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Public Procurement Act 2026 (austria): Direct Award Thresholds, Modifications & Eforms Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Austria’s Public Procurement Act 2026, published in Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026 on 27 February 2026, introduces the most significant set of changes to Austrian procurement law in nearly a decade. The amendments raise direct award thresholds for works, supplies and services contracts, codify new requirements for contract modification notices, and mandate the use of eForms for an expanded range of procurement notices. All new procedures launched from 1 March 2026 must comply with the revised rules. This guide provides contracting authorities and suppliers with the threshold tables, step-by-step workflows and compliance checklists needed to meet the Public Procurement Act 2026 requirements without disruption.

Quick Summary and At-a-Glance Compliance

The 2026 amendments affect every contracting authority in Austria and every supplier bidding on public contracts. Three headline changes define the reform:

  • Threshold increases. Direct award limits have been raised across all contract categories (works, supplies, services), allowing contracting authorities to procure a wider range of contracts without a formal competitive procedure, provided transparency and documentation requirements are met.
  • Mandatory eForms. Electronic notice forms (eForms) are now required for notices above EU thresholds and for a broader set of national-level notices, replacing legacy publication formats.
  • Contract modification rules. The Act formally codifies the conditions under which a post-award contract modification is permissible without re-tendering, together with mandatory notification duties when a modification is made.

Action now:

  • Update internal procurement templates and value-estimation worksheets to reflect 2026 thresholds.
  • Verify that your organisation’s eProcurement portal supports the mandated eForm templates and field structures.
  • Review all ongoing contracts approaching a potential modification to determine whether notification duties apply under the new rules.

What the Public Procurement Act 2026 Changes, Overview

The Public Procurement Act 2026 (Bundesvergabegesetz 2026, or BVergG 2026) amends Austria’s existing Federal Procurement Act to achieve two objectives: streamline lower-value procurement by lifting direct award and sub-threshold ceilings, and increase transparency by mandating electronic publication through standardised eForms. The legislation also aligns Austria’s modification-notice framework more closely with EU Directive 2014/24/EU (Article 72) and its equivalents under the Utilities and Concessions Directives.

The Act was published in Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026 on 27 February 2026 and entered into force on 1 March 2026. Procedures initiated before that date continue under the previous rules; all new procedures must apply the 2026 regime. EU procurement thresholds, set by European Commission Delegated Regulation and updated biennially, remain applicable in parallel for contracts that reach or exceed the relevant EU value.

Timeline and Scope

The 2026 changes apply to federal, state (Länder) and municipal contracting authorities, as well as entities subject to the Utilities Procurement Regime. Key legislative references include:

  • Publication: Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026, 27 February 2026.
  • Entry into force: 1 March 2026 (new procedures only).
  • Transitional provision: Procedures already published or commenced before 1 March 2026 remain governed by the previous BVergG 2018 (as amended).

Direct Award Thresholds in Austria, The 2026 Changes in Detail

A procurement threshold is the estimated contract value at or above which a contracting authority must follow a prescribed competitive procedure (open, restricted, negotiated or competitive dialogue). Below the relevant threshold, direct award, awarding a contract to a chosen supplier without a full competitive process, may be permissible, subject to documentation, non-discrimination and transparency duties.

The Public Procurement Act 2026 raises the direct award thresholds austria authorities may apply. The table below summarises the revised limits based on published commentary sources. Contracting authorities should verify exact figures against the Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026 text (available via the Austrian Legal Information System, RIS).

Contract Type 2026 Direct Award Threshold Practical Example / Note
Works €200,000 (as reported in published commentary) A municipal building refurbishment estimated at €180,000 may be directly awarded, provided the authority documents its value estimate, applies proportionate checks and publishes the required notice.
Supplies €100,000 (as reported in published commentary) Procurement of medical imaging equipment by a hospital authority: if the estimated value falls below the threshold, direct award is possible after obtaining comparable price information from at least one additional supplier.
Services €100,000 (as reported in published commentary) Specialist IT consultancy for a state agency: the contracting authority must ensure the value estimate covers the full contract term (including options) and record the justification for selecting a particular provider.

