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EU procurement rules don't apply to every public purchase. They kick in only when a contract exceeds a specific value — the procurement threshold. Below that threshold, national rules apply. Above it, the full EU procurement directives govern the process: mandatory publication on TED, minimum timelines, specific procedures, and cross-border access for all EU companies.
Understanding these thresholds is essential. They determine where your tender gets published, which procedures the contracting authority must follow, and what rights you have as a bidder. Here's the complete breakdown for the 2024-2025 period.
Current EU Procurement Thresholds (2024-2025)
The European Commission revises thresholds every two years to align with the WTO Government Procurement Agreement (GPA). The current thresholds apply from January 1, 2024 through December 31, 2025.
Classic Directive (2014/24/EU) — Public Sector
This covers most public contracts awarded by government bodies.
Central Government Authorities (ministries, central agencies):
Supplies and services: €143,000
Construction works: €5,538,000
Sub-Central Government Authorities (municipalities, regional governments, hospitals, universities):
Supplies and services: €221,000
Construction works: €5,538,000
Utilities Directive (2014/25/EU) — Water, Energy, Transport, Postal
Companies operating in these sectors have higher thresholds:
Supplies and services: €443,000
Construction works: €5,538,000
Concessions Directive (2014/23/EU)
All concession contracts: €5,538,000
Defense and Security Directive (2009/81/EC)
Supplies and services: €443,000
Construction works: €5,538,000
How Thresholds Are Calculated
The estimated value is calculated net of VAT and includes the total value of the contract over its full duration, including all options, renewals, and lots.
Key Rules for Calculation
Framework agreements and dynamic purchasing systems: The threshold is based on the maximum estimated value of all contracts envisaged for the total term of the agreement.
Lots: When a contract is divided into lots, the values of all lots must be added together. If the total exceeds the threshold, EU rules apply to each lot — with some exceptions. Under the Classic Directive, you can exempt individual lots from EU procedures if:
For supplies/services: the lot value is under €80,000 AND the total value of exempted lots doesn't exceed 20% of the total contract value
For works: the lot value is under €1,000,000 AND exempted lots don't exceed 20% of total value
Regular purchases: If a contracting authority regularly buys the same type of supplies or services, the threshold is based on the total value over the previous 12 months (or the expected total for the next 12 months).
No artificial splitting. The rules explicitly prohibit splitting a procurement into smaller contracts to stay below the threshold. This is one of the most common infringements flagged by EU auditors.
What Happens Below the Threshold?
Contracts below EU thresholds are governed by national procurement rules, which vary significantly across member states. Some countries have very low national thresholds (requiring formal procedures even for small purchases), while others are more flexible.
Examples of National Thresholds
Romania: Direct purchases allowed up to approximately €30,000 for services/supplies. Above that, SEAP procedures required but below EU thresholds, simplified procedures may apply.
Germany: Varies by federal state (Bundesland). Generally, direct purchases up to €1,000-€5,000, simplified procedures up to national thresholds which vary.
France: Below €40,000, simplified purchasing. Between €40,000 and EU thresholds, adapted procedures with less formal requirements.
The Netherlands: National rules require a degree of competition even below EU thresholds, with various procedures depending on the value.
Even below EU thresholds, the fundamental principles of EU law still apply: equal treatment, non-discrimination, transparency, and proportionality. A contracting authority can't favor a local company over a company from another EU member state, even for small contracts.
What Changes When EU Thresholds Are Exceeded
When a contract crosses the EU threshold, several things happen:
Mandatory Publication on TED
The contract notice must be published in the Official Journal of the EU (via TED). This gives it pan-European visibility and ensures companies from all member states can see it.
Minimum Time Limits
The contracting authority must allow minimum time for companies to prepare and submit bids:
Open procedure: 35 days minimum (can be reduced to 15 days if a prior information notice was published)
Restricted procedure: 30 days to request participation, then 30 days for invited candidates to submit bids
Accelerated procedures: Possible in cases of urgency, with reduced timelines (15 days for open, 10 days for restricted)
Specific Procedures Required
The contracting authority must use one of the defined EU procurement procedures (open, restricted, competitive dialogue, innovation partnership, etc.). Informal or direct purchasing is no longer allowed.
ESPD and Self-Declaration
For above-threshold contracts, companies can use the European Single Procurement Document to self-declare their qualifications. This standardized form works across all EU countries, simplifying cross-border bidding.
Standstill Period
After the award decision but before signing the contract, there must be a minimum standstill period (typically 10-15 days) during which unsuccessful bidders can challenge the decision.
Review and Remedies
EU law guarantees effective review procedures. If you believe the contracting authority violated procurement rules, you have the right to challenge the decision before a national review body.
Upcoming Changes: The 2026 Threshold Revision
The European Commission will publish revised thresholds for the 2026-2027 period, typically in November/December 2025. Changes are usually small adjustments (±5%) based on exchange rate fluctuations between the euro and the SDR (Special Drawing Rights) used in the WTO GPA.
Practical impact: A small threshold increase means some contracts that previously required full EU procedures might fall just below the new threshold. Conversely, a decrease means more contracts come under EU rules.
Strategic Implications for Your Business
If You're a Small or Medium Enterprise
Below-threshold contracts are often more accessible: shorter timelines, simpler procedures, less documentation. But they're harder to find because they're scattered across national portals.
Strategy: Monitor both TED (for above-threshold opportunities) and your key national portals (for below-threshold ones). Platforms like Tendersight aggregate both, saving you the hassle of checking multiple sources.
If You're Looking to Enter New Markets
Focus on above-threshold contracts first. They're published on TED, accessible to all EU companies, and the rules are standardized across countries. This makes cross-border bidding more predictable.
If You're Bidding Across Multiple Countries
The EU threshold rules are identical across all member states, but national rules below the threshold vary significantly. Invest time in understanding the national rules of your target markets — or use a platform that pre-filters opportunities regardless of which portal they're published on.
Key Takeaways
Know the thresholds for your buyer type. Central government (€143,000), sub-central (€221,000), and utilities (€443,000) have different limits for supplies and services.
Calculate correctly. Include the full contract duration, all lots, and all options in the estimated value. Net of VAT.
Below-threshold ≠ unregulated. National rules still apply, and EU principles of fairness and non-discrimination are always in effect.
Threshold changes are incremental. Don't expect dramatic shifts. The system is designed for stability.
Monitor both above and below threshold. The best tender pipeline covers opportunities at all levels, from small direct purchases to major EU-wide contracts.