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Public Procurement Lawyers Turkey 2026: Thresholds, National Preference & Bidder Remedies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: May 10, 2026

Turkey’s public procurement landscape shifted materially in early 2026, and the demand for experienced public procurement lawyers Turkey‑wide has intensified as bidders, contracting authorities and in‑house counsel scramble to interpret the changes. Amendments published in the Resmî Gazete introduced revised procurement thresholds under Article 3(g) of Law No. 4734, effective 1 February 2026, alongside national preference procedural reforms that took effect on 1 January 2026. These reforms alter how tenders are classified, how domestic content is scored and, critically, how short the window is for challenging an unfavourable award.

This practitioner guide walks through every change that matters, with worked examples, an EKAP registration checklist, and a step‑by‑step remedies playbook designed for general counsel, procurement managers and international bidders entering the Turkish market.

Executive summary, what changed in 2026 and what bidders must do first

Two overlapping waves of reform define the 2026 procurement cycle. First, national preference procedural amendments came into force on 1 January 2026, changing how contracting authorities evaluate and score domestic content in goods, services and works tenders. Second, the Article 3(g) threshold increases took effect on 1 February 2026, raising the estimated‑cost ceilings that determine which procurement procedure applies, open, restricted or negotiated.

Together, these changes mean that a tender published in February 2026 may fall under a different procedure and a different scoring regime than an identical tender would have attracted in December 2025. For bidders, the practical impact is immediate: documentation requirements may be lighter (or heavier), national preference margins may tip the outcome, and administrative objection windows remain unforgivingly short.

Before responding to any tender published on or after 1 January 2026, every bidder should take the following five actions:

  • Run a threshold check. Confirm the estimated contract value against the new 2026 thresholds to determine the applicable procedure and documentation tier.
  • Verify your EKAP supplier ID. Ensure your Electronic Public Procurement Platform (EKAP) registration is current, including authorised signatory details and e‑signature certificates.
  • Assess national preference exposure. Review tender documents for local content scoring clauses and calculate whether the preference margin changes your competitive position.
  • Update your compliance file. Refresh financial capacity evidence, experience certificates and consortium documentation to meet the specific requirements of the applicable procedure.
  • Set your appeal calendar. Diarise the administrative objection deadlines from the date of EKAP notification, missing these deadlines forfeits your challenge rights.

The legal framework, Law No. 4734, implementing rules and EKAP

Turkey’s public procurement regime is anchored by Law No. 4734 on Public Procurement (Kamu İhale Kanunu), originally enacted in 2002 and amended repeatedly since. The law establishes the Kamu İhale Kurumu (KIK), the Public Procurement Authority, as the regulatory and adjudicatory body overseeing all tenders conducted by public contracting authorities. Implementing regulations, secondary legislation and KIK communiqués flesh out procedural detail on everything from qualification criteria to appeal timelines.

Law No. 4734: key articles to cite

Practitioners advising on Turkish procurement should be familiar with the following core provisions, as published on the official Mevzuat legislation portal:

  • Article 3 (Scope exemptions). Defines entities and procurements exempt from the law, including Article 3(g), which now carries revised threshold values.
  • Article 8 (Threshold values). Sets the estimated‑cost limits that determine procedure selection (open, restricted, negotiated).
  • Article 21 (Negotiated procedure). Establishes grounds for negotiated procurement, including the controversial paragraph (f), which has been subject to 2026 amendments regarding state‑owned enterprise (SOE) usage.
  • Articles 54–57 (Review and remedies). Govern the administrative review process before KIK and the conditions for judicial review before Administrative Courts.
  • Article 63 (National preference). Provides the legal basis for domestic content advantages in tender evaluation.

EKAP: role and implications for evidence

The Electronic Public Procurement Platform (EKAP) is the mandatory digital gateway through which all tender notices are published, bids are submitted and award decisions are communicated. For bidders, EKAP is not merely a submission tool, it is the single source of truth for evidentiary purposes. Download timestamps, receipt confirmations and notification dates recorded in EKAP determine the start of administrative objection periods. Industry observers note that failing to capture and preserve these timestamps is among the most common reasons bidders lose challenge rights. Every EKAP interaction should be treated as a potential exhibit in a future administrative or judicial proceeding.

