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how to tender for construction contracts in New Zealand

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How to Tender for Construction Contracts in New Zealand (2026): Step‑by‑step Public Procurement Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to tender for construction contracts in New Zealand is essential for any contractor, subcontractor or project owner seeking public sector work in 2026. New Zealand’s public construction procurement is governed by the Government Procurement Rules, administered by New Zealand Government Procurement (NZGP) within the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), and all mandated agencies must advertise eligible opportunities through the Government Electronic Tender Service (GETS). With the MBIE National Construction Pipeline signalling sustained infrastructure investment and updated procurement rules tightening compliance expectations, bidders who follow a disciplined, legally informed process will hold a significant competitive advantage.

This guide sets out every stage of the tendering procedure, from eligibility checks and document preparation through to contract award and mobilisation, so that procurement teams can bid with confidence and manage risk from day one.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

Public construction procurement in New Zealand covers projects funded or managed by central government departments, crown entities, district health boards, local authorities and state‑owned enterprises. The process is designed to ensure open, fair competition and value for money when public funds are committed to building, civil engineering and infrastructure works. Bidders range from large tier‑one contractors to specialist SME subcontractors and design consultants.

Who issues public construction tenders

Mandated agencies, central government departments and most crown entities, are required to follow the Government Procurement Rules when procuring construction services. Local authorities (city and district councils, regional councils) typically adopt equivalent policies. Transport projects may also involve Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency procurement frameworks. In each case, the contracting authority prepares the tender documentation and manages the evaluation process, often supported by independent probity advisors.

Typical procurement routes and when they are used

Public construction procurement in New Zealand generally follows one of four routes. An open tender is advertised publicly and any qualified supplier may respond; it is the default for most projects above the applicable threshold. A selective (restricted) tender invites bids only from suppliers who have passed a pre‑qualification stage, commonly used for complex or high‑value infrastructure. A panel arrangement establishes a standing list of approved suppliers for repeat work over a defined period. Finally, a request for proposals (RFP) is used where the agency seeks innovative solutions and evaluates price alongside non‑price attributes such as methodology, team capability and risk management.

Where to find tender notices

The primary platform is GETS, a free service operated by NZGP. Mandated agencies must publish tender opportunities worth more than the applicable threshold on GETS. Bidders should register on the GETS portal, set up keyword alerts for construction categories, and monitor agency websites and aggregator feeds. Some local authorities and crown entities also advertise on their own procurement pages, so checking both GETS and the specific agency site is recommended.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Tendering for Construction Contracts in New Zealand

Before investing time in a bid, contractors must confirm they satisfy the baseline eligibility criteria that contracting authorities assess during pre‑qualification or compliance checking. Failing to meet a single mandatory requirement can result in immediate disqualification.

Core statutory and regulatory prerequisites

Every tenderer must be a legal entity registered with the New Zealand Companies Office and hold a valid New Zealand Business Number (NZBN). Tax compliance is non‑negotiable: tenderers must be registered for GST with Inland Revenue (IRD) and be able to demonstrate current tax compliance. Levy obligations under the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) scheme must be up to date. Where the work involves design or engineering, the relevant practitioners must hold current registration or practising certificates. Compliance with the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 is mandatory, and most tender documents require evidence of a functioning safety management system.

Financial and insurance prerequisites

Agencies typically require audited financial statements for the most recent one to two financial years, demonstrating sufficient turnover and balance‑sheet strength relative to the contract value. Tenderers must hold adequate insurance, at a minimum, public liability and, depending on the project, professional indemnity and contract works cover. Policy limits are usually specified in the RFP, and certificates of currency must show cover dates spanning the tender period through to contract completion. Performance bonds or bank guarantees are routinely required, with amounts commonly set at 5 to 10 per cent of the contract value. The bond form prescribed in the tender documents must be used; substituting an alternative form without approval is a common cause of non‑compliance.

Procurement thresholds and when agencies must publish on GETS

Under the Government Procurement Rules, mandated agencies must advertise any procurement opportunity worth more than $100,000 on GETS. For construction projects specifically, a higher threshold applies, procurement.govt.nz guidance indicates a construction threshold of $9 million for certain open advertising obligations. Below these thresholds, agencies may still choose to advertise but are not required to do so. Bidders should verify the current thresholds directly against the Government Procurement Rules on procurement.govt.nz, as these figures are subject to periodic review. Understanding where a project sits relative to these procurement thresholds in NZ determines the level of procedural formality the agency must follow and, by extension, the documentation standard expected from tenderers.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure, How to Tender for Construction Contracts in New Zealand

The following seven steps trace the path from opportunity discovery through to contract mobilisation. The table below summarises each stage, the responsible party and the typical duration before the detailed guidance that follows.

