Tenderwize

Common Tender Requirements in Europe

What public buyers across the EU ask bidders to prove — eligibility, financial standing, technical capacity, certifications, references, and the grounds that can exclude you.

Short answer

Most European public tenders require bidders to prove legal eligibility (no exclusion grounds), sufficient financial standing (turnover, insurance), technical and professional capacity (relevant experience, qualified staff), and any sector-specific certifications. Requirements are typically declared up front via the ESPD (European Single Procurement Document).

The five requirement families

Almost every requirement in a European tender falls into one of these groups. Map each tender's criteria to them before you bid.

Eligibility requirements

Can your company legally participate at all?

  • Valid business registration in the relevant trade/professional register
  • Authorisations or licences required to perform the activity
  • No mandatory or discretionary exclusion grounds (see below)
  • Compliance with the ESPD self-declaration

Financial requirements

Are you financially robust enough to deliver?

  • Minimum annual turnover (often up to 2× the contract value)
  • Specific turnover in the field of the contract
  • Balance-sheet ratios or financial statements
  • Professional indemnity / liability insurance

Technical & professional capacity

Can you actually do the work?

  • Relevant experience and comparable past contracts
  • Qualified staff, technical experts and their CVs
  • Tools, equipment and technical facilities
  • Quality-management and supply-chain measures

Certifications

Recognised standards the buyer trusts.

  • ISO 9001 (quality management)
  • ISO 14001 (environmental management)
  • ISO/IEC 27001 (information security)
  • Sector-specific accreditations and professional licences

References

Evidence you have done this before.

  • List of comparable contracts (usually last 3 years for services/supplies, 5 for works)
  • Contract value, dates and recipient (public or private)
  • Certificates of satisfactory performance
  • Contactable client references
Requirements at a glance
Requirement typeTypical evidence
EligibilityTrade-register extract, licences, ESPD self-declaration
FinancialTurnover figures, financial statements, insurance certificate
TechnicalReference list, staff CVs, equipment description
CertificationsISO 9001 / 14001 / 27001, sector accreditations
ReferencesComparable contracts (last 3–5 years) with performance certificates

Common exclusion grounds

EU Directive 2014/24/EU defines grounds that can remove a bidder from a procedure. Mandatory grounds always exclude; discretionary grounds may exclude at the buyer's decision.

Common exclusion grounds
Exclusion groundBasis
Criminal conviction (corruption, fraud, organised crime)Mandatory
Money laundering or terrorist financingMandatory
Child labour or human traffickingMandatory
Unpaid taxes (final, binding decision)Mandatory
Unpaid social security contributionsMandatory
Bankruptcy or insolvencyDiscretionary
Grave professional misconductDiscretionary
Conflict of interest that cannot be remediedDiscretionary
Significant deficiencies in a prior contractDiscretionary
Misrepresentation or withholding informationDiscretionary

Frequently asked questions

What is the ESPD?

The European Single Procurement Document is a standardised self-declaration in which bidders confirm they meet eligibility and selection criteria and are not subject to exclusion grounds. The winning bidder later provides the supporting evidence.

What turnover do EU tenders usually require?

Minimum annual turnover requirements are capped by the directive at, as a rule, twice the estimated contract value, unless the buyer justifies a higher figure. Many tenders also ask for specific turnover in the field of the contract.

What is the difference between mandatory and discretionary exclusion grounds?

Mandatory grounds (e.g. corruption, fraud, unpaid taxes by final decision) always require exclusion. Discretionary grounds (e.g. insolvency, professional misconduct, prior poor performance) let the buyer decide whether to exclude, often after giving the bidder a chance to self-clean.

Which certifications are most commonly requested?

ISO 9001 (quality), ISO 14001 (environment) and ISO/IEC 27001 (information security) are the most common, alongside sector-specific accreditations and professional licences. Buyers must accept equivalent certificates and other evidence of equivalent measures.

How recent must references be?

Typically the last three years for services and supplies and the last five years for works, though buyers can extend these periods to ensure adequate competition. References usually state the value, dates and recipient and may require a certificate of satisfactory performance.

Can foreign companies meet these requirements?

Yes. EU procurement is open to bidders from any member state (and many third countries under trade agreements). Equivalent foreign certificates, registrations and references must be accepted, though documents may need translation into the procedure's language.