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Contract Lawyers Austria 2026: Public Procurement Act, Thresholds and Contractor Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Austria’s amended Federal Procurement Act 2018, commonly referred to as the Public Procurement Act 2026 (BVergG 2018 idF 2026), represents the most significant overhaul of the country’s public contracting framework in nearly a decade. Contract lawyers in Austria are already advising bidders, contracting authorities and lenders on a staggered implementation schedule: certain administrative transparency measures and eForm requirements took effect on 1 January 2026, while substantive procedural and threshold changes apply to all procurement procedures initiated on or after 1 March 2026.

This guide delivers what short firm alerts do not, a practitioner-grade walkthrough of the new rules, complete with a bidder compliance checklist, sample tender contract clauses and an analysis of the financing implications that banks and sponsors must factor into public-sector project support.

The three things every contractor, procurement manager and in-house counsel should do immediately are:

  • Audit every pending tender. Determine whether the procedure was initiated before or after 1 March 2026, because only procedures started on or after that date fall under the new substantive rules.
  • Revise standard exclusion representations and performance-security wording. The amended Act introduces expanded mandatory exclusion grounds and new sustainability obligations that must be reflected in tender documents and supply-chain declarations.
  • Coordinate with lenders and guarantors. Changes to assignment rules, step-in rights and exclusion-event triggers affect existing covenant packages and may require side-letter amendments.

The sections below move from legislative overview to practical clause drafting, finishing with a remedies roadmap and a structured FAQ. Readers seeking specialist assistance can find a contract lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.

Key Changes Under the Public Procurement Act 2026

The 2026 amendments to the BVergG 2018 pursue three overarching objectives: greater transparency through digitisation and freedom-of-information (FOI) linkage, stronger sustainability mandates, and updated thresholds that align Austria more closely with the latest EU Procurement Directives. Industry observers expect the combined effect to raise compliance costs for bidders in the short term while producing a more level playing field once market participants adapt.

Summary of Statutory Amendments

  • Revised contracting thresholds. Upper and lower threshold values for supplies, services and works have been adjusted to reflect updated EU thresholds, altering which procedures require full formal tender and which qualify for simplified direct-award or negotiated processes.
  • Mandatory eForms. All contracting authorities must use standardised electronic forms (eForms) for contract notices, award notices and modification notices, replacing legacy notification formats.
  • FOI linkage. Procurement documentation, including evaluation reports, award decisions and material contract amendments, must now be accessible under Austria’s freedom-of-information framework, increasing post-award transparency.
  • Expanded exclusion grounds. The catalogue of mandatory exclusion grounds has been broadened to cover additional financial and environmental offences, with a clearer nexus to final court or administrative-authority decisions.
  • Sustainability obligations. Contracting authorities are required to integrate environmental and social criteria into award decisions and, where technically feasible, into minimum specifications for works and supply contracts.
  • Fee system changes. The fee structure for review proceedings before procurement review bodies (Vergabekontrollbehörden) has been recalibrated, affecting the cost calculus for aggrieved bidders considering challenges.

Practical Impact for Contractors

Statutory Change Contractor Impact
Revised thresholds Some contracts that previously fell below the formal procurement threshold will now require full competitive tendering; others may shift into the simplified regime. Bidders must recalibrate go/no-go decisions for each opportunity.
Mandatory eForms Technical submission requirements change, legacy PDF-based notices are no longer accepted. IT systems and bid-management platforms must be updated.
FOI linkage Post-award transparency increases the risk that commercially sensitive bid information becomes publicly accessible. Confidentiality clauses require careful drafting.
Expanded exclusion grounds Contractors and their sub-contractors must run enhanced due-diligence checks and prepare compliant self-declarations covering the full catalogue of grounds.
Sustainability mandates Environmental management certifications (e.g., EMAS, ISO 14001) and social-compliance evidence may become de facto prerequisites for award eligibility.
Fee recalibration Higher or restructured review fees alter the economics of challenging an award decision, bidders should factor this into litigation-risk budgets.

Effective Dates and Contracting Thresholds in Austria, Who and What Is in Scope

The Public Procurement Act 2026 does not operate as a single “big bang.” Contract lawyers in Austria must advise clients based on a staggered timeline. The critical distinction is between administrative-infrastructure provisions (effective 1 January 2026) and substantive procedural rules (effective for procedures initiated on or after 1 March 2026). Procurement deadlines in Austria therefore depend on when a specific contracting authority formally launches its procedure.