Step Who does it Typical duration
Opportunity discovery and initial go/no‑go Bid manager / Commercial lead 0–2 days from notice
Compliance matrix and mandatory documents check Bid team / Legal / QS 2–7 days
Pre‑qualification / PQQ submission Bid team / Finance 1–2 weeks (varies)
Detailed pricing and risk allocation Estimator / Legal / Contracts 1–4 weeks
Tender submission (GETS or portal) Bid team Same day (deadline)
Evaluation and clarifications Contracting authority 2–6 weeks typical
Notification of outcome and debrief Contracting authority 1–2 weeks after evaluation
Contract execution and mobilisation Successful tenderer / Authority 2–8 weeks (depends on conditions)

Step 1: Opportunity discovery and quick go/no‑go (Day 0–2)

Monitor GETS alerts and agency websites daily. When a relevant notice appears, the bid manager should conduct a rapid assessment within 48 hours. Key questions at this stage: Does the project align with our core capability and geographic reach? Do we meet the stated pre‑qualification criteria? Is the contract value within our bonding and insurance capacity? Can we resource the bid team within the tender period? A formal go/no‑go decision should be documented, noting the basis for proceeding or declining. Declining early avoids wasted bid cost and preserves the team’s capacity for stronger prospects.

Step 2: Read RFP/PQQ and mandatory documents, create compliance matrix (Day 0–7)

Once the decision to bid is confirmed, the bid team must read every tender document in full, the RFP or invitation to tender, conditions of tendering, draft contract, specifications, drawings and any schedules. Create a compliance matrix: a spreadsheet listing every mandatory requirement, the document or evidence needed to satisfy it, the responsible team member and the internal deadline. This matrix is the single most important bid management tool. Pay close attention to mandatory pass/fail criteria, missing one mandatory requirement will disqualify the tender regardless of the quality of the rest. Note any areas where you intend to submit a contract exception or qualification, and flag these for legal review immediately.

During this period, submit any clarification questions to the contracting authority through the prescribed channel (usually the GETS Q&A function or a nominated contact). All clarification responses are typically shared with all tenderers to maintain fairness.

Step 3: Pre‑qualification and submissions, financials, references, insurances

Where the procurement involves a separate pre‑qualification questionnaire (PQQ), compile and submit the required evidence within the stated deadline. Typical pre‑qualification submissions include the company’s NZBN and Companies Office extract, audited financial statements, insurance certificates of currency, ACC levy status, health and safety documentation, and project references demonstrating relevant experience. For pre‑qualification construction NZ processes, references should show projects of comparable scale, complexity and sector, include contract values, client contact details and completion dates. If a supplier panel or standing arrangement is in place, confirm your panel status and any additional registration steps required. Where the agency uses a performance assessment system, ensure your rating is current and that any recent project completions have been reported to the scheme administrator.

Step 4: Pricing, risk allocation and preparing contract exceptions (internal legal review)

The estimating team prepares the price, drawing on quantity surveyor take‑offs, subcontractor quotes, supplier pricing and programme assumptions. In parallel, the contracts team conducts a detailed review of the draft contract. Identify clauses that impose disproportionate risk, unlimited liability provisions, onerous variation regimes, aggressive liquidated damages, inadequate extension‑of‑time mechanisms and unfavourable payment terms. Under the Construction Contracts Act 2002, payment provisions in construction contracts must comply with the statutory framework, including default payment terms and the right to adjudication. Prepare an exceptions schedule listing each clause you wish to qualify, with proposed alternative wording and a brief commercial rationale.

Keep exceptions to a genuine minimum, agencies often score tender evaluation criteria NZ on the basis of the fewest and least material departures from their standard contract.

Step 5: Submission on GETS or portal and confirmation (tender deadline day)

Upload the completed tender to GETS (or the specified submission portal) well before the deadline. GETS will issue an electronic receipt confirming submission. Do not wait until the final minutes, technical difficulties, file‑size limits and upload speeds can cause late submissions, which are almost invariably rejected. Check that all attachments have uploaded correctly and that the tender is marked as submitted, not draft. Retain the confirmation receipt and a complete copy of the submitted documents for your records.

