The rulebooks of public procurement: every major regulation and standard you should know
June 09, 2026

The rulebooks of public procurement: every major regulation and standard you should know

Public procurement is one of the most heavily regulated activities in the world economy — and for good reason. According to the European Commission, over 250,000 public authorities in the EU alone spend around 16% of GDP, roughly EUR 2.5 trillion every year, on goods, services, and works. Money at that scale attracts rules. Lots of them.

If you work in procurement — on either side of the table — you operate inside a layered system of treaties, directives, model laws, and soft-law standards that took half a century to build. Most practitioners know their national law well. Far fewer can name the international frameworks their national law is built on, or the standards an auditor, court, or review body will reach for when a procurement is challenged.

This guide maps the "golden rulebooks" of the field: every major regulation, standard, and guideline that shapes how public tenders are designed, run, and reviewed. Every claim and figure below was verified against the primary sources in mid-2026, and each section links to the canonical text.

How the layers fit together

Procurement rules come in four layers, and confusion between them causes real mistakes:

What is striking is how much these layers agree. The same handful of principles — transparency, competition, equal treatment, integrity, and value for money — appears in every single one of them, phrased slightly differently each time. We will come back to that.

UNCITRAL Model Law on Public Procurement: the template

The UNCITRAL Model Law on Public Procurement was adopted by the UN Commission on International Trade Law on 1 July 2011, replacing the 1994 Model Law. It is not a treaty — it is a template, "aimed at assisting States in formulating a modern procurement law" and designed to be appropriate for all states, whatever their legal tradition.

The Model Law promotes objectivity, fairness, participation, competition, integrity, and transparency, with procedures built to achieve value for money and avoid abuse. Its most practically important feature is the supplier challenge mechanism in Chapter VIII: decisions and actions in the procurement process can be challenged by suppliers, first through reconsideration before the procuring entity and then through review before an independent body. If your national law has a procurement review board, there is a fair chance its design traces back to this text.

Why it matters: when a country modernises its procurement legislation — and dozens have since 2011 — the UNCITRAL Model Law is usually the starting point. Knowing it means you understand the skeleton underneath many national regimes at once.

WTO Government Procurement Agreement: the trade treaty

The WTO Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA) is the binding treaty layer. It is a plurilateral agreement — not all WTO members are parties — currently counting 22 parties comprising 49 WTO members, and covering procurement activities estimated at more than US$1.7 trillion annually. The current text, known as GPA 2012, has been in force since 6 April 2014.

The GPA's core obligations sit in Article IV. First, non-discrimination: each party must give the goods, services, and suppliers of other parties treatment "no less favourable" than its own. Second — and notable as the only such mandate in any WTO agreement — procuring entities must conduct covered procurement "in a transparent and impartial manner" that avoids conflicts of interest and prevents corrupt practices.

The GPA only applies to "covered procurement": purchases by entities each party has listed in its market-access schedules, above party-specific thresholds. It also contains a rule every practitioner should know exists: a procurement may not be split into smaller procurements, or valued creatively, to dodge coverage. National laws have inherited that anti-splitting rule almost universally.

UNCAC: the anti-corruption baseline

The UN Convention against Corruption is the most widely adopted rulebook on this list — 192 states parties as of late 2025, which the UN Office on Drugs and Crime describes as near-universal adherence. Adopted on 31 October 2003 and in force since 14 December 2005, it is the only legally binding universal anti-corruption instrument.

For procurement people, the key provision is Article 9. It requires each state party to establish procurement systems "based on transparency, competition and objective criteria in decision-making" that are effective in preventing corruption. Specifically, Article 9(1) requires:

Read that list again: published criteria fixed in advance, decisions verifiable against those criteria, a working appeal route. That is the global legal minimum, agreed by essentially every country on Earth.

World Bank Procurement Framework: the lender's rules

Where international financing is involved, the rulebook changes. The World Bank Procurement Framework governs procurement in projects financed through Investment Project Financing, and it binds borrower governments through the legal agreement they sign with the Bank. The operative document is the Procurement Regulations for IPF Borrowers — currently the Seventh Edition, September 2025 (the Bank revises it often: three editions appeared between 2023 and 2025).

