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The landscape of public procurement Greece has undergone its most significant overhaul in nearly a decade. Law 5290/2026, published in April 2026, restructures the rules governing unsolicited proposals, recalibrates the classification of public‑private partnerships (PPPs) and concessions, and modifies the remedies available to aggrieved bidders before Greece’s administrative courts. These domestic reforms land alongside the revised EU public procurement thresholds that took effect on 1 January 2026, together redrawing the line between contracts subject to full EU procurement directives and those governed solely by national rules. For procurement officers, in‑house and external counsel, PPP investors and bidders operating in Greece, the combined effect demands an immediate reassessment of tender strategy, bid‑challenge readiness and compliance architecture.
This guide explains what changed, who is affected, and, critically, what practitioners should do now. It covers:
Law 5290/2026 amends several core provisions of Greece’s public procurement framework, building on the earlier reform trajectory established by Law 5218/2025. Where the 2025 law began modernising Greece’s alignment with EU Directives 2014/24/EU and 2014/25/EU, the 2026 amendments go further by tackling three areas that generated persistent practical difficulties: the unsolicited‑proposals regime, the boundary between PPPs and standard public contracts, and the procedural rules for administrative review of award decisions.
The law applies to all contracting authorities within the meaning of the Greek transposition of the EU procurement directives, central government ministries, regional authorities, municipalities, public‑law bodies and utilities. Its three substantive pillars are:
Contracting authorities must now comply with enhanced transparency obligations when evaluating unsolicited proposals, including mandatory publication of receipt, evaluation criteria and outcome on the National Electronic Public Procurement System (ΕΣΗΔΗΣ). They must also apply a formal public‑interest test before any unsolicited proposal can progress to a competitive dialogue or negotiated procedure. Additionally, authorities procuring PPP contracts above the EU thresholds must classify the arrangement at the outset and maintain documentary evidence supporting that classification throughout the award process.
For bidders, the reforms create new opportunities (the unsolicited‑proposal channel) but also new compliance burdens. Early indications suggest that contracting authorities will scrutinise technical and financial feasibility documentation more rigorously, and that the enhanced remedies framework shortens the window for challenge preparation. Procurement officers should update their internal procedures, template documentation and delegation matrices before the next procurement cycle begins.
The European Commission’s biennial threshold revision, effective 1 January 2026, directly determines which Greek procurements must comply with the full procedural requirements of the EU directives, including mandatory publication in the Official Journal of the EU (OJEU), prescribed minimum time‑limits and the EU remedies directive. Contracts below the thresholds remain subject to national rules, which Law 5290/2026 now also modifies.
| Contract type | Previous threshold (pre‑2026) | New threshold (from 1 Jan 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Works contracts (all contracting authorities) | €5,382,000 | €5,538,000 |
| Supply & service contracts, central government | €140,000 | €143,000 |
| Supply & service contracts, sub‑central authorities | €215,000 | €221,000 |
| Utilities sector, supply & service contracts | €431,000 | €443,000 |
| Concession contracts | €5,382,000 | €5,538,000 |
Note: thresholds are expressed net of VAT. Where a contract’s estimated value falls close to the boundary, contracting authorities must aggregate lots and avoid artificial splitting, a requirement that Law 5290/2026 reinforces with enhanced penalties.
Municipal road project. A municipality procures a road‑surfacing contract estimated at €5,400,000 (net). Under the previous thresholds this exceeded the works threshold and triggered full EU rules. Under the revised thresholds (€5,538,000), the same contract falls below the EU threshold and is governed solely by Greek national procurement rules as amended by Law 5290/2026, a material difference in time‑limits, publication obligations and available remedies.
Hospital concession. A regional health authority plans a 25‑year hospital‑services concession valued at €12 million. This remains above both the previous and revised concession thresholds, so full EU procedures apply. However, the PPP classification changes in Law 5290/2026 may affect whether this is treated as a concession or as an availability‑payment PPP, with downstream consequences for risk transfer analysis and financing structure.
The unsolicited‑proposals regime is arguably the most consequential innovation in the 2026 reforms. Before Law 5290/2026, unsolicited proposals occupied a legal grey zone in Greek public procurement, tolerated in practice but lacking a clear statutory framework. The new provisions create a structured pathway from initial submission through to potential contract award, while preserving competitive tension and public‑interest safeguards.
Under the new rules, a private party may submit an unsolicited proposal to a contracting authority where:
This last criterion, the “unmet public need” test, is new and is expected to be the primary filter through which authorities assess whether to engage with a proposal at all.
Law 5290/2026 prescribes a minimum content framework for unsolicited proposals in Greece:
On receipt of an unsolicited proposal, the contracting authority must:
The mandatory competitive stage is critical: an unsolicited proposal cannot result in a direct award. Industry observers expect this requirement to reduce the risk of legal challenge by unsuccessful competitors while preserving the incentive for private innovation.
The original proposer receives a limited form of exclusivity during the evaluation phase: other private parties may not submit unsolicited proposals for the same project while the first is under evaluation. However, this exclusivity expires automatically if the authority misses the 120‑day evaluation deadline. The original proposer is also entitled to participate in the subsequent competitive procedure and receives a scoring bonus (the precise percentage to be determined by ministerial decision) in recognition of their origination costs.