Step 6: Evaluation, clarifications and presentations (typical 2–6 weeks)

During the tender evaluation timeline, the contracting authority assesses submissions against published criteria, typically a weighted combination of price, non‑price attributes (methodology, capability, experience, health and safety, sustainability) and contract compliance. The agency may issue requests for clarification; respond promptly, accurately and within the scope of the question. Do not volunteer new information or amend pricing unless specifically invited to do so. Some evaluations include shortlisted tenderer presentations or interviews, prepare a concise presentation that addresses the evaluation criteria and demonstrates your team’s understanding of the project risks and proposed delivery approach. Probity advisors may observe the process to ensure compliance with the Government Procurement Rules.

Step 7: Notification, debrief, contract award and mobilisation

The contracting authority will notify all tenderers of the outcome. Successful tenderers enter contract negotiation and execution, this is the stage to finalise any residual contract exceptions and confirm bond, insurance and mobilisation arrangements. Unsuccessful tenderers should request a debrief. Debriefs are valuable: they reveal how your submission was scored, where it fell short and how to improve future bids. If you believe the procurement process was conducted unfairly or in breach of the Government Procurement Rules, you have the right to raise concerns with the contracting authority and, where appropriate, refer the matter to the Office of the Auditor‑General.

Once the contract is signed, establish the project governance structure, appoint key personnel and commence the mobilisation programme within the agreed timeframe.

Required Documents, Tender Documents Checklist

A construction tender submission in New Zealand typically requires the following documents. The specific requirements will vary by project and agency, so always cross‑reference this checklist against the compliance matrix you prepared in Step 2. The table below sets out the standard documents, the usual issuer and format, and validity guidance.

Document Notes (issuer, format, validity)
NZBN / Companies Office extract Issued by Companies Office, PDF extract; ensure active status and that the extract is no more than 30 days old at submission.
GST registration and IRD tax compliance evidence IRD‑issued statement or tax compliance certificate, confirm format requirements with current IRD guidance.
ACC levies status ACC account statement or certificate of levy status, issued by ACC; must show levies are current.
Certificates of Currency, Public Liability and Professional Indemnity insurance Issued by insurer, PDF; check policy limits required in RFP and ensure cover dates span the tender and contract periods.
Performance bonds / bank guarantees (if requested) Issued by bank or surety; use the exact form prescribed in the RFP, substituting an unapproved form risks disqualification.
Financial statements / auditors’ report Latest 1–2 financial years; prepared by accountant or auditor, PDF.
References / project examples Client reference letters with contact details, include contract values, scope descriptions and completion dates.
Health and Safety Plan / safety management system evidence Project‑specific H&S plan plus evidence of a functioning safety management system, must demonstrate compliance with the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015.
Relevant licences / registrations Issued by the relevant regulatory body (e.g., Engineering New Zealand chartered professional engineer registration where required).
Method statements / programme / construction methodology Tenderer‑prepared documents, PDF with Gantt chart or construction programme showing key milestones.
Environmental or heritage approvals (if required) Issued by consenting authority, include resource consent certificate and any conditions.
Subcontractor details and consent Names, scope, evidence of subcontractor capacity and pre‑approval where required by the RFP.

Preparing these documents takes time. Industry observers expect that assembling a complete, audit‑ready tender documents checklist for a major public works bid typically requires two to four weeks of lead time, longer if insurance limits need to be increased or bonds arranged for the first time. Begin compiling documents as soon as the go/no‑go decision is made.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Public Construction Tendering in New Zealand

Procurement timelines vary depending on the value and complexity of the project and the procurement route used. The table below illustrates a typical tender evaluation timeline for an open public tender. Where a separate pre‑qualification stage is used, add one to two weeks before the tender‑period milestones.

Milestone Typical timescale (open tender) Notes
Tender advertised on GETS Day 0 Agencies must advertise per Government Procurement Rules; notice includes submission deadline and evaluation criteria.
Questions / clarifications period Day 0 to Day 7–14 Some RFPs set a fixed Q&A window; questions submitted after this date may not be answered.
Tender submission deadline Day X (specified in notice) Strict deadline, late submissions are usually rejected without exception.
Evaluation period 2–6 weeks after deadline Complex or high‑value tenders may take longer; agencies may request clarifications during this period.
Notification of intention to award 1–2 weeks after evaluation Some procurements include a standstill period before contract execution.
Contract execution 1–4 weeks after award notification Depends on remaining contract negotiation, bond issuance and insurance confirmations.
Mobilisation start Varies (typically 2–8 weeks after execution) Coordinate mobilisation plan, key personnel deployment and site establishment with the contracting authority.

