Submissions closed on 2 November 2021 (1609 days ago). The information below is archived for reference.
Issuing Organization
Unknown
Location
National
Closed On
2 November 2021
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In 2026 the procurement landscape for general contractors in Gauteng is dominated by tighter fiscal oversight and an intensified focus on transformation. The Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) and the Public‑Private Partnership Act (PPPFA) have been amended to require full traceability of every expenditure, while the MFMA reinforces the need for transparent, value‑for‑money outcomes. For suppliers, non‑compliance is no longer a procedural hiccup; it is a direct barrier to winning contracts with national departments operating in Gauteng. Understanding and embedding these obligations is therefore essential for any contractor that wishes to remain competitive and avoid disqualification at the bid‑evaluation stage.
Gauteng’s construction pipeline is worth R94 billion over the next three MTEF cycles, yet 38% of bids still crash at compliance. The March 2026 CIDB gazette tightened the *Construction Procurement Regulations*—effective 1 April—making a misaligned CIDB grade an automatic SBD 4 disqualification. If your CIDB certificate does not mirror the tender value band, your envelope is not even opened. This guide strips out the theory and tells you exactly what must be on the front page of your submission to stay alive in the Gauteng adjudication room.
Security contractors in Gauteng are entering 2026 under heightened scrutiny: every cloud or hosting service that stores, processes or transmits any state data must now prove full data-sovereignty, localisation and residency compliance before a security guarding or electronic security tender can even reach adjudication. National Treasury’s Instruction 2025-11 (effective 1 April 2026) makes SITA’s Cloud Framework Agreement 2.0 mandatory for national and provincial departments, while the Information Regulator’s 2025 enforcement guidance treats non-compliant hosting as an automatic POPIA breach. For security firms, the risk is immediate—if the CCTV archive, access-control database or guarding-management platform is not demonstrably hosted inside South Africa with verified local data custodians, your bid is rejected at box-tick.
Gauteng’s 2026 infrastructure pipeline exceeds R65 billion, yet 42% of General-category bids fail at compliance screening. With National Treasury’s April 2026 Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act (PPPFA) amendments now in force, every supplier engaged in provincial construction, maintenance, and facilities-management work must recalibrate their documentation matrix. Misinterpreting the revised 80/20 and 90/10 preference point thresholds, or submitting outdated BBBEE affidavits, triggers automatic disqualification—costing contractors both tender costs and opportunity value in the country’s most competitive procurement marketplace.
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