Note: The procurement thresholds austria 2026 figures above are drawn from published legal commentary. Contracting authorities must confirm the applicable numeric values in the official legislative text via RIS before relying on them in live procedures.

When Direct Award Is Permitted, Legal Tests

A direct award is not automatic simply because the estimated value falls below the threshold. The Public Procurement Act 2026 requires that the contracting authority:

  • Estimate the contract value correctly. The estimate must cover the entire contract term, all lots (if applicable) and any renewal options. Artificial splitting of contracts to avoid thresholds is prohibited.
  • Ensure non-discrimination. The direct award must not be structured in a way that unjustifiably excludes potential suppliers, particularly cross-border bidders within the EEA.
  • Document the decision. A written justification, including the value estimate methodology, the legal basis for direct award, the supplier selected and the rationale, must be prepared and retained.
  • Publish a notice where required. Even below the full competitive-procedure threshold, the Act may require a simplified notice (increasingly via eForms) depending on the contract category and value band.

Step-by-Step Process for Contracting Authorities

The following workflow ensures compliance when using the direct award thresholds austria rules under the 2026 Act:

  1. Prepare the value estimate. Calculate the total contract value net of VAT, including extensions, options and framework call-off volumes. Document the methodology (e.g., market research, historical spend data, price indices).
  2. Confirm the threshold applies. Cross-reference the estimated value against the correct threshold for the contract type (works, supplies or services). If the value is close to the limit, apply a reasonable contingency and consider whether the contract may exceed the threshold once options are included.
  3. Draft the direct-award justification. Record the legal basis (section and subsection of the BVergG 2026), the value estimate, the supplier selected, the price or fee agreed, and any price-comparison evidence obtained.
  4. Conduct proportionate market engagement. Even for a direct award, best practice is to obtain comparable pricing from at least one alternative source, unless the circumstances justify a sole-source approach (e.g., technical exclusivity, extreme urgency).
  5. Publish the required notice. Use the national eProcurement portal and the prescribed eForm template. Retain a copy of the published notice and the date-stamped confirmation.
  6. Archive the file. Maintain the complete procurement file (estimate, justification, notice, contract) for the statutory retention period.

Contract Modifications and Modification-Notice Requirements

One of the most practical reforms in the Public Procurement Act 2026 is the formalisation of rules governing contract modification notice austria obligations. Before 2026, practitioners relied heavily on EU case law and the text of Article 72 of Directive 2014/24/EU to assess whether a post-award contract change required a new procurement. The 2026 Act now codifies clear statutory tests.

A post-award modification is permitted without re-tendering if it satisfies at least one of the following conditions:

  • Objective change clause. The original contract or framework agreement contains a clear, precise and unambiguous review or option clause, and the modification falls within its scope.
  • De minimis value increase. The value of the modification does not exceed the statutory cap (generally expressed as a percentage of the original contract value and a fixed euro ceiling) and the overall nature of the contract remains unchanged.
  • Unforeseeable circumstances. The need for modification arises from circumstances that a diligent contracting authority could not have foreseen, and the modification does not alter the overall nature of the contract.
  • Substitution of contractor. Where the Act permits a change in the identity of the contractor, for example, through corporate succession, insolvency or an expressly permitted subcontracting arrangement, the substitution is treated as a permissible modification.
  • Non-substantial modifications. The modification is not considered “substantial” under the statutory definition (i.e., it does not extend the scope materially, change the economic balance in favour of the contractor or attract new bidders who would have participated).

Where a modification is made under one of these exceptions, the contracting authority must issue a contract modification notice. The 2026 Act specifies the information that must be included and, for above-EU-threshold contracts, requires submission via eForms to the Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) database.

