Public procurement disputes in Austria have entered a new phase since the amended Bundesvergabegesetz (BVergG) took effect for all procedures initiated from 1 March 2026. The reforms tighten exclusion grounds, refine debarment mechanisms and reshape the remedies landscape for aggrieved contractors and bidders. For any tenderer that has been excluded, or expects to be, the window for action is narrow, and the stakes are significant: an unchallenged exclusion can lock a company out of an entire contract cycle and erode its market standing. This practical playbook explains exactly how to contest an exclusion decision, secure interim injunctive relief, and pursue a damages claim under Austria’s Public Procurement Act 2026.
The 2026 amendments to Austria’s Public Procurement Act build on the BVergG 2018 framework but introduce several material changes that directly affect how public procurement disputes in Austria are initiated, defended and resolved. Industry observers expect the new rules to produce a wave of early test cases as contracting authorities and review bodies interpret tightened exclusion provisions and revised threshold mechanics for the first time.
| Date | Change Introduced | Practical Impact for Contractors |
|---|---|---|
| 2018, BVergG 2018 enacted | Foundational procurement rules and remedies framework implementing EU Directives 2014/24/EU and 2014/25/EU | Pre-2026 procedures remain governed by these rules; transitional exceptions apply |
| 2025, Major amendments published | Draft consultation, parliamentary debate and publication of amending Act in the Federal Law Gazette | Legislative history useful for interpreting ambiguous provisions under the 2026 regime |
| 1 March 2026, BVergG 2026 in force | New rules apply to all procurement procedures initiated from this date | Contractors must verify the contract notice date to determine which exclusion and remedies rules apply |
The amended Act applies across all classic-sector and utilities-sector procurements above the applicable EU thresholds, as well as to below-threshold contracts governed by the national regime. Contractors bidding for IT system implementations, hospital infrastructure projects, or large-scale construction works are all within scope. A critical practical point: if a contracting authority initiated a procedure before 1 March 2026 but has not yet awarded the contract, the pre-amendment BVergG 2018 rules continue to govern both the procedure and any subsequent challenge. Contractors should always verify the initiation date stated in the contract notice before determining which set of rules, and which exclusion grounds, apply to their situation.
The threshold adjustments under the Public Procurement Act 2026 also recalibrate the financial limits above which full remedies (including interim suspension) are available. For below-threshold contracts, contractors retain the right to seek a declaration of unlawfulness and damages, though interim injunctive relief may be more limited. Procurement teams should map their contract value against the current thresholds to understand the full menu of remedies available in their particular dispute.
Understanding the exclusion grounds is the essential first step for any contractor preparing to challenge an adverse procurement decision. The 2026 amendments reorganise and expand these grounds, and a contracting authority’s failure to apply them correctly is one of the most fertile areas for a successful challenge.
Contracting authorities are required to exclude a tenderer where there is a final conviction, from an Austrian or a foreign court, for specified criminal offences. These include participation in a criminal organisation, corruption and bribery, fraud affecting the EU’s financial interests, money laundering, terrorist financing, child labour, and human trafficking. The 2026 amendments tighten the treatment of final foreign court decisions: a conviction rendered by a court in another EU Member State or a third country with comparable rule-of-law standards now triggers the same mandatory exclusion as a domestic conviction, provided certain recognition criteria are met.
Beyond mandatory grounds, contracting authorities may exclude tenderers on discretionary bases. Key discretionary exclusion triggers under BVergG 2026 include:
The Public Procurement Act 2026 reinforces the right of a tenderer to be heard before an exclusion decision becomes final. Contracting authorities must notify the tenderer in writing of the proposed exclusion, specify the factual and legal basis, and allow a reasonable period for the tenderer to respond with evidence of self-cleaning measures or factual rebuttals. Failure to provide adequate notice or a meaningful opportunity to respond is itself a ground for annulment, and is among the most common procedural errors exploited in public procurement disputes in Austria.
Experienced procurement counsel regularly identify the following contracting authority errors that give rise to viable challenges:
A structured, time-sensitive approach is essential when contesting an exclusion decision under BVergG 2026. The following step-by-step playbook reflects the sequencing that experienced procurement litigators apply across IT, healthcare and construction sectors.
Upon receiving notice of exclusion, the contractor should immediately:
Counsel should scrutinise the exclusion decision for legal and procedural defects. Common grounds that succeed include: the contracting authority applied the wrong exclusion provision; the underlying facts were insufficiently evidenced; the tenderer’s self-cleaning measures were disregarded without reasons; or the right to be heard was not respected. Each ground should be documented with specific references to the decision text and supporting evidence.
Austria’s procurement remedies architecture distinguishes between pre-award and post-award challenges. Before the contract is awarded, tenderers may apply to the competent review body (the federal or regional procurement review authority) for annulment of the exclusion decision and, simultaneously, for interim suspension of the award procedure. After the contract has been signed, the available remedy shifts to a declaration of unlawfulness, which cannot undo the contract but preserves the contractor’s right to claim damages in separate civil proceedings.
The application must set out the challenged decision, the specific infringement alleged, the remedy sought (annulment, interim suspension, or declaration of unlawfulness), and the factual and evidential basis. Procurement remedies in Austria require precision: vague assertions of unfairness will not succeed. Each alleged infringement should be linked to a specific provision of BVergG 2026 and supported by documentary evidence or witness statements.
