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When to hire a public procurement lawyer Denmark

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When to Hire a Public Procurement Lawyer in Denmark (2026): a Practical Decision Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Deciding when to hire a public procurement lawyer in Denmark is a question that confronts every contracting authority preparing a tender and every supplier weighing a post-award challenge. The two practical options, instruct external procurement counsel now, or handle the matter in-house, carry starkly different consequences for cost, timing, and the preservation of legal remedies.

With the revised EU procurement thresholds that took effect on 1 January 2026 shifting which contracts fall under the full EU regime, the stakes of choosing wrong have increased: a procurement that slipped below the old threshold may now trigger mandatory standstill obligations and Complaints Board jurisdiction, while one that moved above it demands cross-border transparency and rigorous procedural compliance under the Danish Public Procurement Act (Udbudsloven). This guide maps the decision dimension by dimension, tells you exactly when to instruct counsel and when in-house management is safe, and flags the 2026 changes that alter the calculus.

Option A: Instruct External Procurement Counsel Now

External procurement counsel in Denmark adds value across every stage of the procurement lifecycle, and at certain inflection points, the value is not optional but essential to preserving rights and avoiding procedural invalidation.

Pre-Tender and Tender Design

At the design stage, counsel performs a threshold classification analysis, determining whether the contract value brings the procurement within the scope of the EU directives and the Public Procurement Act, or whether the lighter national rules apply. Getting this wrong is one of the most common triggers for Complaints Board proceedings. Counsel also drafts or reviews selection and award criteria to ensure they are transparent, proportionate, and non-discriminatory, the three pillars that generate the majority of successful challenges. For dynamic purchasing systems (DPS) and framework agreements, where multiple call-offs over years amplify any structural error, early legal input prevents disputes downstream.

Post-Award and Dispute Phases

On the supplier side, the critical window for engaging procurement legal advice in Denmark opens the moment an unsuccessful tenderer receives the award decision and standstill notification. The standstill period under the Public Procurement Act is short, and once it expires without a complaint, the right to automatic suspension is lost. A procurement dispute lawyer who is already instructed can file with the Danish Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud) within the standstill window and, where needed, apply for interim measures that preserve the supplier’s position while the Board considers the merits.

When External Counsel Is Essential

  • Threshold ambiguity. The contract value sits near the EU threshold, or aggregation rules make classification uncertain.
  • Cross-border interest. The procurement is likely to attract bidders from other EU/EEA states, triggering full transparency and standstill obligations even below the threshold.
  • Complex evaluation models. The award criteria involve quality scoring, lifecycle costing, or innovation partnerships, each an invitation for challenge if poorly designed.
  • Urgent post-award challenge. A supplier must decide within days whether to file a complaint; counsel preserves the option.
  • Framework or DPS structuring. Multi-year instruments with aggregate values running into the tens of millions require airtight procedural design.

Industry observers consistently report that contracting authorities who engage counsel at the design stage face significantly fewer Complaints Board challenges, and that suppliers who instruct counsel before the standstill expires are far more likely to obtain interim relief than those who scramble after the deadline.

Option B: Handle the Procurement In-House

Not every procurement justifies external counsel fees. For well-resourced contracting authorities with trained in-house procurement teams, and for suppliers responding to straightforward invitations, managing the process internally is both rational and common.

When In-House Management Is Reasonable

  • Routine, low-value purchases. The contract value falls clearly below the EU thresholds and the national light-regime thresholds, with no realistic prospect of cross-border interest.
  • Standardised commodity purchases. The selection criteria are simple (price only or price-quality with a well-tested model), and the contracting authority has used the same template successfully before.
  • Experienced procurement team. In-house staff hold procurement qualifications or certifications, have handled Board proceedings before, and maintain up-to-date template libraries.
  • No post-award dispute indicators. The procurement attracted few bidders, the evaluation was straightforward, and no tenderer has raised questions during the standstill period.

Controls for In-House Management

Even when the decision is to handle in-house, the following controls reduce risk:

  • Run a documented threshold check, including aggregation with related contracts, at the planning stage.
  • Use pre-approved template tender documents reviewed by counsel within the last 12 months.
  • Require senior sign-off before publishing the contract notice.
  • Keep a limited retainer with external counsel for rapid sign-off on standstill notices and award letters.