Modification Notice, Key Fields

The following fields should be included in every contract modification notice austria authorities prepare under the 2026 rules:

  • Contracting authority identification (name, address, contact, registration number).
  • Original contract reference (contract title, award date, contract number, CPV code).
  • Legal basis for modification (specific section of the BVergG 2026 relied upon).
  • Description of the modification (scope of change, technical specifications affected, revised deliverables or milestones).
  • Value delta (original contract value, revised contract value, net change, all net of VAT).
  • Justification narrative (why the modification satisfies the statutory test, e.g., unforeseeable circumstances with supporting evidence).
  • Date and authorised signatory.

eForms: Mandatory Electronic Notices and Compliance in Austria

The adoption of eForms is among the most operationally significant elements of the Public Procurement Act 2026. eForms are the standardised electronic notice templates introduced at EU level under Implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/1780 and mandated for publication on TED. Austria’s 2026 amendments extend the mandatory use of eForms procurement austria-wide, not only for above-EU-threshold notices submitted to TED, but also for a broader set of national-level notices published on domestic portals.

The following notice types must now be submitted using the prescribed eForm templates:

  • Contract notices (invitation to tender).
  • Prior information notices (voluntary or mandatory, depending on procedure type).
  • Contract award notices (results of completed procedures).
  • Contract modification notices (for permissible post-award changes).
  • Direct award notices (where publication is required under the 2026 thresholds regime).

For contracts above EU thresholds, notices must be transmitted to TED using the EU eForm schema. For national notices below EU thresholds, contracting authorities must use the corresponding national eForm templates available on Austria’s eProcurement portal.

Field-by-Field Checklist, Preparing eForms

Before filing any eForm, contracting authorities should assemble the following information and cross-reference it against their internal documentation:

eForm Field Required Internal Document
Contracting authority ID (official registration number) Organisation registration certificate / public-body identifier
CPV codes (Common Procurement Vocabulary) Procurement needs assessment / technical specifications document
Estimated contract value (net of VAT) Value-estimation worksheet (methodology, data sources, date of estimate)
Procedure type and legal basis Procurement strategy memorandum citing the applicable section of the BVergG 2026
Direct-award justification text Direct-award justification file (value estimate, non-discrimination check, rationale)
Modification description and value delta Contract modification notice file (as outlined in the modification-notice section above)
Award criteria and weightings Evaluation framework / scoring matrix
Lots structure (if applicable) Lot-division analysis (reasoning for splitting or not splitting into lots)

Common Mistakes to Avoid When Filing eForms

Early indications suggest that the most frequent filing errors since 1 March 2026 fall into a small number of recurring categories:

  • Incorrect or overly broad CPV codes. Using a generic code rather than the most specific available code reduces transparency and may attract challenges.
  • Inconsistent values. The estimated value in the eForm must match the figure in the internal value-estimation worksheet. Rounding errors or failure to include option values can trigger queries from review bodies.
  • Missing mandatory fields. National eForm templates may contain mandatory fields that differ from the TED schema. Authorities must complete every required field; incomplete submissions are rejected by the portal.
  • Late publication. The statutory deadline for publishing a notice after an award decision must be respected. Late filing does not invalidate the award in all cases, but it weakens the authority’s position in any subsequent review proceeding.

Sub-Threshold Procurement and Framework Agreements in Austria

Below the EU thresholds but above the direct award limits, the Public Procurement Act 2026 establishes a sub-threshold procurement austria regime with simplified, but still structured, competitive procedures. The 2026 amendments raise several sub-threshold ceilings, giving contracting authorities more room to use restricted (invitation-only) procedures rather than full open tenders for medium-value contracts.

Key points for sub-threshold procurement under the 2026 rules:

  • Restricted procedures with prior publication. For contracts above the direct award limit but below the EU threshold, the contracting authority may use a restricted procedure, inviting a minimum number of candidates (typically three to five) after publishing a simplified notice.
  • Transparency requirements remain. Even sub-threshold procedures require notice publication (via the national eForm), documentation of the evaluation process and a standstill period before contract conclusion.
  • Framework agreements. Where a contracting authority operates a framework agreement standstill austria rules apply to call-off awards above a certain value. The 2026 Act clarifies that individual call-offs under a framework agreement that exceed the direct award threshold must follow a mini-competition or justified allocation process, and the standstill period applies to each qualifying call-off.