Successful challenges to an exclusion from public procurement rest on a well-organised evidential record. The evidence matrix below outlines the typical documents and sources required:
| Type of Issue | Evidence to Collect | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Procedural defect (no right to be heard) | Correspondence log, exclusion notice, reply deadline documentation | Contractor’s own records; contracting authority’s file (request access) |
| Misapplication of exclusion ground | Criminal record certificate, court judgments, competition authority decisions | National criminal record authority; court registries |
| Self-cleaning measures ignored | Compliance programme documentation, management change records, compensation receipts | Contractor’s compliance department; external compliance auditors |
| Factual basis lacking | Contracting authority’s evaluation report, tender specifications, prior contract performance records | Request under right of access; prior client references |
| Scoring / evaluation irregularity | Evaluation matrix, scoring methodology, comparator bidder data (redacted) | Review body’s file inspection right |
The most effective dispute strategies combine an application for annulment with a simultaneous request for interim suspension and a formal reservation of the right to claim damages. A well-timed damages warning letter to the contracting authority can also encourage settlement discussions and protect limitation rights. This parallel approach is particularly important in large-value procurement disputes where the contract may be awarded, and performed, before the merits challenge concludes.
Early indications suggest that the following challenge grounds are most likely to gain traction under the 2026 regime:
Securing interim relief is often the single most important step in a procurement dispute. If the contracting authority proceeds to award and sign the contract before the merits hearing, the contractor’s primary remedy, annulment, becomes unavailable, leaving only a declaration of unlawfulness and a potentially complex damages claim. A procurement injunction in Austria therefore serves as the gatekeeper to meaningful relief.
Review bodies apply a structured test when deciding applications for interim suspension of an award procedure. The contractor must demonstrate:
The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments is to compress the window for interim applications. Contractors should file the suspension application at the same time as, or even before, the main annulment application, particularly in accelerated procedures or framework agreement call-offs where award decisions move quickly. In construction procurement, where project timelines are rigid, even a one-week delay in filing can be fatal to the injunction application because the balance-of-interests test will weigh heavily against suspending a time-critical build programme.
Where a contractor has strong grounds but limited time, filing an interim suspension application supported by a concise affidavit, with the full evidential package to follow within days, is preferable to waiting for a perfect filing. Review bodies generally accept supplementary evidence provided it is submitted promptly after the initial application.
Where an exclusion or award decision is found to be unlawful but the contract has already been signed and performed, the aggrieved contractor’s remaining remedy is a damages claim. Austrian law provides two principal heads of recovery in procurement disputes: bid costs (negative interest) and lost profit (positive interest, typically framed as loss of chance).
A damages claim in procurement in Austria may be grounded in:
| Element | Calculation | Amount (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Bid preparation costs (negative interest) | Internal staff costs + external consultants + technical studies | 85,000 |
| Contract value | Award value of the excluded contract | 4,200,000 |
| Expected profit margin | Industry-standard margin for comparable contracts | 8% = 336,000 |
| Probability of award (loss of chance) | Based on number of compliant bidders and evaluation ranking | 40% |
| Recoverable lost profit | 336,000 × 40% | 134,400 |
| Total claim value | Bid costs + lost profit | 219,400 |
A well-drafted damages claim procurement in Austria should include: a clear statement of the unlawful act (referencing the review body’s decision or the declaration of unlawfulness), the causal link between the infringement and the loss, a detailed damages calculation supported by an expert financial report, and witness evidence from the project team. Contractors should also address the mitigation obligation head-on, demonstrating that they took reasonable steps to secure alternative work and reduce the overall loss.
Damages claims for procurement infringements are subject to the general limitation periods under Austrian law. Contractors should be aware that the limitation clock typically begins to run from the date on which the contractor knew (or ought to have known) of the infringement and the resulting loss. Filing the damages warning letter promptly, ideally during the review proceedings, preserves the limitation position and signals serious intent to the contracting authority, which can facilitate settlement negotiations.
Choosing the correct forum and meeting filing deadlines are threshold requirements that can make or break a procurement challenge. Austria’s remedies architecture distinguishes sharply between pre-contractual review and post-contractual damages proceedings.
For federal procurement procedures, the competent review body is the Bundesverwaltungsgericht (Federal Administrative Court). For procedures conducted by regional or municipal contracting authorities, the relevant Landesverwaltungsgericht (Regional Administrative Court) has jurisdiction. Damages claims arising from an unlawful procurement decision are brought before the ordinary civil courts, typically the Landesgericht (Regional Court) at the seat of the contracting authority.
Contractors pursuing parallel remedies, annulment before the administrative court and damages before the civil court, must coordinate filings carefully to avoid inconsistent outcomes and to ensure that the civil court can rely on the administrative court’s finding of unlawfulness as a binding factual basis.
Applications for interim suspension typically require the contractor to provide security (a deposit or bank guarantee) to cover potential losses to the contracting authority or third parties if the suspension is ultimately found to have been unjustified. The amount of security is set by the review body and is proportionate to the contract value. Contractors should budget for this requirement at the outset and have financing in place before filing.
Not every procurement dispute needs to run to a full hearing. In practice, a credible interim suspension application often prompts settlement discussions. Contracting authorities may agree to re-evaluate the tender, withdraw the exclusion, or offer financial compensation in exchange for the contractor discontinuing proceedings. Any settlement agreement should include carefully drafted release language that preserves the contractor’s right to participate in future procurements and does not constitute an admission of wrongdoing.
Public procurement disputes in Austria under the 2026 regime demand speed, precision and a clear strategic framework. Contractors who act within the first 48–72 hours, securing the exclusion decision, preserving evidence and instructing specialist counsel, position themselves to obtain interim relief and, ultimately, meaningful procurement remedies in Austria. Whether the goal is annulment of an unlawful exclusion, suspension of an imminent award, or recovery of substantial damages, the playbook outlined above provides the tactical foundation every aggrieved bidder needs. This article reflects the legal position as at May 2026 and is intended as practical guidance, it does not constitute legal advice for any specific case.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Alvarez Privado at APS-LAW, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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