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud).
  • Key takeaway 4: Suppliers must act quickly to preserve challenge rights; the standstill period and complaint-filing deadlines are measured in calendar days, not business days.

Last reviewed: 19 May 2026. This article is general information, not legal advice. Readers should consult qualified counsel for case-specific guidance.

Is Negotiation Allowed in Danish Public Procurement? Quick Legal Answer

Negotiation is allowed only in specified procedures and must meet equality and transparency rules at every stage. The Danish Public Procurement Act, which transposes EU Directive 2014/24/EU, establishes a clear hierarchy of procedures. The default routes, the open procedure and the restricted procedure, do not permit any form of negotiation on the substance of tenders. A contracting authority may seek clarification or ask a bidder to correct evident errors, but it may not invite changes to price, scope, or technical content.

Where negotiation is permitted, the Act requires the authority to define the scope, format, and minimum requirements of negotiations in the procurement documents before publishing the contract notice. Failing to do so is one of the most common grounds on which the Complaints Board for Public Procurement annuls award decisions.

The negotiation rules for a public tender can be summarised in a single decision tree:

  • Do: Choose a procedure that expressly allows negotiation when the contracting authority’s needs cannot be met without adaptation of readily available solutions, or when the specifications cannot be established with sufficient precision.
  • Do: Document every round of negotiation with identical granularity for every participating bidder.
  • Don’t: Use an open procedure and then “discuss” terms with a preferred bidder, this constitutes an illegal direct award.
  • Don’t: Negotiate minimum requirements that were declared non-negotiable in the procurement documents.
Procedure / Situation Negotiation Allowed? Practical Note
Open procedure (EU / national) No Clarification only; no re-opening of offers
Restricted procedure No Shortlisting permitted, but final tenders are non-negotiable
Competitive procedure with negotiation Yes Negotiation rounds allowed; must preserve equal treatment
Competitive dialogue Yes Dialogue phase for complex needs; final tenders based on agreed solution
Two-stage tendering (below thresholds) Yes (limited) First stage for solutions; second stage for final bids with possible negotiation
Negotiated procedure without prior publication Yes (very limited) Only where strictly listed legal exceptions apply (e.g., extreme urgency, sole supplier)
Framework agreements (call-off) Possible Negotiation allowed when awarding specific contracts under a multi-supplier framework if preannounced in framework terms

When Negotiation Is Permitted: Legal Bases, Thresholds & 2026 Updates

Danish law permits negotiation in public procurement under precisely defined circumstances, and the 2026 regulatory updates have added new compliance layers.

Legal Bases in the Danish Public Procurement Act

The Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven) sets out the conditions under which a contracting authority may choose a negotiation-based procedure. Under Part III of the Act, the competitive procedure with negotiation may be used where the authority’s needs cannot be met without adaptation of readily available solutions, where the procurement involves design or innovative solutions, where the contract cannot be awarded without prior negotiation due to specific circumstances linked to the nature, complexity, or legal and financial make-up of the requirement, or where the technical specification cannot be established with sufficient precision by reference to standards or similar.

Competitive dialogue follows a similar logic but is typically reserved for particularly complex procurements, large-scale IT deployments, public-private partnerships, and infrastructure projects where the authority cannot define the technical or financial structure in advance. The negotiated procedure without prior publication is a last resort, confined to cases of extreme urgency unforeseen by the authority, where only one supplier can deliver, or where the result of a design contest is being implemented.

For procurements below the EU thresholds, the Public Procurement Act provides lighter-touch procedures under Part IV. Contracting authorities have broader discretion to include negotiation elements, provided the fundamental principles of equal treatment and transparency are maintained. Industry observers expect these below-threshold procurements to become a more common arena for negotiation as the 2026 threshold updates push more mid-value contracts into the EU-regulated tier.

EU Thresholds Effective 1 January 2026

The European Commission publishes revised procurement thresholds every two years, expressed in euros and converted to national currencies. The procurement thresholds 2026, effective 1 January 2026, determine whether a procurement must follow full EU-regulated procedures, including the formal negotiation rules, or may use lighter national rules. Contracting authorities should consult the official threshold table published by the European Commission and the corresponding Danish implementation guidance from the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority (Konkurrence- og Forbrugerstyrelsen) to confirm current values before launching any procurement.