Sector-specific notes: In IT procurement, framework agreements are particularly common for software licensing and managed services. In healthcare, supply contracts for medical devices and pharmaceuticals frequently use dynamic purchasing systems alongside frameworks. In construction, the 2026 Act’s higher direct award limit for works (reported at €200,000) allows smaller municipal projects, such as road resurfacing or school renovations, to proceed via direct award, reducing administrative lead times.

Practical Compliance Checklist for the Public Procurement Act 2026

The following checklists are designed for immediate use by procurement officers and legal advisors preparing procedures under the 2026 regime.

Contracting Authority, Pre-Procedure Checklist

  • Confirm the estimated contract value (net of VAT, including options and extensions).
  • Identify the applicable threshold: direct award, sub-threshold restricted, or above-EU-threshold.
  • Select the correct procedure type under the BVergG 2026.
  • Prepare the value-estimation worksheet and file it in the procurement record.
  • Draft the procurement strategy memorandum (legal basis, procedure type, timeline).
  • Verify eForm template availability on the national portal.

Contracting Authority, During-Tender Checklist

  • Publish the contract notice or direct-award notice via the prescribed eForm.
  • Apply stated evaluation criteria consistently; document all scoring.
  • Retain all communications with tenderers in the procurement file.
  • Issue the award decision and observe the standstill period before signing the contract.

Contracting Authority, Post-Award Checklist

  • Publish the contract award notice via eForm within the statutory deadline.
  • File the complete procurement record (estimate, justification, evaluation, award, contract).
  • Set a diary reminder to review the contract for potential modifications and associated notification duties.

Supplier, Compliance and Challenge Checklist

  • Monitor the national eProcurement portal and TED for relevant notices in your sector.
  • Review award notices for procedural irregularities (missing justification, incorrect CPV codes, threshold miscalculation).
  • If you suspect non-compliance, note the date you became aware and calculate the deadline for filing a review application.
  • Prepare evidence of the alleged infringement (screen captures of notices, correspondence, technical analysis).

Template Snippet, Direct-Award Justification

“This contract for [description] is awarded directly to [supplier name] pursuant to § [section] of the BVergG 2026. The estimated net contract value of €[amount] falls below the direct award threshold of €[threshold] for [works / supplies / services]. A value estimate dated [date] and comparable pricing obtained from [source] are retained on file. The award does not discriminate against potential cross-border bidders and is published via eForm reference [number] dated [date].”

Remedies, Standstill, Award Suspension and Challenge

Austria’s procurement remedies regime gives aggrieved suppliers the right to challenge award decisions before the competent administrative review body (the Federal Administrative Court for federal contracts, and the Landesverwaltungsgerichte for state and municipal contracts). The Public Procurement Act 2026 preserves the core remedies framework while refining standstill and notification timelines.

Standstill Period, Timeline

Stage Timeline / Requirement
Award decision issued Contracting authority notifies all tenderers of the intended award, including reasons for non-selection.
Standstill period begins Runs from the date the award notification is dispatched (electronically or by post).
Standstill period duration Typically 10 calendar days (electronic notification) or 15 calendar days (postal notification), verify exact periods in the BVergG 2026 text.
Review application filed Supplier must file within the standstill period; filing suspends the contracting authority’s right to conclude the contract.
Standstill expires without challenge Contracting authority may sign the contract.
Review decision issued The review body may annul the award decision, order a re-evaluation or dismiss the application.