Procurement thresholds 2026 Turkey, what changed under Article 3(g)

Effective 1 February 2026, the threshold values published in the Resmî Gazete raised the estimated‑cost ceilings that determine when procurements fall under specific procedural categories. The table below summarises the principal threshold categories applicable to goods, services and works procurements.

Threshold category 2025 value (TRY, approximate) 2026 value (TRY, effective 1 Feb 2026)
Goods & services, general contracting authorities To be confirmed against KIK communiqué Revised upward, verify current figure on Mevzuat / KIK
Goods & services, SOEs and entities under Article 3(g) To be confirmed against KIK communiqué Revised upward, verify current figure on Mevzuat / KIK
Works, general contracting authorities To be confirmed against KIK communiqué Revised upward, verify current figure on Mevzuat / KIK
Works, SOEs and entities under Article 3(g) To be confirmed against KIK communiqué Revised upward, verify current figure on Mevzuat / KIK

Note: Bidders should always confirm exact TRY threshold values on the official Mevzuat portal and the KIK website, as annual adjustments are published in the Resmî Gazete each January or February.

Worked examples: when thresholds matter

Example 1, Goods procurement for a municipality. A municipality estimates the value of an office equipment purchase at TRY 900,000. Under the 2025 thresholds, this figure exceeded the open‑procedure ceiling for goods, requiring a full open tender. Under the raised 2026 thresholds, the same value may fall below the revised ceiling, potentially allowing the contracting authority to use a simplified procedure. The bidder must check whether the tender documents cite the 2025 or 2026 thresholds and whether the EKAP publication date falls before or after 1 February 2026.

Example 2, Services contract for an SOE. A state‑owned energy company publishes a consulting services tender with an estimated value near the old Article 3(g) exemption limit. If the tender was published on or after 1 February 2026, the revised (higher) threshold may bring the procurement within the scope of Law No. 4734, meaning full procedural compliance, including EKAP publication and KIK oversight, now applies where it previously did not.

Example 3, Works contract straddling the threshold. A highway maintenance contract is initially estimated at TRY 50 million. Under the 2026 works thresholds, this figure may place the contract in a different procedure band. Bidders should verify whether the contracting authority has applied the correct 2026 threshold and whether any cost‑splitting has been used to circumvent the higher procedure requirements, a ground for administrative challenge under Article 5 of Law No. 4734.

Article 21/f and SOEs, what changed?

Article 21(f) of Law No. 4734 previously allowed certain contracting authorities to use negotiated procedures for urgent procurements under relatively broad conditions. The 2026 regulatory cycle tightened the application of this provision, particularly for state‑owned enterprises. Early indications suggest that KIK guidance now requires contracting authorities invoking Article 21(f) to provide more detailed justification and to publish the negotiation notice on EKAP, reducing the procedural opacity that had drawn criticism from bidders and international observers. Bidders encountering an Article 21(f) tender should scrutinise whether the urgency justification meets the stricter 2026 standard and consider filing an administrative objection if it does not.

National preference rules Turkey, calculation, scoring and impact

The national preference mechanism under Article 63 of Law No. 4734 permits contracting authorities to grant a scoring advantage to bidders offering goods or services with a specified level of domestic content. The procedural amendments effective 1 January 2026 refined how this preference is calculated and applied across different tender types.

  • National preference applies to goods, services and works tenders where the tender documents explicitly invoke it.
  • The preference operates as a percentage margin, typically up to 15%, that is added to the evaluated price of qualifying domestic bids during comparison with foreign bids.
  • The 2026 amendments standardised the documentation required to demonstrate domestic content eligibility, aligning with EKAP submission requirements.

When national preference can be decisive, scoring thresholds

Consider a worked example. A foreign bidder submits a goods tender at TRY 10,000,000. A domestic bidder submits at TRY 11,200,000, 12% higher. If the tender documents apply a 15% national preference margin, the foreign bid is evaluated as if priced at TRY 11,500,000 (TRY 10,000,000 × 1.15). The domestic bid at TRY 11,200,000 is now lower than the adjusted foreign bid, and the domestic bidder wins. This margin effect means that foreign bidders competing in tenders with national preference clauses must price at least 15% below domestic competitors to remain competitive, a significant commercial consideration.

Can national preference exclude foreign bidders entirely?