The practical effect is straightforward: when a contract value sits above the applicable threshold, the authority must use one of the EU procedures and comply fully with the Udbudsloven’s negotiation safeguards. Below the threshold, negotiation is subject to the principles-based regime in Part IV but with lighter procedural obligations.

Supplier Unique Identifier, Rules from 1 April 2026

From 1 April 2026, new supplier registration requirements demand that economic operators participating in Danish public procurements hold a valid supplier unique identifier. The requirement, administered through the national e-procurement platform, means that bidder lists in negotiation-based procedures must include only operators whose registration is current and verified. Contracting authorities should update their procurement documents and qualification checklists to reference the identifier, and suppliers should register well in advance of upcoming tender deadlines to avoid disqualification during a negotiation round.

Date Change Practical Effect
1 January 2026 Revised EU procurement thresholds take effect Some previously below-threshold procurements now fall under full EU rules, expanding the scope of formal negotiation procedures
1 April 2026 Supplier unique identifier registration required Bidders must hold a valid identifier to participate; authorities must verify registration before entering negotiation rounds
Ongoing 2026 Proposed legislative reviews (e.g., section 134a discussions) Authorities and suppliers should monitor the Danish Parliament and the Competition Authority for enacted amendments

Equality and Non-Discrimination Safeguards When Negotiating in Public Procurement

Every negotiation in a public tender must comply with the four foundational principles of EU and Danish procurement law: equal treatment, non-discrimination, proportionality, and transparency. These principles are not aspirational, they are enforceable obligations, and a breach of any one of them can result in annulment of the award by the Complaints Board for Public Procurement.

In practice, the equality and non-discrimination requirements in procurement translate into concrete operational safeguards:

  • Uniform criteria. All bidders admitted to negotiations must be assessed against the same selection and award criteria published in the original contract notice. The authority may not introduce new criteria or change the weighting mid-process.
  • Identical information disclosure. Any information disclosed to one bidder during negotiations, whether by way of clarification, feedback on initial tenders, or modification of requirements, must be disclosed simultaneously to all bidders in the same round, unless it constitutes a bidder’s own confidential commercial content.
  • Written records. Every negotiation session, whether conducted in person, by telephone, or through the e-procurement platform, must be recorded in writing. The record should capture date, participants, topics discussed, positions taken, and any concessions or amendments agreed.
  • Objective scoring. Final tenders must be scored by an evaluation panel using the pre-published methodology. Panel members involved in negotiation rounds should not be the sole evaluators, a second-reviewer check is strongly recommended.

Consider two scenarios. In a compliant process, the authority sends all three shortlisted bidders a written summary of negotiation round one, identifies the areas where revised tenders may be submitted, and gives all three the same deadline and format instructions. In a non-compliant process, the authority telephones one bidder to “informally discuss” pricing while sending only written feedback to the others. The second scenario breaches equal treatment and creates immediate grounds for a complaint, even if the telephone conversation did not actually change the outcome.

A useful model clause for negotiation invitations reads: “All information, clarifications, and feedback provided during this negotiation round will be shared equally with all participating tenderers in written form. No unilateral oral commitments shall be binding.”

Practical Steps for Contracting Authorities: How to Negotiate Compliantly

Running a negotiation-based procurement procedure in Denmark requires meticulous planning. The following step-by-step process reflects both the negotiation rules for public tenders under the Udbudsloven and good-practice guidance from the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority.