The framework rests on seven core procurement principles: value for money, economy, integrity, fit for purpose, efficiency, transparency, and fairness. Its stated vision is to support borrowers in achieving "value for money with integrity in delivering sustainable development." Other multilateral development banks maintain closely related frameworks, so the World Bank text is worth knowing even if you never touch a Bank-financed project — it is the reference model for donor-funded procurement worldwide.

The OECD instruments: what "good" looks like

The OECD does not write binding procurement law. What it writes instead is the most influential soft law in the field — the standards that peer reviews, audit institutions, and reform programmes measure procurement systems against.

Three instruments matter most. The OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement, adopted by the OECD Council on 18 February 2015, is the overarching standard for the entire procurement cycle. It contains twelve integrated principles: transparency, integrity, access, balance, stakeholder participation, efficiency, e-procurement, capacity, evaluation, risk management, accountability, and integration. If you need a checklist for what a healthy procurement system contains, this is the closest thing the world has to consensus.

The OECD Recommendation on Public Integrity (2017) widens the lens from procurement to the whole public sector, with 13 principles organised in three pillars — system, culture, accountability. Its background materials single out procurement as a high-corruption-risk activity, noting that procurement represents around 13% of GDP in OECD countries and roughly a third of government expenditure.

The third is the most operational: the OECD Recommendation on Fighting Bid Rigging in Public Procurement (2012, revised June 2023) and its companion Guidelines for Fighting Bid Rigging, last updated in 2025. The Guidelines contain two checklists every contracting authority should have on the wall: one for designing tenders to reduce collusion risk, and one for detecting bid rigging — red flags like unusual bidding patterns, suspicious pricing, and tell-tale bidder conduct. All of these are non-binding recommendations, but 41 jurisdictions adhere to the bid-rigging instrument, including non-OECD members.

EU procurement law: the deepest rulebook

For anyone working in Europe, EU procurement law is the layer with teeth. Above certain value thresholds, public purchasing across all member states is governed by three directives adopted in 2014:

Article 18 of the classic directive states the principles the whole system runs on: equal treatment, non-discrimination, transparency, and proportionality. Below the thresholds, national rules apply — but they must still respect general principles of EU law where a contract has cross-border interest.

Alongside the substantive directives sit the Remedies Directives — 89/665/EEC for the public sector and 92/13/EEC for utilities, both substantially amended by Directive 2007/66/EC. These are the reason an aggrieved bidder in any EU country can demand a standstill period, challenge an award, and have an illegally concluded contract declared ineffective. For bidders, the Remedies Directives are arguably the most practically valuable EU texts of all.

The thresholds change every two years, and they changed on 1 January 2026. Set by Commission Delegated Regulations adopted in October 2025, the current values — valid through 2027 — actually decreased from the previous period:

EUR 140,000
supplies and services, central government (EUR 216,000 sub-central)
EUR 432,000
supplies and services in the utilities sectors
EUR 5,404,000
works contracts and concessions, all sectors

The current values are published on the European Commission's thresholds page — bookmark it, because quoting an outdated threshold is one of the most common errors in procurement documents.

Three operational instruments complete the EU picture. TED (Tenders Electronic Daily) is where above-threshold notices are published — around 800,000 procurement notices a year, worth more than EUR 815 billion. Since October 2023, those notices must use eForms, the EU's structured open data standard established by Implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/1780. And the European Single Procurement Document (ESPD), established by Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/7, lets bidders submit a standardised self-declaration as preliminary evidence instead of a folder of certificates.

The 2014 directives are about to be rewritten

The European Commission evaluated the 2014 framework in October 2025, ran a public consultation that closed in January 2026, and is expected to table a legislative proposal — widely referred to as the EU Public Procurement Act — in 2026. Negotiations are projected to run into 2027. Nothing changes until the new rules are adopted, but every European procurement professional should be watching this file.

Sustainability and integrity tools

Two further standards round out the canon. ISO 20400:2017, Sustainable procurement — Guidance is the international standard for integrating sustainability into purchasing, applicable to organisations of any size or sector. One thing to know before anyone sells you a certificate: it is a guidance standard, not a requirements standard — it is not intended for certification. Reviewed and confirmed by ISO in 2023, the 2017 edition remains current.