National preference under the current framework does not exclude foreign bidders from participating. Instead, it adjusts the evaluation methodology. Foreign bidders remain eligible to submit bids, attend site visits and request clarifications. The preference is a scoring mechanism, not a barrier to entry. However, the practical effect can be exclusionary where the margin is large enough to offset any cost advantage a foreign supplier might offer. Bidders should model the preference impact before deciding whether to bid and factor it into their pricing strategy from the outset.

Contract drafting and bid documents, what to include

Bidders claiming domestic content status must include the following in their bid submissions:

  • Domestic content certificate. Issued by the relevant chamber of commerce or industry, confirming the percentage of local content in the offered goods or services.
  • Manufacturing origin declaration. Specifying the production facility location and supply chain breakdown.
  • EKAP compliance documentation. All domestic content certificates must be uploaded to EKAP as part of the bid package, late or incomplete uploads risk disqualification.

Red‑flag checklist for public procurement lawyers Turkey‑wide: verify that the tender documents correctly specify the applicable preference percentage, confirm that the contracting authority has published the preference criteria on EKAP, and check that the evaluation committee applies the margin only at the comparison stage, not as a threshold eligibility filter.

EKAP registration and supplier ID, step‑by‑step for 2026

Every entity intending to participate in a Turkish public procurement must hold an active EKAP supplier ID. The registration process, managed through the EKAP portal, involves several steps that should be completed well in advance of any tender deadline.

  1. Create an EKAP account. Navigate to the EKAP portal and select the supplier registration module. Provide the entity’s legal name, tax identification number (vergi kimlik numarası) and registered address.
  2. Submit required documents. Upload company registration extracts (ticaret sicil gazetesi), articles of association, authorised signatory powers of attorney and the entity’s tax certificate.
  3. Obtain your supplier ID. Once documents are verified, EKAP assigns a unique supplier identification number. This ID is mandatory for all bid submissions and EKAP communications.
  4. Configure e‑signature access. Authorised signatories must register their qualified electronic signatures (e‑imza) within EKAP. Bids submitted without a valid e‑signature are automatically rejected.

Common EKAP mistakes and how to avoid them

  • Expired e‑signature certificates. Certificates must be renewed before expiry. An expired certificate during bid submission renders the entire bid invalid, there is no grace period.
  • Mismatched signatory details. The signatory registered in EKAP must match the person authorised in the company’s trade registry extract. Discrepancies trigger rejection at the qualification stage.
  • Late document uploads. EKAP enforces strict upload deadlines. Documents uploaded after the tender submission deadline, even by seconds, are timestamped and excluded.
  • Failure to update registration. Changes in company name, address or authorised representatives must be reflected in EKAP immediately. Stale registrations can lead to bid disqualification.

Tender eligibility screening checklist, a practical procurement compliance checklist

Before committing resources to a bid, every bidder should complete the following pre‑bid screening. This checklist is designed to be used as a go/no‑go decision tool.

  • Threshold test. Confirm the estimated contract value against the 2026 thresholds to identify the applicable procedure and documentation tier.
  • National preference test. Determine whether the tender invokes Article 63 national preference. If so, model the scoring impact on your bid price.
  • Minimum qualification requirements. Review the tender documents for minimum turnover, experience certificate and technical capacity thresholds. Verify that your entity (or consortium) meets every stated requirement.
  • Consortium eligibility. If bidding as a joint venture or consortium, confirm that the pilot partner and each consortium member satisfy the individual and aggregate requirements specified in the tender documents.
  • Financial capacity evidence. Prepare audited financial statements, bank reference letters and, where required, bid bonds denominated in TRY or in the currency specified in the tender documents.
  • Experience certificates. Obtain and upload relevant experience (iş deneyim belgesi) certificates that meet the minimum percentage of estimated contract value specified in the tender.
  • EKAP submission proof. Confirm that all documents have been uploaded, timestamped and receipt‑confirmed within EKAP before the deadline. Print or save PDF receipts.
  • Blacklist and prohibition check. Verify that neither the entity nor any director or shareholder appears on KIK’s prohibition list (yasaklılar listesi).