  1. Select the correct procedure. Confirm that the procurement genuinely meets one of the legal grounds for using a negotiation-based procedure. Document the justification in the procurement file before drafting the contract notice. A weak justification is the single most common point of attack at the Complaints Board.
  2. Define the negotiation scope in procurement documents. State clearly which elements of the tender are negotiable (e.g., implementation timeline, pricing model, service levels) and which are minimum requirements that cannot be changed. Publish this scope in the contract notice and the tender specifications.
  3. Publish clear selection and award criteria. Use the contract notice to set out all criteria, their relative weighting, and the evaluation methodology. The criteria must remain fixed throughout the negotiation.
  4. Establish the negotiation format. Decide in advance: how many negotiation rounds are planned, whether rounds are conducted in writing or in person, the minimum and maximum number of bidders to be retained after each round, and the timeline for each stage. Publish this format.
  5. Appoint a single point of contact (SPoC). All bidder communications should be channelled through one designated officer or team to prevent inconsistent messaging. Use the e-procurement platform as the primary communication channel to create an automatic audit trail.
  6. Maintain rigorous documentation. For every interaction with every bidder, produce a written record covering date and time, participants, topics discussed, information provided, and any amendments to the bidder’s position. File these records in the procurement case file immediately.
  7. Conduct a fairness check. After each negotiation round, have a second reviewer, someone not involved in the negotiations, audit the records for equal treatment. This reviewer should confirm that all bidders received the same information and were given the same opportunities.
  8. Issue the decision notice and observe the standstill period. Upon selecting the winning tender, notify all participating bidders simultaneously in writing, stating the name of the chosen tenderer, the reasons for the decision, and the precise date on which the standstill period expires. The standstill period under Danish law is a minimum of ten calendar days from the date the notification is sent electronically.
  9. Update the contract award notice. Publish the award notice in the relevant official journal within the prescribed deadline. Ensure the notice accurately reflects any terms modified during negotiation.
  10. Archive the complete file. Retain all procurement documents, negotiation records, evaluation matrices, and correspondence for the statutory retention period. This file is the authority’s primary defence if a complaint is filed.
Entity Type Notification Obligation Timeframe
Central government authorities Award notice in the Official Journal of the EU (OJEU) and national platform Within 30 days of contract conclusion
Sub-central authorities (regions, municipalities) Award notice in OJEU (if above EU threshold) and national platform Within 30 days of contract conclusion
Utilities / defence entities Award notice per sector-specific rules As specified in the applicable directive transposition

Practical Steps for Suppliers: How to Participate and Protect Your Rights

Suppliers and bidders who can negotiate in public procurement have both opportunities and risks. The following seven steps help bidders participate effectively while preserving challenge rights in Denmark’s 2026 procurement environment.

  1. Verify the procedure and negotiation scope. Before investing resources, read the contract notice and procurement documents carefully. Confirm that the procedure permits negotiation and identify exactly which tender elements are negotiable. If the documents are ambiguous, submit a written clarification request through the e-procurement platform before the clarification deadline.
  2. Track all clarifications and amendments. Monitor the e-procurement platform for updates, amendments, and answers to other bidders’ questions. These clarifications can materially change the negotiation parameters. Keep a dated log of every document downloaded.
  3. Prepare your BATNA and redlines. Before entering negotiation rounds, define your best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA), your walk-away price, and the concessions you are willing to make. Having clear internal authority limits prevents reactive concessions during live negotiations.
  4. Document every exchange. Even if the authority is responsible for record-keeping, maintain your own parallel file. After each negotiation round, send a written summary of your understanding to the authority through the official channel and ask for confirmation. This creates a contemporaneous audit trail.
  5. Request equal-treatment confirmations in writing. If you suspect that another bidder has received information or opportunities not extended to you, ask the authority explicitly: “Please confirm that all information and feedback provided in this negotiation round has been shared equally with all participating tenderers.” The authority’s response, or refusal to respond, becomes evidence if you later need to challenge the procurement decision.
  6. Preserve your right to challenge the procurement decision. If you are not awarded the contract, the clock starts running immediately. Under Danish law, a complaint to the Complaints Board for Public Procurement must generally be filed within 45 calendar days of the date the contracting authority published the award notice. If no award notice is published, the deadline may be extended, but suppliers should not rely on this. Prepare a draft complaint brief during the standstill period so it can be filed quickly if needed.
  7. Decide when to withdraw or accept. If the negotiation moves your offer below your walk-away threshold, withdraw formally in writing rather than submitting a non-competitive bid. Withdrawal preserves your commercial reputation and avoids any suggestion that you accepted terms you later want to contest.

Complaints Risk, Strategy & Preserving Challenge Rights (Klagenævnet for Udbud)

The Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud) is Denmark’s specialised administrative tribunal for procurement disputes. It has the power to annul contract award decisions, order re-evaluation, suspend contract execution, and award compensation. Any bidder, candidate, or other party with a legal interest may file a complaint.

When Negotiation Inflates Complaint Risk

Negotiation-based procedures carry inherently higher complaint risk than open procedures because the multiple rounds of interaction create more opportunities for unequal treatment. The most frequent grounds for successful complaints in negotiation cases include:

  • Failure to provide the same information to all bidders during negotiation rounds.
  • Changing minimum requirements or award criteria after the contract notice was published.
  • Inadequate documentation of negotiation exchanges, leaving the authority unable to demonstrate compliance.
  • Accepting a final tender that materially deviates from the procurement documents without re-opening the process to all bidders.