The hidden cost of handling in-house is the risk of an error that surfaces only after contract award, by which point remedies may include contract annulment, financial penalties, and reputational damage. The likely practical effect of in-house management without the controls above is an elevated rate of successful challenges, particularly for procurements near the EU thresholds where procedural precision is non-negotiable.

When to Hire a Procurement Lawyer Denmark: Side-by-Side Comparison

The table below is the centrepiece of this decision guide. It maps every material dimension against the two options, instructing external counsel now, or managing in-house, so that procurement leads and suppliers can see the trade-offs at a glance.

Decision Dimension Instruct External Counsel Now Handle In-House
Eligibility / EU Threshold Classification Counsel performs binding threshold analysis, including aggregation and cross-border interest assessment Relies on in-house judgment; misclassification risk elevated near thresholds
Cost (Legal Fees vs Exposure) Upfront legal fees; typically a fraction of the contract value or potential damages exposure No upfront fees; full exposure to challenge costs, contract annulment, and damages if errors occur
Timing (Preserving Remedies) Counsel files within standstill; automatic suspension preserved; interim measures applied for promptly Risk of missing standstill deadline; no automatic suspension once deadline lapses
Interim Measures Counsel applies to Complaints Board or court for interim measures; experienced in procedural requirements Unfamiliarity with procedural steps may delay or prevent interim relief
Cross-Border Complexity Essential where foreign bidders participate or the procurement has EU-wide publication; counsel manages language, translation, and EU law overlay Manageable only where no cross-border interest exists
Liability & Compliance Risk Counsel ensures compliance with Public Procurement Act obligations; reduces risk of contract invalidation and financial penalties Compliance dependent on staff knowledge; risk of inadvertent breach
Enforceability & Dispute Resolution Board and court proceedings managed by experienced Complaints Board counsel; damages and annulment claims properly framed Self-representation possible but rare and typically disadvantageous
Tender Drafting Quality Legally tested criteria, clear scoring models, defensible specifications Template-dependent; untested criteria invite challenges
Commercial Negotiation / Settlement Counsel leverages procedural position to negotiate early settlement or corrective award Limited negotiating leverage without legal backing

Three points stand out from this comparison:

  • Timing is the decisive factor for suppliers. Once the standstill expires, the strongest remedies evaporate. The cost of missing a filing deadline almost always exceeds the cost of counsel.
  • Threshold classification is the decisive factor for contracting authorities. Misclassifying a contract as below-threshold when the 2026 rules place it above triggers the full suite of EU procurement obligations, retroactively, if challenged.
  • In-house handling is safe only when the procurement is clearly routine, clearly below threshold, and carries no cross-border risk.

Strong recommendation: If any doubt exists about classification, timing, or the likelihood of a challenge, instruct external procurement counsel before publishing the contract notice or before the standstill expires.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Timing and Interim Measures in Danish Procurement

Speed determines outcomes in Danish procurement disputes. The standstill period, the mandatory pause between the award decision and contract signature, gives aggrieved tenderers a narrow window to act. Under the Public Procurement Act, the contracting authority must observe this period, and a complaint filed with the Complaints Board during it triggers an automatic suspensive effect: the authority cannot sign the contract while the complaint is pending.

  • Instruct counsel now: Filing within the standstill preserves automatic suspension. Counsel can simultaneously apply for interim measures if the Board’s proceedings are expected to take longer than the standstill itself.
  • Handle in-house: Without familiarity with the Board’s procedural rules, the risk of missing the standstill window or filing a procedurally defective complaint is substantial. Once the standstill expires, automatic suspension is lost, and seeking interim measures requires a separate, more burdensome application.

Early indications from practitioners suggest that the majority of interim-measures applications that fail do so because of late filing or procedural errors, not because the substantive claim lacked merit.

Cost: Legal Fees vs Financial Exposure

The cost comparison is asymmetric. Legal fees for procurement counsel are quantifiable and manageable; the exposure from handling a challenge badly, or from having a procurement annulled, is orders of magnitude larger.

Cost Item Instruct External Counsel Handle In-House
Initial threshold / classification opinion Fixed-fee engagement (typically a few hours of senior counsel time) No direct cost; risk of misclassification and subsequent challenge
Tender document drafting / review Hourly or capped-fee; proportionate to contract complexity Internal staff time; template risk if templates are outdated
Complaints Board representation Blended hourly rate or block fee for Board proceedings; filing fee payable to the Board Self-representation possible; no legal fees but weaker procedural position
Interim relief application Urgent-rate engagement; typically higher hourly rate for expedited work Rarely feasible without counsel; risk of failed application and lost remedy
Potential downside exposure (contract annulment / damages) Reduced by compliant design and competent defence Full exposure: contract value, reliance damages, reputational cost

For suppliers, the equation is even starker: the value of the lost contract dwarfs any reasonable legal fee. For contracting authorities, a single annulment can delay project delivery by months and attract political scrutiny.