Public procurement appeals Turkey, bidder remedies and the tender challenge procedure

The remedies framework under Law No. 4734 provides bidders with two sequential avenues: administrative review before the contracting authority and KIK, followed (if necessary) by judicial review before Administrative Courts. Understanding the timelines is critical, missed deadlines are fatal and cannot be cured.

Remedy stage Filing body Key deadline and effect
Administrative objection (şikâyet) Contracting authority Filed within 10 days of the date the bidder learned (or should have learned) of the challenged act via EKAP notification. The contracting authority must respond within 10 days. The contract‑signing process is suspended during this period.
Appeal to KIK (itirazen şikâyet) Kamu İhale Kurumu (KIK) Filed within 10 days of receipt of the contracting authority’s decision (or deemed rejection after 10 days of silence). KIK renders a binding decision, typically within 20 days. Contract signing remains suspended until KIK decides.
Judicial review Administrative Courts (İdare Mahkemesi) Filed within 60 days of notification of KIK’s decision. Courts may grant interim injunctive relief (yürütmenin durdurulması) suspending the contract award pending full hearing.

Urgent injunctive relief

Where the contracting authority proceeds to sign the contract despite a pending administrative objection, or where KIK rejects the complaint, bidders may apply to the Administrative Court for an interim suspension order. The court evaluates whether (a) execution of the contract would cause irreparable harm and (b) the challenge raises a serious legal question. Industry observers note that courts grant interim relief in a meaningful proportion of cases involving procedural errors in tender evaluation.

Model grounds of challenge, six common grounds

Public procurement lawyers in Turkey frequently advise bidders to frame challenges around one or more of the following grounds:

  • Threshold misclassification. The contracting authority applied the wrong threshold, resulting in the use of an incorrect procurement procedure.
  • National preference miscalculation. The evaluation committee applied the preference margin incorrectly or failed to verify domestic content certificates.
  • Qualification criteria violation. The winning bidder did not meet stated minimum requirements (financial capacity, experience, technical capability).
  • Bid evaluation error. Arithmetic mistakes, failure to request clarification of ambiguous bids, or improper exclusion of compliant bids.
  • Procedural irregularity. Defective tender publication, failure to publish on EKAP, or inadequate site‑visit arrangements.
  • Conflict of interest or bias. An evaluation committee member with a personal or financial connection to a bidder participated in the decision.

Practical examples and worked scenarios

Three concrete scenarios illustrate how the 2026 changes play out in practice.

Scenario 1, Foreign JV excluded by national preference scoring. A French‑Turkish consortium bids on a medical equipment tender. The tender documents invoke a 15% national preference margin. The consortium’s bid is TRY 20,000,000; a fully domestic bidder submits at TRY 22,500,000. After applying the 15% adjustment, the consortium’s evaluated price becomes TRY 23,000,000. The domestic bidder wins. The consortium’s recommended action: verify the domestic bidder’s content certificates, confirm the 15% margin was correctly applied, and, if the certificates are deficient, file an administrative objection within 10 days of EKAP notification.

Scenario 2, Award reversed after administrative objection. A construction firm is notified via EKAP that its bid on a highway project has been rejected for insufficient experience certificates. The firm files a şikâyet within 10 days, arguing that the contracting authority miscounted the value of completed projects. The contracting authority upholds the rejection. The firm escalates to KIK within 10 days of that decision. KIK reviews the experience certificates, finds the contracting authority applied an incorrect valuation methodology, and orders re‑evaluation. The likely practical effect: the firm is reinstated and may ultimately be awarded the contract.

Scenario 3, Threshold misclassification caught during bid evaluation. An IT services bidder notices that the contracting authority classified a TRY 1,200,000 software procurement as below the 2026 threshold for open procedure, using the pre‑February 2025 thresholds. Because the tender was published on 15 February 2026, the 2026 thresholds should apply. The bidder files an objection, arguing the contracting authority should have conducted an open tender with full EKAP publication and competition. If the objection succeeds, the procurement is cancelled and re‑tendered under the correct procedure.

First 48 hours checklist: When you learn of an adverse decision, (1) download and timestamp all EKAP notifications, (2) preserve the full tender file including evaluation committee minutes, (3) engage public procurement lawyers Turkey‑qualified to assess challenge grounds, and (4) begin drafting the administrative objection before day three to allow internal review time.