Law 5290/2026 addresses a persistent source of structuring uncertainty in Greek PPPs: the boundary between a concession (where the private partner bears genuine demand risk) and an availability‑payment PPP (where the public authority guarantees payments linked to performance, not usage). The practical consequences of this classification extend to financing, accounting treatment and, under the revised thresholds, whether EU procurement rules apply at all.
The law requires contracting authorities to classify each PPP arrangement as either a concession or an availability‑payment contract at the procurement‑design stage, based on a structured risk‑transfer analysis. A project qualifies as a concession only where the private partner bears “significant operating risk”, meaning that, under normal operating conditions, the partner is not guaranteed to recover its investment and operating costs. Where payment is primarily linked to availability and performance standards, the contract is classified as an availability‑payment PPP and is subject to the standard supply/services procurement thresholds rather than the higher concession threshold.
The Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund (HRADF) manages Greece’s privatisation programme, which includes major infrastructure concessions (ports, airports, motorways, energy assets). Law 5290/2026 explicitly states that unsolicited proposals may not be submitted for assets already within the HRADF pipeline. However, the likely practical effect of the new unsolicited‑proposal regime is that private parties may use it to propose complementary projects, for example, ancillary infrastructure serving an HRADF concession, that are not themselves within the Fund’s portfolio.
Concession and PPP sponsors operating in Greece should take the following immediate actions:
All formal procurement procedures in Greece, whether initiated by a contracting authority or triggered by an unsolicited proposal that has progressed to the competitive stage, are conducted through the National Electronic Public Procurement System (ΕΣΗΔΗΣ), accessed via the Promitheus platform. Compliance failures at the submission stage remain one of the most common grounds for bid exclusion.
The remedies framework is where Law 5290/2026 makes its most tactically significant changes for tender disputes Greece practitioners must master. Greece’s pre‑contractual review system channels challenges through the Hellenic Single Public Procurement Authority (EAAΔHΣΥ) for below‑threshold contracts and through the Administrative Courts of Appeal for above‑threshold contracts. The 2026 reforms adjust timelines and procedural sequencing in both tracks.
Under the amended framework, the key deadlines for challenging a procurement decision are:
A bidder who files a pre‑contractual application may simultaneously request interim measures, including suspension of the procurement procedure and prohibition of contract signature. The Administrative Court of Appeal must hear the interim‑relief application within a compressed timetable. The likely practical effect of the amended rules is that courts will prioritise these applications, but bidders should prepare evidence and legal arguments before the award decision is issued, given the shortened ten‑day filing window.
For unsuccessful bidders (challengers):
For winning bidders (defenders):
| Stage | Deadline / typical duration | Key action |
|---|---|---|
| Notification of award decision | Day 0 | Request full evaluation report and scoring sheets |
| Filing of pre‑contractual application | Day 10 (strict) | File application + interim‑relief request with Administrative Court of Appeal |
| Standstill period (minimum) | Days 0–10 | Authority may not sign contract; extended automatically if application filed |
| Interim‑relief hearing | Typically days 15–25 | Court decides whether to suspend the procedure |
| Main hearing | Typically days 30–60 | Full merits hearing on legality of award decision |
| Judgment | Typically days 45–90 | Court issues decision; appeal to Council of State possible on points of law |
Note: timelines are indicative and depend on court caseload and case complexity. In high‑value procurements, courts have expedited hearings to within 20 days of filing.
The following checklists consolidate the key compliance obligations arising from Law 5290/2026 and the revised EU thresholds.
| Date | Event | Practical significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Revised EU public procurement thresholds enter into force | Determines which Greek contracts are subject to EU procedural rules, publication and remedies obligations |
| April 2026 | Law 5290/2026 published and discussed in legal briefings | Amends unsolicited‑proposals regime, PPP classification rules and remedies framework |
| May 2026 | Implementation notices and Promitheus / ΕΣΗΔΗΣ guidance bulletins issued | Provides operational detail for contracting authorities and bidders on new procedures |
Law 5290/2026 and the revised EU thresholds represent a structural shift in how public procurement Greece operates. Bidders gain a formal unsolicited‑proposal channel, but must comply with rigorous documentation and procedural requirements. Contracting authorities face tighter transparency obligations and a reformed remedies regime that shortens challenge windows while strengthening interim relief. PPP sponsors must revisit risk‑transfer classifications that may now trigger different procurement rules.
The immediate priorities are clear: update internal procurement procedures, recalibrate threshold assessments, establish unsolicited‑proposal intake protocols, and build challenge‑readiness into every bid process. Given the compressed timelines, particularly the ten‑day filing window for pre‑contractual applications, early engagement with experienced public procurement lawyers in Greece is essential.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nikolas Avgouleas at Fortsakis Diakopoulos & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The following resources support compliance with Law 5290/2026 and the revised public procurement Greece framework:
To request access to these resources, contact a qualified procurement adviser or reach out through the Global Law Experts platform.
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