Timeline of Key Legislative Dates

Measure Effective Date Procedures Affected / Note
Administrative transparency measures, eForm infrastructure, FOI integration 1 January 2026 Applies to all contracting authorities updating procurement portals and FOI systems; does not directly change pending tender procedures.
Substantive threshold changes, expanded exclusion grounds, sustainability criteria, procedural amendments 1 March 2026 (procedures initiated on or after this date) All new procurement procedures, open, restricted, negotiated, competitive dialogue, concessions, started on or after 1 March 2026 must comply with the full amended Act.
Transitional provisions Varies Procedures initiated before 1 March 2026 continue under the prior rules until their conclusion. Contracts awarded under prior-regime procedures are not retroactively subject to new exclusion or sustainability requirements, though modifications may trigger new-regime obligations.

Contracting Thresholds, Before vs After

The revised contracting thresholds in Austria follow the updated EU thresholds that became applicable in the 2025–2026 cycle. Exact figures differ by contract type and contracting-entity category (classical contracting authority vs sectoral/utilities entity). The table below summarises the key procurement-contract categories:

Contract Type Previous Threshold (€) New Threshold Under 2026 Amendments (€)
Supplies and services, central government authorities 140,000 143,000
Supplies and services, sub-central contracting authorities 215,000 221,000
Works contracts 5,382,000 5,538,000
Concession contracts 5,382,000 5,538,000
Sectoral entities, supplies and services 431,000 443,000

Note: These figures align with the latest EU Directive thresholds. National sub-threshold procedures (Unterschwellenvergabe) are subject to separate, domestically defined values that the 2026 amendments also adjust. Contractors should verify the precise values in the official Federal Law Gazette text before relying on any threshold for a specific procurement.

Which Procedures Are Captured

All procedure types recognised under the BVergG, open procedures, restricted procedures, negotiated procedures with and without prior publication, competitive dialogues, innovation partnerships and concession-award procedures, are subject to the new rules when initiated on or after 1 March 2026. Framework agreements concluded before that date continue to operate under their original terms, but call-offs or mini-competitions launched on or after 1 March 2026 under those frameworks are likely to attract scrutiny under the updated exclusion and sustainability provisions.

Who Is Affected, Contracting Authorities, Utilities and Private Bodies

Austrian procurement law distinguishes between classical contracting authorities (federal, state and municipal bodies), sectoral entities (utilities in water, energy, transport and postal services) and certain private bodies that receive predominant public funding or are subject to management oversight by a public entity. The 2026 amendments affect all three categories, though the specific new obligations differ.

Entity Type New Obligations Under the 2026 Amendments Practical Note
Classical contracting authorities (federal, state, municipal) Full suite: eForms, FOI linkage, sustainability criteria, updated thresholds, expanded exclusion checks Federal authorities must upgrade procurement platforms first; smaller municipalities may require technical assistance.
Sectoral/utilities entities Updated thresholds, eForms, expanded exclusion grounds; sustainability criteria apply where technically feasible Utilities operating under EU sectoral Directives must align their internal procurement manuals with both EU and Austrian amendments.
Private bodies subject to public-procurement rules Threshold and exclusion changes apply when body acts as a contracting entity; FOI obligations may be limited depending on the legal form PPP project companies and publicly funded foundations should conduct a governance audit to determine whether the amendments capture them.

The Austrian Bundesbeschaffung GmbH (BBG), the federal central purchasing body, is a key interface for compliance. Framework agreements established by the BBG after 1 March 2026 will embed the new requirements, and all entities calling off those frameworks must adhere to the updated sustainability and exclusion standards.

Contractor Obligations 2026 and the Bidder Compliance Checklist

Meeting the amended Act’s requirements begins long before a tender is submitted. The contractor obligations introduced in 2026 demand a structured, evidence-based approach to bid preparation. The following bidder compliance checklist distils the key steps into a pre-award and post-award sequence.

Pre-Award Checklist

  1. Exclusion-ground self-assessment. Review the expanded mandatory and discretionary exclusion grounds. Obtain and archive criminal-record extracts, tax-compliance certificates and environmental-offence clearances for the entity and all proposed key personnel.
  2. Sub-contractor due diligence. If sub-contractors will perform more than 30% of the contract value (or any critical portion), run equivalent exclusion checks against them and obtain signed self-declarations.
  3. Sustainability documentation. Prepare environmental management certificates (EMAS, ISO 14001 or equivalent), social-compliance policies and any carbon-footprint data required by the tender specifications.
  4. Financial capacity evidence. Update bank references, audited accounts and insurance certificates. For procurement contracts in Austria exceeding the works threshold, ensure professional-indemnity and contractor-all-risks cover meets the specified minimums.
  5. eForm compatibility. Confirm that the organisation’s eProcurement platform or portal access supports the new eForm standards. Test submission workflows before the bid deadline.
  6. Corporate-governance declarations. Prepare ultimate-beneficial-owner declarations, organisational-chart evidence and any required conflict-of-interest disclosures.
  7. Procurement-deadline tracking. Map all procedural deadlines (request-to-participate, tender submission, standstill period) against the tender notice and cross-reference against the transitional rules to confirm which regime applies.