Industry observers expect complaint filings related to negotiation procedures to increase in 2026, as more procurements cross the revised EU thresholds and are subject to the full procedural rigour of the Udbudsloven.

Preservation Checklist for Suppliers

To preserve the right to challenge a procurement decision in 2026, suppliers should complete the following steps:

  • Download and date-stamp all procurement documents, clarifications, and negotiation correspondence on the day they are published.
  • Send written equal-treatment confirmation requests after every negotiation round.
  • Review the award decision notice immediately upon receipt and calculate the standstill and complaint-filing deadlines in calendar days.
  • Engage procurement counsel during the standstill period, not after it expires.
  • File the complaint with the Complaints Board within the applicable deadline, paying the required complaint fee.

What Authorities Should Do to Reduce Overturn Risk

Contracting authorities can significantly reduce the likelihood of a successful complaint by maintaining a “litigation-ready” procurement file from day one. This means:

  • Producing detailed contemporaneous minutes of every negotiation session, not retrospective summaries written after a complaint is filed.
  • Using the e-procurement platform for all communications to create tamper-resistant timestamps.
  • Having a second reviewer sign off on equal-treatment compliance after each round.
  • Including a clear, reasoned evaluation report that traces the scoring back to the published criteria and demonstrates that no information asymmetry existed between bidders.
Typical Remedy Likely Cause Authority’s Best Response
Annulment of award decision Unequal treatment during negotiation; undisclosed changes to criteria Re-run the negotiation phase or re-evaluate with a new panel
Order to re-evaluate tenders Scoring errors or failure to follow published methodology Correct the evaluation and re-issue the decision notice with a new standstill period
Suspension of contract execution Complaint filed during standstill; prima facie evidence of breach Do not sign or perform the contract until the Board rules
Declaration of ineffectiveness Illegal direct award disguised as a negotiation Terminate the contract and re-procure; potential financial penalties apply

Quick Compliance Checklist & Sample Templates

The following checklists and templates can be adapted for use in any negotiation-based procurement in Denmark. They are designed to be printed or saved as standalone compliance tools.

Checklist for Contracting Authorities

  • Legal ground for negotiation procedure documented and filed.
  • Negotiation scope and non-negotiable minimum requirements stated in procurement documents.
  • Selection and award criteria published with weightings and methodology.
  • Negotiation format (rounds, timeline, communication channel) defined and published.
  • Single point of contact appointed and communicated to all bidders.
  • Written record template prepared and used for every interaction.
  • Equal information disclosure confirmed after each round (second-reviewer sign-off).
  • Standstill period calculated correctly (minimum ten calendar days, electronic notification).
  • Award notice published within the prescribed deadline.
  • Complete procurement file archived for statutory retention period.
  • Supplier unique identifier verified for all bidders admitted to negotiations (from 1 April 2026).

Checklist for Suppliers

  • Procedure type and negotiation scope verified from the contract notice.
  • Supplier unique identifier registration current and valid.
  • BATNA, redlines, and internal authority limits documented before negotiation rounds begin.
  • All clarifications and platform updates downloaded and date-stamped.
  • Written summary sent to the authority after each negotiation round.
  • Equal-treatment confirmation requested in writing.
  • Award decision notice reviewed on day of receipt; deadlines calculated.
  • Procurement counsel engaged during standstill period if challenge is contemplated.
  • Complaint fee and filing requirements confirmed with Complaints Board.
  • Parallel documentation file maintained independently of the authority’s records.

Template A, Negotiation Scope Clause for Tender Documents

“The contracting authority will conduct [number] rounds of negotiation with shortlisted tenderers. Negotiations may cover [list negotiable elements, e.g., implementation timeline, pricing model, service-level targets]. The following minimum requirements are non-negotiable and must be met in all initial and final tenders: [list minimum requirements]. All information, clarifications, and feedback provided during negotiation rounds will be shared equally and simultaneously with all participating tenderers in written form via [name of e-procurement platform]. No unilateral oral commitments shall be binding.”

