Submissions closed on 31 March 2026 (39 days ago). The information below is archived for reference.
Issuing Organization
Driving Licence Card Account
Location
Gauteng
Closed On
31 March 2026
Tender Document DLCA NCD FORMS (2025-4).pdf
Tender Published
9 March 2026
Tender was published
Closing Date
31 March 2026
Tender closing date
Request for Bid for the Appointment of a Turnkey Contractor for Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Fire Suppression System for Pietermaritzburg Data Centre and Offices. Compulsory Site Visit Will Be Held on 15 May 2026 at 343 Jabu Ndlovu Street, 1st Floor Natalia Building, Pietermaritzburg.
Rfqjw086tn26 - Laundry Services
Appointment of a Suitable Qualified Service Provider to Conduct a Pricing Tool Update for a Period of Three (03) Months
Rfqjw087tn26 - Mental Health Awareness
RFQ 201965: Provision of ManageEngine, AD Manager Plus & AD Audit Plus tools
Driving Licence Card Account
Visit WebsiteLearn how to submit a winning bid with these related articles
Everything South African general contractors need to know about how to write a winning tender proposal without an in-house bid team in gauteng — covering CSD, BBBEE, step-by-step processes, common disqualification mistakes, and how Tenders-SA.org helps you find and win relevant contracts in Gauteng.
Gauteng’s 2026 security-tender market is worth just under R4.2 billion in state spend, yet 38% of security bids are disqualified at box-tick for two pieces of paper that sit in different government silos: an up-to-date PSIRA profile for every guard and a COIDA letter of good standing. With provincial departments now loading compliance checks directly onto the e-Wallet system, a lapse of even one calendar day is enough to push your bid to “non-responsive”. In a province where the average security contract runs five years, that is revenue you cannot afford to forfeit.
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.
Security contractors in Gauteng must now navigate a tightening regulatory landscape that intertwines ICT procurement with stringent safety and compliance standards. In 2026, every tender is scrutinised for PSIRA validity, CSD clearance, BBBEE status, SARS TCS compliance, and COIDA standing. Missing or outdated documentation can instantly disqualify a bid, jeopardising lucrative contracts and exposing firms to legal penalties. Understanding the updated framework is therefore not optional—it is essential for survival and growth in the provincial market.
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