Post-Award Compliance and Ongoing Obligations

  • Notification of changes. Any change in the contractor’s ownership, key personnel or sub-contractor composition during contract performance must be notified to the contracting authority without delay. Failure may trigger a re-assessment of exclusion grounds.
  • Sustainability performance reporting. Where the contract includes sustainability KPIs, periodic reporting obligations will apply. Establish internal data-collection processes at mobilisation.
  • Assignment and novation restrictions. The contractor may not assign or novate the procurement contract without the contracting authority’s prior written consent. Any purported assignment in breach may be void.

Sample Compliance Matrix

Obligation Who Is Responsible Documentation Required
Exclusion-ground self-declaration Bidder (lead contractor) Signed declaration; criminal-record extracts; tax certificates
Sub-contractor exclusion checks Bidder and each nominated sub-contractor Sub-contractor self-declarations; due-diligence file
Environmental/sustainability proof Bidder ISO 14001 / EMAS certificate; carbon-footprint methodology
Financial capacity Bidder (and guarantor if applicable) Audited accounts; bank reference; insurance certificates
eForm submission Bidder’s bid-management team System-compatibility confirmation; submission receipt
Ongoing change notification Awarded contractor Written notice to contracting authority within defined timeframe

How to Amend Procurement Contracts and Tender Documents, Sample Tender Contract Clauses and Red Flags

Compliance with the Public Procurement Act 2026 is not merely a matter of ticking statutory boxes, it requires the underlying contractual documentation to embed the Act’s requirements in enforceable, commercially workable language. This section provides sample tender contract clauses and identifies the red flags that contract lawyers in Austria should watch for when reviewing or redrafting procurement contracts.

Sample Clause: Mandatory Exclusion and Representations

The following clause variants illustrate how exclusion warranties can be drafted at different levels of rigour:

  • Variant A, Basic representation. “The Contractor represents and warrants that, as at the date of this Contract and throughout its term, neither the Contractor nor any of its directors, officers or persons having powers of representation, decision-making or control has been the subject of a final conviction or final administrative decision in respect of any of the mandatory exclusion grounds set out in [Section XX] of the BVergG 2018 (as amended).”
  • Variant B, Extended due-diligence obligation. “The Contractor shall, prior to nominating any sub-contractor, conduct and document due-diligence enquiries sufficient to verify that the proposed sub-contractor is not subject to any mandatory or discretionary exclusion ground. The Contractor shall provide copies of such due-diligence records to the Contracting Authority upon request.”
  • Variant C, Remediation carve-out. “Where a potential exclusion ground arises during the term of this Contract, the Contractor shall notify the Contracting Authority within five (5) business days and shall be entitled to demonstrate self-cleaning measures in accordance with [Section XX] of the BVergG 2018 (as amended). The Contracting Authority shall assess such measures in good faith before exercising any termination right.”
  • Variant D, Lender-coordination clause. “In the event that an exclusion ground triggers a termination right under this Contract, the Contracting Authority shall, before exercising such right, notify any Security Agent identified in the Direct Agreement and allow the cure period specified therein to elapse.”

Sample Clause: Performance Security and Guarantees

Performance-security clauses must now account for the amended Act’s sustainability and exclusion triggers. A procurement-compliant clause should:

  • Specify that the bank guarantee or performance bond remains valid for a period extending beyond the defects-liability period, covering any post-completion sustainability audits.
  • Include a mechanism for partial release as milestones are achieved, reducing the guarantor’s exposure incrementally.
  • Address the interplay between an exclusion-event termination and a call on the guarantee, clarifying whether the guarantee covers the contracting authority’s re-procurement costs.

Red Flags and Negotiation Tips

  • Blanket assignment prohibitions. Clauses that prohibit all assignment without exception may conflict with lender security requirements. Negotiate a carve-out for assignment by way of security to a financing bank or security agent.
  • Unlimited exclusion-event termination. A clause permitting immediate termination upon any exclusion ground, without a notice-and-cure period, exposes the contractor and its lenders to disproportionate risk. Insist on a self-cleaning window.
  • Missing FOI confidentiality safeguards. Given the new FOI linkage, ensure the contract includes a protocol for the contracting authority to notify the contractor before disclosing any commercially sensitive information and to redact genuine trade secrets.
  • Vague sustainability KPIs. Sustainability obligations that refer to aspirational targets without measurable baselines create enforcement disputes. Push for quantified indicators with a clear measurement methodology.