Liability and Compliance Risk

The Public Procurement Act imposes obligations on contracting authorities that carry real sanctions for non-compliance. The Complaints Board can declare a contract without effect (uden virkning), shorten contract duration, or impose financial penalties. For suppliers, non-compliance with tender conditions, even procedural ones, can result in exclusion from future procurements.

  • Instruct counsel now: Counsel audits the procurement for compliance risks before publication or submission, reducing the likelihood of sanctions.
  • Handle in-house: Compliance depends entirely on the team’s current knowledge of the Act and Board case law, which evolves with each decision.

Enforceability and Dispute Resolution

Denmark’s primary review body is the Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud), housed within Nævnenes Hus. The Board has authority to annul award decisions, declare contracts without effect, and award compensation. Its decisions can be appealed to the ordinary courts.

  • Instruct counsel now: Experienced Complaints Board counsel frames the claim to maximise the chance of annulment or compensation, and manages the procedural steps, including evidence submission, written pleadings, and oral hearings, efficiently.
  • Handle in-house: While there is no legal requirement to be represented by counsel before the Board, self-represented parties face significant procedural disadvantages. The Board’s case law is extensive and fact-specific, and a poorly framed claim risks dismissal on procedural rather than substantive grounds.

Tender Design and Award Criteria

Poorly drafted award criteria are the single most common source of procurement challenges in Denmark. Criteria that are vague, disproportionate, or internally inconsistent invite complaints, and the Board has repeatedly annulled awards where criteria did not meet the transparency standard required by the Public Procurement Act.

  • Instruct counsel now: Criteria are tested against Board case law and the Act’s requirements before publication.
  • Handle in-house: Workable only where the criteria are purely price-based or drawn from a recently reviewed, legally tested template.

What Changes in 2026: EU Procurement Thresholds and the Danish Impact

The European Commission periodically revises the EU procurement thresholds, the contract values above which the full EU procurement regime applies, including mandatory EU-wide publication, standstill obligations, and access to the Complaints Board’s full range of remedies. The threshold adjustments effective from 1 January 2026 alter which contracts fall within the EU regime under the Public Procurement Act.

The practical effect for contracting authorities is that some contracts that previously fell below the threshold now require full EU-compliant procedures. Conversely, contracts that move above the threshold for the first time trigger obligations, including mandatory standstill periods, transparency requirements, and the right of tenderers to challenge before the Board, that did not previously apply. For suppliers, the change means that procurements previously treated as national-only may now carry full EU remedies, including the possibility of contract annulment.

Is it worth hiring a procurement lawyer for procurements below the EU thresholds after the 2026 changes? The answer depends on the margin. For contracts clearly below the revised thresholds with no cross-border interest, in-house handling remains appropriate. But for contracts in the zone just below the new threshold, or where aggregation with related contracts could push the value above it, the 2026 threshold change makes procurement legal advice in Denmark essential to avoid misclassification and the cascading procedural consequences that follow.

Decision Framework: When to Instruct Counsel, When to Handle In-House

Use the framework below to make the call. Each row identifies a concrete trigger condition and the recommended path.

If Your Priority Is… Choose…
Preserving remedies and obtaining urgent interim relief after an adverse award decision Instruct counsel now, before the standstill expires
Correct threshold classification for a contract near the EU threshold or involving potential aggregation Instruct counsel now, at the planning stage, before publication
Drafting complex award criteria (quality scoring, lifecycle costing, innovation partnership) Instruct counsel now, at the tender design stage
Defending against a Complaints Board challenge as a contracting authority Instruct counsel now, immediately upon receipt of the complaint
Routine low-value purchase clearly below thresholds with no cross-border interest Handle in-house, with a documented checklist and pre-approved templates
Repeat commodity purchase using a recently legally reviewed template Handle in-house, with a limited counsel retainer for escalation
Cross-border procurement or foreign supplier participation Instruct counsel now, EU law overlay and language requirements demand specialist input

Choose to instruct counsel when:

  • The contract value is within 20% of the EU threshold (above or below).
  • You are a supplier who has received an adverse award decision and the standstill period is running.
  • The procurement involves a DPS, framework agreement, or multi-lot structure.
  • Any bidder has raised questions about the evaluation criteria or process during the procurement.
  • You are a foreign supplier bidding in Denmark for the first time.