For construction projects above the procurement thresholds in NZ, the full cycle from advertisement to mobilisation commonly spans 10 to 20 weeks. Smaller projects with fewer tenderers and simpler evaluation criteria may complete in as few as six to eight weeks. Budget adequate internal resource for the entire period, the evaluation and clarifications phase requires senior personnel to remain available at short notice.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Tendering is not free. Bidders should budget for both direct and indirect costs, particularly when pursuing large infrastructure contracts. The table below provides indicative ranges; actual costs will depend on project scale, the contractor’s existing systems, and whether external specialists (bid writers, quantity surveyors, legal advisors) are engaged.

Item Typical amount / range Notes
Bid preparation (internal or paid bid writer) NZ$2,000 – NZ$30,000+ Scales with project complexity; large infrastructure bids with design components are at the upper end.
Performance bond / bank guarantee 5%–10% of contract value (typical) Check RFP requirements; some larger projects require higher security. Issuance fees apply.
Insurance (annual premiums) Varies by trade and size Public liability, professional indemnity and contract works policies, confirm limits match RFP specifications.
Tender document / pre‑qualification fees Usually nil for GETS Some panel applications or industry pre‑qualification schemes may charge administrative fees.
Legal review / contract negotiation NZ$2,000 – NZ$20,000+ Depends on contract complexity; essential for large or unusual contract terms.
GST 15% (standard rate) Verify current rate with IRD. Show pricing excluding and including GST in tender where requested by the RFP.

Tender costs are generally not recoverable, even for unsuccessful bidders. Factor bid preparation expenditure into your annual business planning and consider the ratio of bids submitted to contracts won, a disciplined go/no‑go process (Step 1) is the most effective way to control tendering costs.

What Changes in 2026, Procurement Requirements and the MBIE Construction Pipeline

The 2026 procurement environment reflects two converging developments. First, the MBIE National Construction Pipeline signals continued public investment in transport, education, health and housing infrastructure, expanding the volume and value of tenders available to the market. Second, the Government Procurement Rules were updated in 2024–2025, introducing strengthened requirements around supplier panel management, secondary procurement, contract management practices and reporting obligations for mandated agencies. The likely practical effect for bidders is greater scrutiny of pre‑qualification documentation, more rigorous evaluation of non‑price attributes (particularly health and safety, sustainability and workforce capability), and increased expectations around post‑award contract management and performance reporting.

Immediate operational checklist for the 2026 pipeline

  • Review and update pre‑qualification records. Ensure all panel registrations, performance ratings and financial statements are current and reflect your latest completed projects.
  • Confirm insurance and bonding capacity. Speak with your insurer and bank to ensure policy limits and bonding facilities are adequate for the increased project values anticipated in the pipeline.
  • Assess workforce and subcontractor capacity. Confirm that key personnel and specialist subcontractors are available for upcoming procurement windows; plan recruitment or training as needed.
  • Update pricing models for materials and labour volatility. Build appropriate contingency and escalation provisions into tender pricing to account for supply‑chain disruption and cost movement.
  • Invest in bid systems and compliance processes. Strengthen your compliance matrix templates, document management systems and quality‑assurance review processes to meet rising procurement requirements 2026.
  • Monitor procurement.govt.nz for further rule updates. The Government Procurement Rules may be amended further; subscribe to NZGP updates and review any new guidance as it is published.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them, Contract Risk Allocation

Even experienced contractors make avoidable errors in the tendering process. The following pitfalls account for the majority of disqualifications, scoring penalties and post‑award disputes in New Zealand public construction procurement.

  • Non‑compliance with mandatory requirements. Missing a single mandatory document, using the wrong form or failing to answer a mandatory question results in disqualification. The mitigation is straightforward: build and maintain a compliance matrix from the moment you receive the tender documents, and have a second person audit every submission item before upload.
  • Abnormally low bids. The Government Procurement Rules and the construction tendering guidance published by NZGP require that tender documents state that abnormally low tenders may be rejected where the tenderer cannot provide sufficient justification. Pricing below cost to win work creates serious delivery risk and may trigger additional scrutiny from the evaluation panel.
  • Excessive or unacceptable contract exceptions. Submitting a long list of qualifications to the contract signals that the tenderer is unwilling to accept the risk profile of the project. Keep exceptions to a minimum, ensure each is commercially justified and offer alternative wording that is balanced rather than one‑sided.
  • Inadequate health and safety documentation. Failing to demonstrate compliance with the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, whether through a generic safety plan, outdated policies or incomplete incident records, is a frequent cause of low non‑price scores and, in some cases, disqualification.
  • Incorrect bond or guarantee forms. Using a bond form that differs from the one specified in the tender documents, or providing a bond from an institution not acceptable to the contracting authority, can render the tender non‑compliant.
  • Late submission. GETS and most portals enforce hard deadlines. A submission received even one minute late is typically rejected. Allow at least 24 hours’ buffer for upload and confirmation.
  • Failure to review contract risk allocation clauses. Clauses governing liability caps, variations, extensions of time, payment terms, retention, dispute resolution and relief events define the commercial risk of the project. Under the Construction Contracts Act 2002, certain payment provisions are subject to statutory minimums. Failing to review and, where necessary, negotiate these clauses before signing can expose the contractor to disproportionate financial risk throughout the project life cycle.