How to document and preserve evidence

Evidence preservation is foundational to any successful challenge. The following practices should be standard operating procedure for every tender participant:

  • EKAP receipts. Download and save PDF copies of every EKAP submission receipt, notification and communication. Note the exact date and time of each receipt.
  • Screenshot and hash. Take timestamped screenshots of EKAP portal pages showing bid status, notification content and document lists. Generate a hash (SHA‑256) of critical files at the time of download to prove integrity.
  • E‑signature preservation. Archive the qualified electronic signature certificate used for bid submission and retain the certificate validity confirmation from the certificate authority.
  • Tender document version control. Download every version of the tender documents, including addenda and clarification responses, and retain them with dated file names.
  • Chain of custody log. Maintain a log recording who downloaded, reviewed and stored each document, with dates. This is essential if documents are later submitted as evidence to KIK or the Administrative Court.

Key legislative dates, 2026 timeline for public procurement lawyers Turkey

Date Change Practical effect for bidders
1 January 2026 National preference procedural amendments came into force Procurements published on or after this date may apply new scoring rules, bidders must check tender documents for local content scoring clauses and updated documentation requirements.
1 February 2026 Article 3(g) threshold increases took effect Higher thresholds may move certain tenders into different procurement procedures (e.g., open vs restricted), affecting documentation requirements and evaluation criteria.
10 May 2026 Date of this article’s review Readers should verify current threshold values and any subsequent KIK communiqués on the official KIK and Mevzuat portals.

Conclusion and next steps

The 2026 procurement thresholds, national preference reforms and tightened Article 21/f requirements represent the most significant package of changes to Turkey’s public procurement framework in recent years. For bidders, domestic and international alike, the message is clear: check thresholds, model national preference impact, maintain EKAP compliance and know your remedies timeline. Engaging experienced public procurement lawyers Turkey early in the process preserves options and prevents the kind of procedural missteps that forfeit challenge rights.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Işıl Kılıç Erol at Kılıç Hukuk Danışmanlık, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Kamu İhale Kurumu (Public Procurement Authority, KIK)
  2. EKAP (Electronic Public Procurement Platform)
  3. Mevzuat (Turkish legislation portal), Law No. 4734
  4. Resmî Gazete (Official Gazette)
  5. Moroğlu Arseven, Public Procurement practice overview
  6. CMS, International procurement commentary
  7. LegisEye, Regulatory alerts
  8. OECD, Procurement governance and best practice guidance

FAQs

What are the public procurement threshold changes in Turkey for 2026?
The 2026 amendments raised certain procurement thresholds, notably those under Article 3(g) of Law No. 4734, effective 1 February 2026. The revised values alter which procurement procedures apply based on estimated contract value. Bidders should confirm exact current figures on the Mevzuat legislation portal and the KIK official website.
National preference under Article 63 does not exclude foreign bidders but grants domestic suppliers a scoring advantage, typically up to 15%, during price comparison. The 2026 procedural amendments standardised documentation requirements for domestic content claims. Foreign bidders must factor this margin into their pricing strategy from the outset.
Bidders may file an administrative objection (şikâyet) with the contracting authority within 10 days of learning of the challenged act, escalate to KIK (itirazen şikâyet) within 10 days of the authority’s response, and ultimately seek judicial review before Administrative Courts within 60 days of KIK’s decision. Evidence preservation from EKAP is essential at every stage.
The 2026 regulatory cycle tightened the conditions under which contracting authorities, particularly SOEs, may invoke Article 21(f) for negotiated procedures. Stricter justification requirements and mandatory EKAP publication now apply. Bidders encountering an Article 21(f) tender should scrutinise the urgency justification and consider a challenge if it appears deficient.
Register on the EKAP portal by providing your entity’s legal name, tax number and registered address. Upload trade registry extracts, articles of association and authorised signatory powers of attorney. Once verified, EKAP assigns a supplier ID. Configure qualified e‑signature access for all authorised signatories. Begin registration well before your first tender deadline.
Engage specialised counsel as soon as you identify a threshold classification concern, a national preference scoring disadvantage, or any intention to file an administrative objection. Early legal involvement, ideally before the bid submission deadline, preserves remedies, strengthens evidence and prevents procedural errors that cannot be corrected later.

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Public Procurement Lawyers Turkey 2026: Thresholds, National Preference & Bidder Remedies

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