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Welfare technology procurement in Denmark is entering a critical phase in 2026, driven by an ambitious national digitalisation strategy, fresh Innovation Fund calls, and updated EU procurement thresholds that change the procedural obligations for contracting authorities across the country’s 98 municipalities and five regions. Whether a municipality is sourcing sensor-based fall-detection systems for home care or a regional authority is tendering cloud-based rehabilitation platforms, the choice of procurement model, the drafting of contract clauses, and the management of compliance risks will determine whether the project succeeds legally and operationally.
This guide provides a step-by-step framework for both public buyers and healthtech suppliers navigating welfare technology procurement in Denmark under the 2026 rules, covering procurement model selection, tender design, essential contract clauses, threshold triggers, risk management, and practical templates.
Before diving into the detail, here are five quick answers that address the most common questions about welfare technology procurement in Denmark:
Understanding the legal architecture is the essential starting point for any welfare technology procurement in Denmark. The primary legislation, secondary EU rules, and the national policy framework together shape both the obligations and the opportunities available to contracting authorities and suppliers.
The Danish Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven) entered into force on 1 January 2016, implementing EU Directive 2014/24/EU into Danish law. It regulates the conclusion of public contracts above the EU thresholds and also establishes national rules for contracts below those thresholds. The Act is supplemented by the Utilities Directive (2014/25/EU) for sectors such as energy and transport, and by the Concessions Directive (2014/23/EU) where relevant. Contracting authorities must publish above-threshold procurement notices via the EU’s Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) portal and use the Danish electronic tendering platform (ethics.dk) for all procedures.
For welfare technology, the relevant procedural choice depends on the estimated contract value. Sub-central authorities, including municipalities and regions, which are the main buyers of welfare technology, are subject to a higher goods-and-services threshold than central government bodies. Below the EU thresholds, the Danish Public Procurement Act still mandates compliance with the principles of transparency, equal treatment, and proportionality, and requires a degree of competitive process for contracts with clear cross-border interest.
Denmark’s national digitalisation strategy for 2022–2026 explicitly targets the modernisation of welfare services through technology, with goals including freeing up resources in home care, improving rehabilitation outcomes, and scaling proven solutions across municipalities. The strategy is administered by Digitaliseringsstyrelsen (the Danish Agency for Digital Government) and supported by dedicated welfare-technology funding pools aimed at strengthening the public sector’s uptake and use of welfare technology.
In parallel, Innovation Fund Denmark’s “Grand Solutions” programme provides co-funding for large-scale research and innovation projects, including those that develop or scale welfare technology. Industry observers expect 2026 calls to prioritise digitally enabled care and assisted living technologies, creating procurement opportunities for contracting authorities willing to pursue innovation partnership procedures or pre-commercial procurement routes.
The European Commission’s country benchmarking report for Denmark on innovation procurement confirms that the Danish public sector is among the more active users of strategic procurement in Europe, but notes room for further uptake of innovation-focused procurement tools, a signal that municipalities have both the political mandate and the EU-level encouragement to experiment with new models for healthtech procurement in Denmark.
| Date | Event | Impact on Procurers |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2016 | Danish Public Procurement Act entered into force | Baseline implementation of EU Directive 2014/24/EU into Danish law; establishes procedures, thresholds, and complaint mechanisms |
| 2022–2026 | National digitalisation strategy (actions period) | Dedicated funding and targets for welfare-technology digitisation; affects municipal procurement priorities and budgets |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Innovation Fund “Grand Solutions” calls and national welfare-tech scaling pushes | Increased co-funding for collaborative tenders; encouragement to use innovation procurement routes |
Choosing the right procurement model is arguably the single most consequential decision in welfare technology procurement. Denmark is one of the European countries that utilises framework agreements the most, research indicates that more than 50% of all Danish EU tenders are structured as frameworks, but the dynamic purchasing system (DPS) is gaining traction for technology categories where the supplier market moves quickly. This section provides a decision matrix and step-by-step guidance for each model.