Template B, Negotiation Record / Minutes Template

Field Content
Date and time [DD/MM/YYYY, HH:MM–HH:MM]
Participants (authority) [Names, roles]
Participants (bidder) [Names, roles, one record per bidder]
Negotiation round number [e.g., Round 2 of 3]
Topics discussed [Summary of each topic]
Positions / proposals made by bidder [Detail]
Feedback / information provided by authority [Detail, note whether identical information was provided to all bidders]
Concessions or amendments agreed [Detail, or “None”]
Action items and next steps [Detail with deadlines]
Prepared by / reviewed by [Name of recorder; name of second reviewer]

Conclusion & Recommended Next Steps

Understanding whether you can negotiate in public procurement in Denmark is not an academic exercise, it is a compliance imperative that directly affects contract validity, cost outcomes, and litigation exposure. The 2026 rule changes have narrowed the margin for error: revised thresholds mean more procurements are subject to full EU procedural requirements, and the supplier unique identifier adds an administrative checkpoint that bidders must clear before negotiations can even begin. Whether you sit on the authority side or the bidder side, the three most important actions to take now are:

  1. Update procurement templates to reflect the 2026 thresholds, supplier unique identifier requirements, and the negotiation scope clauses and record-keeping templates provided above.
  2. Train negotiation teams on equal-treatment obligations, documentation standards, and Complaints Board risk, before the next tender cycle begins, not after a complaint is filed.
  3. Consult specialist procurement counsel for complex or high-value procurements, particularly those involving competitive dialogue or multi-supplier framework call-offs where negotiation parameters are most likely to be tested.

This article is general information and does not constitute legal advice. For bespoke guidance on your procurement, consult a qualified public procurement lawyer.

Need Legal Advice?

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

Sources

  1. Danish Competition & Consumer Authority (Konkurrence- og Forbrugerstyrelsen)
  2. European Commission, Public Procurement Rules & Thresholds
  3. Retsinformation, Danish Official Legislation Database (Udbudsloven)
  4. Klagenævnet for Udbud (Complaints Board for Public Procurement)
  5. Kromann Reumert, Procurement Analysis
  6. Plesner, Procurement Law Notes
  7. DLA Piper, Comparative EU Procurement Guidance

FAQs

What is the Complaints Board for Public Procurement?
The Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud) is Denmark’s specialised administrative tribunal that handles disputes about public procurement procedures. It can annul award decisions, order re-evaluation, suspend contract performance, and declare contracts ineffective. Any party with a legal interest, typically an unsuccessful bidder, may file a complaint, subject to a filing fee and statutory deadlines. The Board operates under the authority of the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority.
Yes, but only under certain procedures. The Danish Public Procurement Act permits negotiation in the competitive procedure with negotiation, competitive dialogue, the negotiated procedure without prior publication (narrow exceptions only), and in some framework agreement call-offs. Negotiation is never permitted in open or restricted procedures. All negotiations must respect equal treatment, non-discrimination, and transparency requirements.
Suppliers should download and date-stamp all procurement documents, send written equal-treatment confirmation requests after each negotiation round, review the award decision notice on the day of receipt, and calculate the complaint-filing deadline in calendar days. Engaging procurement counsel during the standstill period, before it expires, is essential. Complaints to the Klagenævnet must generally be filed within 45 calendar days of the publication of the award notice.
Negotiation is permitted when the contracting authority’s needs cannot be met without adaptation of readily available solutions, when the procurement involves design or innovation, when the contract’s nature or complexity prevents award without prior negotiation, or when technical specifications cannot be established with sufficient precision. These grounds are set out in the Public Procurement Act and mirror the conditions in EU Directive 2014/24/EU.
Authorities must produce a written record of every negotiation session covering date, participants, topics discussed, positions taken, information provided, and any concessions. Records should be created contemporaneously, not after a complaint is filed. The e-procurement platform should be used as the primary communication channel to generate tamper-resistant timestamps. A second reviewer should audit each round’s records for equal-treatment compliance.
The European Commission publishes revised procurement thresholds every two years. The thresholds effective 1 January 2026 determine whether a procurement must follow full EU-regulated procedures or may use lighter Danish national rules. Contracting authorities should consult the European Commission’s official threshold table and the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority’s implementation guidance for the current values applicable to their entity type.
From 1 April 2026, economic operators participating in Danish public procurements must hold a valid supplier unique identifier. Registration is administered through the national e-procurement platform. Suppliers should complete registration well before upcoming tender deadlines, as an unregistered bidder may be excluded from negotiation rounds. The Danish Competition and Consumer Authority provides guidance on the registration process and requirements.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 57 minutes ago

By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 3 hours 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

Can You Negotiate in Public Procurement in Denmark? When It's Allowed, Equality Rules & Practical Steps

Send welcome message

Custom Message