Integrity Pacts, developed by Transparency International in the 1990s, are a different kind of tool: a legally binding agreement between the contracting authority, the bidders, and an independent civil-society monitor who follows the procurement from design through implementation, with public reports and sanctions for breaches. Between 2016 and 2021, Transparency International and the European Commission ran a large pilot in which 15 civil-society organisations monitored 18 EU-funded projects worth about EUR 920 million across 11 member states — Latvia among them.

National rulebooks worth knowing by name

Every jurisdiction has its own procurement law, and this guide cannot cover them all. But two national regimes are referenced so often in international practice that they belong on the map.

The US Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) governs purchasing by all US federal executive agencies — codified in Title 48 of the Code of Federal Regulations and maintained jointly by the Department of Defense, the General Services Administration, and NASA. Its guiding principles (FAR 1.102) commit the system to delivering best value while conducting business "with integrity, fairness, and openness." The FAR is currently undergoing its biggest rewrite in decades — the Revolutionary FAR Overhaul launched in 2025 aims to strip the regulation back to its statutory roots; rewritten text is already in government-wide use through agency deviations while formal rulemaking proceeds through 2026.

The UK Procurement Act 2023, in force since 24 February 2025, is the most significant recent example of a country rebuilding its procurement regime from scratch after leaving the EU framework. It replaced four EU-derived regulations with a single act, renamed the award basis from "most economically advantageous tender" to simply "most advantageous tender", introduced a flexible competitive procedure that authorities design themselves, and created a central digital platform and a public debarment list. Reform-watchers everywhere are studying how it performs.

The common thread

Put all of these texts side by side — a UN treaty, a WTO agreement, a model law, lending regulations, EU directives, OECD recommendations — and the same requirements keep appearing:

Procurement decisions must be made on objective, predetermined criteria — so that the correct application of the rules can be verified afterwards. That idea appears, in nearly identical words, in rulebooks signed by 192 countries.

This convergence is good news for practitioners. Master the principles once and you can navigate any of these frameworks; they differ in procedure and threshold, not in philosophy.

It also sets a high bar in daily practice. "Verifiable afterwards" means every evaluation decision should trace back to a published criterion and to evidence in the documents. That is exactly the discipline that is hardest to sustain manually when a tender runs to hundreds of pages — and it is the standard we built MitigateTenders around: every finding in an analysis is tied to the requirement it tests and the passage in the documents that proves it, so the decision trail the rulebooks demand actually exists.

Where to start

If you are new to the field, read the texts in this order: your national procurement law first; then the EU directives (or your regional equivalent) for the binding procedural layer; then the OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement for the system-level view; then UNCAC Article 9, because it is the floor everything else stands on. Keep the OECD bid-rigging checklists and the Commission's thresholds page within reach. Everything else on this list you can read when it touches your work — but now you know it exists, who maintains it, and why a review body might quote it back to you.

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Primary sources

  1. UNCITRAL Model Law on Public Procurement (2011)
  2. WTO Agreement on Government Procurement
  3. United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNODC)
  4. World Bank Procurement Framework — Procurement Regulations for IPF Borrowers, 7th ed. (2025)
  5. OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement (2015)
  6. OECD Recommendation on Public Integrity (2017)
  7. OECD Recommendation on Fighting Bid Rigging in Public Procurement (2012, rev. 2023)
  8. OECD Guidelines for Fighting Bid Rigging in Public Procurement — 2025 Update
  9. ISO 20400:2017 Sustainable procurement — Guidance
  10. Transparency International — Integrity Pacts
  11. TED / SIMAP — European public procurement directives
  12. European Commission — EU procurement thresholds 2026–2027
  13. European Commission — Remedies Directives
  14. European Commission — eForms
  15. Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/7 — European Single Procurement Document
  16. European Commission — Revision of the public procurement directives
  17. US Federal Acquisition Regulation (acquisition.gov)
  18. UK Procurement Act 2023 (legislation.gov.uk)
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