Clause Comparison: Standard vs Procurement-Compliant vs Lender-Friendly

Clause Element Standard Clause Procurement-Compliant (2026) Lender-Friendly
Exclusion warranty Basic representation at signing Repeating representation + sub-contractor coverage + self-cleaning right As procurement-compliant, plus notice to security agent and cure period before termination
Performance security Fixed-amount guarantee, released at completion Guarantee covering re-procurement costs and sustainability-audit period; partial milestone release As procurement-compliant, plus guarantee must name lender as co-beneficiary; no acceleration without lender consent
Assignment Prohibited without consent Prohibited without consent; sub-contracting subject to exclusion checks Carve-out permitting assignment by way of security to financing bank or security agent
Confidentiality / FOI General confidentiality obligation FOI-disclosure protocol; trade-secret redaction procedure; advance notice Same, plus obligation to notify lender simultaneously with contractor

Financing and Guarantor Implications, What Banks and Sponsors Need to Know

The 2026 amendments do not merely affect the contracting authority–contractor relationship. Lenders, guarantors and project-finance sponsors with exposure to Austrian public-sector contracts must reassess their security packages. The likely practical effect of the new rules is a tightening of covenant monitoring, particularly around exclusion events and sustainability-compliance triggers.

Recommended Lender Covenant Checklist

  • Exclusion-event monitoring covenant. Require the borrower to certify periodically (quarterly or upon a trigger event) that no mandatory or discretionary exclusion ground has arisen in respect of it, its key personnel or its material sub-contractors.
  • Sustainability-compliance covenant. Incorporate the contractor’s sustainability KPIs from the procurement contract as lender reporting obligations, ensuring early visibility of potential non-compliance.
  • Assignment-by-way-of-security carve-out. Ensure the procurement contract permits assignment to the security agent. If the contracting authority resists, negotiate a direct agreement or tri-partite deed that grants the lender step-in rights upon contractor default.
  • Cure-period alignment. Align the cure period in the procurement contract’s termination clause with the lender’s step-in timeline, typically 60 to 90 days. A procurement contract that allows only 10 business days for cure is commercially unworkable from a financing perspective.
  • Escrow/performance-security intercept. Where the procurement contract requires a performance guarantee, ensure the guarantee documentation does not permit a call without simultaneous notice to the security agent. Consider requiring a guarantee-proceeds escrow account pledged to the lender.
  • Change-of-control event. The new notification obligations on ownership changes may trigger lender-consent requirements. Coordinate the definitions of “change of control” across the financing documents and the procurement contract to avoid inadvertent cross-default.

Early indications suggest that Austrian banks are beginning to embed procurement-law compliance triggers into their standard facility-agreement templates for public-sector project loans. Sponsors and borrowers should anticipate more detailed information undertakings in term sheets negotiated from mid-2026 onwards.

Remedies, Exclusions and Contesting Awards Under the Public Procurement Act 2026

Austria’s procurement-review system provides aggrieved bidders with three principal remedies: interim suspension of the procurement procedure, annulment of unlawful decisions, and damages. The 2026 amendments leave this three-pillar structure intact but recalibrate the fee regime and expand the grounds on which a review body may find a violation.

When Exclusion Is Mandatory

Under the amended Act, a contracting authority must exclude a tenderer where a final court conviction or final administrative decision has been rendered against the tenderer (or its key personnel) for offences including:

  • Participation in a criminal organisation, terrorism or terrorist financing
  • Corruption, bribery and fraud (including EU-budget fraud)
  • Money laundering
  • Child labour and other forms of trafficking in human beings
  • Specified environmental offences (new under the 2026 amendments)
  • Non-payment of taxes or social-security contributions established by a final judicial or administrative decision

Discretionary exclusion grounds, covering serious professional misconduct, distortion of competition, conflicts of interest and significant prior-contract performance deficiencies, remain available and have been clarified in scope.

Practical Challenge Checklist

  1. Identify the reviewable decision. Not every procedural act is challengeable, focus on the award decision, the decision to exclude, or the decision to cancel the procedure.
  2. Observe the standstill period. File the review application within the standstill period (typically 10 to 15 calendar days from notification of the award decision, depending on the procedure type).
  3. Apply for interim measures. Request suspension of the procurement procedure pending the review body’s decision. Demonstrate urgency and potential irreparable harm.
  4. Calculate the revised fee. Under the 2026 fee adjustments, compute the review-application fee as a proportion of the estimated contract value and budget accordingly.
  5. Prepare evidence efficiently. Document every procedural irregularity contemporaneously. Review bodies place weight on documentary evidence and correspondence timelines.