Choose to handle in-house when:

  • The contract is clearly below the EU and national light-regime thresholds with no aggregation risk.
  • The procurement uses a simple, price-only award criterion and a legally tested template.
  • Your in-house team has handled similar procurements without challenge in the past 12 months.

When (and Why) You Need a Procurement Lawyer for This Decision

Certain situations move the procurement decision out of in-house comfort and into territory where external counsel is not just helpful but necessary to protect your legal position. Engage a public procurement lawyer in Denmark when any of the following apply:

  • The standstill period is running and you are considering a challenge. You have days, not weeks, to file. Any delay risks losing automatic suspension.
  • You have received a Complaints Board complaint as a contracting authority. The Board’s procedural requirements are strict, and the defence must be filed within the prescribed deadline.
  • Threshold classification is uncertain. Aggregation rules, mixed contracts, and the 2026 threshold changes make classification a specialist task.
  • The procurement involves a framework agreement or DPS with aggregate value above the EU threshold. Structural errors at inception cascade through every call-off.
  • A foreign supplier is involved, either as a bidder or as the contracting authority’s intended supplier. Cross-border procurement triggers EU-law obligations that require specialist input.

What to Have Ready for Your First Call

To get the most from an initial consultation, prepare the following documents before contacting counsel:

  • The contract notice and all published tender documents.
  • The award decision letter and standstill notification (if post-award).
  • The evaluation report or scoring summary.
  • All correspondence with the contracting authority or tenderers during the procurement.
  • Any internal threshold calculation or aggregation analysis.

With these in hand, counsel can provide an initial triage opinion, typically within 24 to 48 hours, covering whether a challenge has merit, whether interim measures should be sought, and a cost estimate for the next steps. For a broader overview of public procurement resources and practice areas, start with the Global Law Experts directory.

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. The Public Procurement Act (Udbudslov.dk, official PDF)
  2. Business in Denmark / Virk, Public Procurement Act guidance
  3. European Commission, Denmark country profile on public procurement
  4. Plesner, Public Procurement Law practice page
  5. DLA Piper Denmark, Public procurement overview
  6. Kromann Reumert, Procurement Law
  7. European Procurement Law Group (EPLG), Denmark overview

FAQs

When should a contracting authority or supplier hire a lawyer for a public procurement, at the tender stage or post-award?
For contracting authorities, the optimal point is the tender design stage, before the contract notice is published. For suppliers, the critical point is immediately upon receiving an adverse award decision, while the standstill period is still running. In both cases, earlier instruction prevents costlier problems later.
There is no legal requirement to be represented by counsel before the Complaints Board. However, the Board’s procedural rules are technical, deadlines are strict, and self-represented parties are at a significant practical disadvantage, particularly when seeking interim measures, where procedural precision is essential.
For contracts clearly and comfortably below the revised thresholds with no cross-border interest, in-house handling is reasonable. But for contracts near the threshold, or where aggregation with related purchases could push the value above it, the 2026 changes make counsel essential to avoid misclassification and the full suite of EU obligations it triggers.
The standstill period is the controlling deadline. Filing within it preserves automatic suspension. If the standstill has expired and the contract has been signed, court proceedings for interim relief may be the only remaining path, but they are more burdensome and less predictable than Board proceedings. Speed is always an advantage; delay is almost always fatal to remedies.
Foreign suppliers should instruct Danish counsel as soon as they decide to bid on a procurement published under the EU regime, or immediately upon receiving an adverse award decision. Danish procurement law has procedural requirements, including language, filing format, and Board rules, that differ materially from other EU member states. Local counsel ensures compliance and preserves all available remedies.
You can, but the consequences of delay may be irreversible. If the standstill period has expired, automatic suspension is lost. If the contract has been signed, the Board’s power to annul is more constrained. If the evaluation criteria were poorly drafted, the error cannot be corrected post-publication without restarting the procurement. Late engagement limits counsel’s options and typically increases costs. The safest mitigation is a standing retainer that allows rapid escalation.
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When to Hire a Public Procurement Lawyer in Denmark (2026): a Practical Decision Guide

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