| Criteria | Dynamic Purchasing System (DPS) | Framework Agreement | Open Procedure (One-Off) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Rapidly evolving supplier markets; standardised goods/services purchased frequently; need for continuous new-supplier access | Stable, recurring needs; predictable specifications; long-term terms with a known supplier set | Single, well-defined procurement; one-off purchase or project |
| Supplier access | Open to new suppliers throughout the duration; new applications assessed against qualification criteria on an ongoing basis | Limited to parties awarded a place on the framework; requires mini-competitions for multi-supplier frameworks | All qualified suppliers may tender; no ongoing access mechanism |
| Typical maximum term | No fixed maximum under the Directive; commonly set at 4–8 years in practice | Generally no more than 4 years under EU rules (Article 33(1) of Directive 2014/24/EU), unless justified by the subject-matter | N/A, single award process |
| Flexibility for technology updates | High, new products and suppliers can be admitted as the market evolves | Moderate, limited to the original scope; modifications restricted by the substantial modification rules | Low, locked into the contract terms at award |
| Administrative burden | Higher setup; lower per-call-off effort once established | Moderate setup; mini-competition effort per call-off | Full procedure each time |
A DPS is well suited where a contracting authority anticipates frequent, smaller-value call-offs for welfare technology products that are subject to rapid innovation, for example, sensor kits, wearable health monitors, or smart-home assistive devices. The key advantage is that new suppliers can join the system at any time, ensuring the authority always has access to the latest solutions. Municipalities in Denmark have successfully used DPS structures for civilian technology categories, as evidenced by published notices on the ethics.dk platform.
Scenario: A municipality expects to purchase fall-detection sensors, GPS tracking devices, and video-consultation equipment over a four-year period. The products evolve rapidly, and new Danish and international suppliers enter the market each year. A DPS allows the municipality to qualify new entrants quarterly while running streamlined call-offs against the pre-qualified pool.
A framework agreement is the better choice where the authority’s needs are well-defined, the technology is relatively mature, and the primary concern is securing favourable pricing and consistent service levels over time. Multi-supplier frameworks with mini-competition are common for welfare technology categories such as telecare platforms, electronic medication dispensers, or rehabilitation robots where the market is established.
Scenario: A regional purchasing consortium needs a telecare platform to serve 15 municipalities. The specifications are stable, the market has 5–8 established suppliers, and the consortium wants to lock in pricing, SLA terms, and integration requirements for four years. A multi-supplier framework with mini-competition for individual call-offs provides the necessary structure.
Structuring a tender for welfare technology in Denmark requires balancing clinical and operational needs with procurement compliance. The following stepwise approach ensures that contracting authorities cover all critical bases.
The statement of work (SOW) is the foundation of any successful welfare technology tender. It must clearly articulate what the technology needs to achieve, in functional and outcome-based terms, without specifying a particular product or brand (which would breach the equal treatment principle). Key elements include:
Welfare technology tenders typically use the “best price-quality ratio” (BPQR) award criterion, weighting technical quality heavily relative to price. The following sample matrix illustrates a typical weighting scheme:
| Evaluation Criterion | Weighting (%) | Sub-Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Technical quality & functionality | 40% | Functional compliance, clinical effectiveness, ease of use, accessibility |
| Integration & interoperability | 20% | Compatibility with existing systems, data-exchange standards, API availability |
| Data protection & security | 15% | GDPR compliance plan, security architecture, breach response capability |
| Implementation & support | 15% | Deployment timeline, training plan, maintenance SLA, helpdesk availability |
| Price | 10% | Total cost of ownership over contract term (acquisition, licensing, maintenance) |
This weighting reflects the reality that welfare technology procurement in Denmark is driven primarily by quality and safety considerations. Contracting authorities should document the rationale for any weighting above 30% for a single criterion and ensure the evaluation methodology is disclosed in the tender documents to maintain transparency and reduce complaint risk.
The contract is where legal risk is either managed or created. Welfare-tech contracts present unique challenges because they typically involve personal health data, vulnerable end-users, integration with critical municipal infrastructure, and products that may be classified as medical devices. The following clause categories are essential for procurement compliance in Denmark and should appear in every welfare technology contract.
