Submissions closed on 25 May 2021 (1761 days ago). The information below is archived for reference.
Issuing Organization
Unknown
Location
National
Closed On
25 May 2021
Learn how to submit a winning bid with these related articles
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 Misinterpreting the revised 80/20 and 90/10 preference point thresholds, or submitting outdated BBBEE affidavits, triggers automatic disqualification—costing contractors both tender costs and opportunity value in the country’s most competitive procurement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.
Gauteng’s 2026 security-tender pipeline is worth just under R2.3 billion and is dominated by SITA-managed ICT sites—data centres, provincial server rooms and fibre backbones that cannot go dark for a second. Yet 68 % of Security bids from SMMEs were disqualified last year for one reason: non-compliant PSIRA paperwork. With National Treasury’s April 2026 instruction note tightening sub-contractor caps to 30 %, the race is on for locally-owned security firms to prove they can protect government digital assets without falling foul of the regulator.
March 2026 brings a fresh wave of infrastructure and service tenders to Gauteng, but the days of the lone-ranger contractor are fading fast. National Treasury’s new “shared-capacity” rules, quietly slipped into the 2025/26 PFMA circular, mean that bids above R50 million in the General sector must demonstrate local SME participation through a consortium or joint venture (JV). If you’re a small plumber, electrician, painter, or general repair firm in Pretoria or Johannesburg, this is your moment to piggy-back onto the big-ticket work—provided you understand the regulatory hoops first.
đź’ˇ Want more tendering tips and strategies?
Explore Our Blog