For contracts procured via direct award, the standstill obligation applies where the estimated value exceeds specified sub-thresholds. Suppliers who believe a direct award was unlawful (e.g., due to threshold miscalculation or artificial contract splitting) may apply for a declaration of ineffectiveness, which can render the concluded contract void. Evidence requirements include documented proof of the contracting authority’s failure to comply with publication or justification duties under the Austria legal framework.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps Under the Public Procurement Act 2026

The Public Procurement Act 2026 represents a material shift in how Austrian contracting authorities plan, document and publish procurement procedures. Higher direct award thresholds create efficiency gains, but only for organisations that implement rigorous documentation practices. Mandatory eForms demand technical readiness. And the codified modification-notice rules require new internal workflows that many authorities have not yet established.

Top five actions in the next 30 days:

  1. Update all procurement templates, value-estimation worksheets, direct-award justifications and contract notices, to reference the BVergG 2026 and its threshold values.
  2. Train procurement staff on the revised thresholds, the new modification-notice duties and the eForm filing process.
  3. Audit ongoing contracts for potential modifications that may now require a formal notice under the 2026 regime.
  4. Test eForm portal compatibility, submit a test notice to confirm your organisation’s eProcurement system correctly generates and transmits the required eForm templates.
  5. Brief your contractors and regular suppliers on the new rules, particularly the expanded standstill and challenge provisions that protect their rights.

Practitioners seeking tailored guidance on how the 2026 amendments apply to specific sectors or contract structures can consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with procurement specialists across Austria.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Alvarez Privado at APS-LAW, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. TWP Rechtsanwälte, Public Procurement Act 2026: Key Changes Already in Force
  2. Binder Grösswang, Public Procurement Act 2026
  3. CMS, Summary: Amendment to the Federal Procurement Act 2026
  4. Bundesbeschaffung GmbH (BBG), Public Procurement Law
  5. Unternehmensserviceportal (USP), Procurement Procedure Guidance
  6. Fellner Wratzfeld & Partner (FWP), Publication of the Public Procurement Act 2026
  7. Schoenherr, Chambers Public Procurement & Government Contracts Guide
  8. European Parliament, Legislative Train: Public Procurement Act

FAQs

What is the Procurement Act 2026?
The Public Procurement Act 2026 (BVergG 2026) is Austria’s legislative amendment package revising direct award and sub-threshold limits, mandating eForms for procurement notices and codifying the rules on contract modifications. It was published in Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026 on 27 February 2026 and applies to all new procedures initiated from 1 March 2026.
Thresholds were increased across all contract categories. Published commentary reports direct award limits of €200,000 for works and €100,000 for supplies and services. Contracting authorities should verify the exact figures in the Federal Law Gazette I No. 8/2026 text (accessible via the Austrian Legal Information System, RIS) before relying on them in live procedures.
eForms are mandatory for all notices published in respect of contracts above EU thresholds (submitted to TED) and, under the 2026 Act, for a broader range of national-level notices, including contract award, modification and direct-award notices. Use the national eProcurement portal’s prescribed eForm templates for domestic notices.
A modification is permissible if it meets one of the statutory exceptions: the change falls within an existing review clause, the value increase stays within de minimis caps, unforeseeable circumstances arise, the contractor is substituted under permitted conditions, or the modification is not “substantial” as defined in the Act. The contracting authority must prepare and publish a contract modification notice.
Document the estimated value, the legal basis for direct award under the BVergG 2026, the rationale for selecting the supplier, and any comparable pricing evidence. Publish the direct-award notice using the mandated eForm on the national portal within the statutory period. Retain the complete file for the prescribed retention period.
Yes. Suppliers may file a review application before the competent administrative review body. Where a direct award was made without the required publication or in breach of threshold rules, a supplier can apply for a declaration of ineffectiveness, potentially rendering the contract void. Strict deadlines apply, typically running from the date the supplier becomes or should have become aware of the award.
Yes. EU procurement thresholds, set by European Commission Delegated Regulation and updated every two years, continue to apply for contracts with cross-border significance. The Austrian Public Procurement Act 2026 sets national thresholds (including direct award limits) that operate below the EU ceilings but does not replace the EU-level regime for above-threshold contracts.
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Public Procurement Act 2026 (austria): Direct Award Thresholds, Modifications & Eforms Compliance

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