Welfare technology invariably involves the processing of personal data, often special-category health data, of citizens receiving care. Under the GDPR and the Danish Data Protection Act, the contracting authority (as data controller) must ensure robust contractual protections:
Where the welfare technology constitutes a medical device, the contract must address product safety comprehensively:
Welfare technology operates in environments where downtime can directly impact citizen safety. Service-level provisions must be precise and enforceable:
Liability provisions in welfare-tech contracts must balance commercial viability for suppliers with adequate protection for the contracting authority and, ultimately, the citizens who depend on the technology:
Correctly identifying whether a welfare technology contract exceeds the EU procurement thresholds is the first compliance gate. Getting it wrong, either by failing to aggregate related purchases or by splitting contracts to avoid the threshold, exposes the authority to challenge and potential annulment of the contract.
The EU procurement thresholds are reviewed biennially by the European Commission. For sub-central contracting authorities (which includes Danish municipalities and regions), the goods-and-services threshold is significantly higher than for central government. Contracting authorities must estimate the total value of the procurement over the full contract term, including all options, extensions, and lots. Where the estimated value exceeds the threshold, the full EU procedural requirements apply, including mandatory publication in TED, minimum time limits for receipt of tenders, and the standstill period before contract signature.
Below the EU thresholds, the Danish Public Procurement Act applies proportionate national rules. Contracts with clear cross-border interest still require a degree of transparency, while lower-value contracts may be procured using simplified procedures, but always subject to the general principles of equal treatment and transparency.
| Phase | Duration (Weeks) | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Needs analysis & market engagement | 4–6 | Define requirements, consult end-users (care staff, citizens), conduct market dialogue with potential suppliers |
| Tender document preparation | 4–6 | Draft SOW, evaluation criteria, contract terms; legal review; internal approvals |
| Publication & tender period | 5–7 | Publish contract notice (TED for above-threshold); minimum 30–35 days for receipt of tenders (open procedure) |
| Evaluation & award | 3–4 | Technical and financial evaluation; panel scoring; award decision; debrief unsuccessful tenderers |
| Standstill period | 1.5–2 | Mandatory standstill (10–15 calendar days depending on notification method) before contract signature |
| Contract signature & mobilisation | 2–4 | Execute contract; kick-off meeting; supplier mobilisation and integration planning |
| Total estimated timeline | 20–29 |
Contracting authorities should build in contingency time for potential complaints and ensure that the minimum time limits prescribed by the Directive are respected, compressing timelines below the legal minimums is a common source of challenge.
Welfare technology procurement carries specific risks that go beyond standard goods-and-services procurement. The following risk register and compliance checklist help contracting authorities stay on the right side of the rules and avoid costly disputes.
Common pitfalls in welfare technology procurement include:
The Klagenævnet for Udbud (Danish Complaints Board for Public Procurement) can suspend a procurement, order a new evaluation, or declare a contract ineffective. To minimise the risk of a successful challenge, contracting authorities should implement the following documentation practices:
The following templates and checklists support the practical implementation of welfare technology procurement in Denmark. These documents are designed to be adapted to the specific circumstances of each procurement and should always be reviewed by procurement legal counsel before use:
For additional guidance on key contractual content in ICT contracts, including DORA-related provisions relevant to digital health platforms, see the related article on this site. Procurement professionals seeking expert support can also consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for specialists in public procurement and welfare technology, or explore the international commercial law guide for cross-border procurement considerations.
Welfare technology procurement in Denmark in 2026 operates at the intersection of an expanding national digitalisation agenda, evolving EU procurement rules, and a maturing but still dynamic supplier market. For contracting authorities, the practical imperative is clear: select the right procurement model (DPS for dynamic markets, framework agreement for stable recurring needs), draft tender documents that are functional and outcome-based rather than product-specific, and build contracts with robust data protection, safety, liability, and service-level provisions. For suppliers, the opportunity lies in understanding the public-sector procurement process, meeting the compliance requirements proactively, and positioning solutions to score well on the quality-weighted evaluation criteria that Danish authorities favour.
By following the structured approach outlined in this guide, from needs analysis through tender design, contract drafting, and dispute avoidance, both buyers and suppliers can navigate welfare technology procurement in Denmark with confidence and legal certainty.
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026
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.
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