If your tender is ruled non‑compliant, immediate steps

If you receive notification that your tender has been assessed as non‑compliant, act quickly. Request written reasons for the finding from the contracting authority. Review whether the finding is based on a genuine non‑compliance or a misinterpretation of your submission. If the agency’s process includes a standstill period, use that window to raise your concerns in writing. You may request a debrief meeting to discuss the evaluation outcome. If you believe the procurement was conducted in breach of the Government Procurement Rules, you can lodge a complaint with the contracting authority and, where warranted, refer the matter to the Office of the Auditor‑General.

Preserve all correspondence, submission records and portal receipts, these are essential evidence if a formal complaint or legal challenge follows.

When to engage a construction lawyer

Engage legal advice early in the process, ideally during Step 4, when reviewing the draft contract and preparing contract exceptions. Legal input is also critical if you are considering a joint venture or consortium bid, if the contract contains unusual risk‑transfer provisions, if your tender is ruled non‑compliant, or if you believe the procurement process was unfair. Early legal involvement is almost always less expensive than resolving a contract dispute after award.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Matt Maling at Maling and Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. New Zealand Government Procurement (NZGP), Planning to Tender, Government Procurement Rules and Templates
  2. GETS, Government Electronic Tender Service
  3. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), New Zealand Government Procurement and Property
  4. Construction Tendering, Quick Reference (PDF), New Zealand Government Procurement
  5. Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 (New Zealand Legislation)
  6. Construction Contracts Act 2002 (New Zealand Legislation)
  7. Inland Revenue (IRD), Tax and GST Guidance
  8. Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC)
  9. Office of the Auditor‑General, Procurement Lessons

FAQs

How do I tender for a New Zealand government construction contract?
Follow the seven‑step process set out in this guide: discover the opportunity on GETS, confirm your eligibility and pre‑qualification status, compile mandatory documents against a compliance matrix, price the work and review contract risk allocation, submit by the deadline, respond to any evaluation clarifications, and, if successful, execute the contract and mobilise.
Standard requirements include a Companies Office extract, IRD tax compliance evidence, ACC levy status, insurance certificates of currency, audited financial statements, project references, a health and safety plan compliant with the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, method statements and, where specified, performance bonds. Refer to the Required Documents table above for full details.
A standard open tender follows this sequence: advertisement on GETS (Day 0), Q&A window (Day 0–14), submission deadline (Day X as specified), evaluation (2–6 weeks), notification (1–2 weeks after evaluation), contract execution (1–4 weeks) and mobilisation. The full cycle typically spans 10 to 20 weeks for larger projects.
Use a compliance matrix to track every mandatory requirement. Log and limit contract exceptions in a formal exceptions schedule with proposed alternative wording. Submit clarification requests where permitted. Obtain legal advice on material risk‑transfer clauses before signing, particularly liability caps, variations, payment terms and dispute resolution provisions.
Yes. Foreign companies may participate provided they meet New Zealand registration, tax and regulatory requirements, can provide acceptable bonds and insurances, and demonstrate the capacity to deliver locally. Check the specific agency’s pre‑qualification rules and the Government Procurement Rules for any additional requirements applicable to overseas suppliers.
Late submissions are almost invariably rejected. If you experience a genuine technical failure preventing submission, contact the contracting authority immediately, document the issue and preserve all evidence. However, agencies have very limited discretion to accept late bids, and the presumption is that the deadline is absolute.
Generally, no. The costs of preparing and submitting a tender, including bid writing, legal review, travel for presentations and bond arrangement fees, are borne by the tenderer regardless of the outcome. A disciplined go/no‑go assessment at Step 1 is the most effective way to manage overall tendering expenditure.
Contact the contracting authority in writing and request a debrief meeting. Under the Government Procurement Rules, agencies are expected to provide meaningful feedback to unsuccessful tenderers, including how the submission was scored and where it fell short. Debriefs are a valuable learning tool and should be sought after every unsuccessful bid.

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How to Tender for Construction Contracts in New Zealand (2026): Step‑by‑step Public Procurement Guide

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