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Tender playbook May 28, 2026·10 min read

How to win your first government tender — a step-by-step playbook for small Canadian firms

Federal contracting tops $20B a year and the threshold to register on CanadaBuys is just $25K. We break down the bid documents, the compliance traps, and how to price your first proposal.

Site crew · Halton, ON

Federal contracting alone tops $20 billion a year, and the threshold to register as a supplier on CanadaBuys is just $25,000. Yet most small Canadian firms never bid — not because they can’t win, but because the process looks opaque from the outside. Here is the playbook, in four steps.

Step 1 — Register where the work is actually posted

There is no single Canadian tender feed. Work is scattered across 30+ official portals by level of government. Start with the three tiers that matter for most SMEs:

01Federal — CanadaBuys — The official PSPC portal (SAP Ariba-based, free), with 180,000+ registered suppliers. It replaced Buyandsell.gc.ca in 2022 and is where federal opportunities are posted.
02Provincial — Each province runs its own: BC Bid (which also covers BC Hydro, BC Transit and ICBC), SEAO in Québec (French-only), Alberta Purchasing Connection, and the Ontario Tenders Portal.
03Municipal / MASH — Cities, schools and hospitals post on aggregators like Bids&Tenders, Bonfire and Biddingo. This is often the most winnable tier for a first contract.

Step 2 — Read the bid document like a buyer

Procurement comes in several shapes, and the type tells you how you’ll be judged. An RFP (Request for Proposal) weighs technical merit and price; an RFQ (Request for Quotation) is price-led; an ITT is an Invitation to Tender; an ACAN signals the buyer intends to award to one supplier unless you challenge it within the posted window.

Whatever the format, separate the mandatory criteria from the rated ones. Miss a single mandatory — a certificate, an insurance level, a signed form — and a perfect proposal is disqualified before it’s scored.

Confirm every mandatory requirement has matching evidence attached.
Note the exact submission method and format the portal demands.
Diarize the question deadline — it’s usually days before the bid close.
Check insurance, bonding and security-clearance requirements early.

Step 3 — Price to win, not to lose money

New bidders make one of two pricing errors: padding so heavily they never win, or buying the contract so cheaply it loses money. Anchor your price to the scope and the evaluation weighting, not to a guess at the competition.

✦ Policy watch Verified · Jun 2026

On June 15, 2026, the Buy Canadian Policy threshold drops from $25M to $5M — pulling far more mid-size contracts under rules that give a 10% price preference to Canadian suppliers plus Canadian Value-Added requirements. If you’re a Canadian SME, that change tilts a lot more bids your way.

Step 4 — Submit before the clock, not at it

Portals close hard at the posted second, and uploads fail at the worst moment. Submit a complete draft a day early, then refine. A compliant bid in on time beats a brilliant one that arrived a minute late — there is no appeal for that.

MT
Written by Marc Tremblay
CanaGrants analysts read every official source so you don’t have to. Not affiliated with the Government of Canada.
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