For detailed guidance on contesting an award, see our companion article on challenging public procurement awards in Austria.

Looking Ahead, Practical Next Steps for Contract Lawyers in Austria

The Public Procurement Act 2026 is not a distant legislative prospect, its key provisions are already in force or will govern every procurement procedure initiated from 1 March 2026. For procurement managers, the immediate priority is auditing existing tender templates and standard-form contracts against the new exclusion, sustainability and transparency requirements. For bidders and contractors, the imperative is to upgrade internal compliance processes, run sub-contractor due-diligence checks and ensure eForm readiness. For banks and sponsors, the task is to revisit covenant packages, direct agreements and guarantee documentation for every Austrian public-sector exposure.

Contract lawyers in Austria play a critical role at each of these stages, from pre-bid advisory through contract negotiation to post-award dispute resolution. Readers seeking to connect with an experienced practitioner can browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory or explore our broader coverage of recent legal developments in Austria. The regulatory landscape is evolving rapidly, and early professional guidance remains the most effective way to turn compliance complexity into competitive advantage.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Roman Hager at WMWP – Act Legal Austria, 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: Towards More Efficient and Transparent Procurement
  3. CMS (Austria), Summary Overview: Amendment to the Federal Procurement Act 2026
  4. DORDA, Newsletter: BVergG 2026 Amendment, What Changes
  5. Unternehmensserviceportal (USP), Procurement Procedure (Official Government Guidance)
  6. Bundesbeschaffung GmbH (BBG), Public Procurement Law Overview
  7. Legal 500, Austria: Public Procurement Guide
  8. Fellner Wratzfeld & Partner (FWP), Publication of the Public Procurement Act 2026
  9. Global Law Experts, Challenge Public Procurement Award Austria 2026

FAQs

What does the Public Procurement Act 2026 change for contractors in Austria?
The 2026 amendments revise contracting thresholds to align with updated EU values, introduce mandatory eForms for procurement notices, expand the catalogue of mandatory exclusion grounds (including specified environmental offences), link procurement documentation to Austria’s freedom-of-information framework, and impose sustainability criteria on award decisions. Certain administrative measures took effect on 1 January 2026, while substantive procedural changes apply to procedures initiated on or after 1 March 2026.
Administrative transparency measures, eForm infrastructure and FOI integration took effect on 1 January 2026. All substantive threshold, exclusion and procedural changes apply to procurement procedures initiated on or after 1 March 2026. Procedures launched before that date continue under the prior rules until completion. Contractors should verify the official initiation date of each specific procurement to determine which regime applies.
Key amendments include: updating exclusion representations to cover the expanded mandatory grounds; adding sub-contractor due-diligence obligations; embedding sustainability KPIs with measurable baselines; adjusting performance-security wording to cover re-procurement costs and sustainability-audit periods; incorporating an FOI-disclosure protocol with a trade-secret redaction mechanism; and ensuring eForm-compatible submission processes are referenced in tender instructions.
Non-compliance risks include mandatory exclusion from the procedure, annulment of an already-made award decision, interim suspension of contract performance, and damages claims by the contracting authority or competing bidders. Self-cleaning measures remain available, but the contractor bears the burden of demonstrating that the remedial steps taken are sufficient. Sub-contractors face equivalent exclusion risk where the contracting authority or lead contractor fails to conduct adequate due diligence.
Exclusion is mandatory where a final court conviction or final administrative decision exists for specified criminal offences, including participation in a criminal organisation, corruption, fraud, money laundering, trafficking, specified environmental crimes and non-payment of taxes or social-security contributions. Discretionary exclusion applies to serious professional misconduct, conflicts of interest and significant prior-performance failures.
Adjusted thresholds mean that some contracts previously awarded through simplified procedures will now require full formal tendering, including comprehensive sub-contractor exclusion checks. Bidders should integrate sub-contractor due diligence into their standard bid-preparation workflow, obtaining exclusion self-declarations and supporting evidence from all nominated sub-contractors before tender submission.
Lenders should include exclusion-event monitoring covenants, sustainability-compliance reporting obligations, a requirement for the procurement contract to permit assignment by way of security, cure-period alignment between the procurement contract and the financing documents (typically 60–90 days), and performance-guarantee provisions that require notice to the security agent before any call. A direct agreement or tri-partite deed with the contracting authority is strongly recommended.

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Contract Lawyers Austria 2026: Public Procurement Act, Thresholds and Contractor Compliance

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