Singapore's government spends over S$30 billion annually on procurement. GeBIZ is where every opportunity is listed.
Singapore's government and public sector entities spend more than S$30 billion annually on goods and services. Every opportunity flows through a single portal: GeBIZ. Many Singapore SME owners have never registered — often assuming contracts are too large or the process too formal. In practice, the portal hosts hundreds of quotation requests every week at scales that suit businesses of all sizes, including sub-S$90,000 opportunities that attract limited competition.
GeBIZ at gebiz.gov.sg is Singapore's centralised government e-procurement portal, managed by the Government Technology Agency (GovTech). Every ministry, statutory board, and public agency publishes procurement opportunities here.
Two main procurement formats operate on GeBIZ:
Invitation to Quote (ITQ) — for contracts below S$90,000. Agencies invite a shortlist of registered suppliers to submit competitive quotes. These are fast-moving opportunities with lower documentation requirements — ideal for SME-scale businesses. Response windows can be as short as 48 to 72 hours, making regular monitoring essential.
Invitation to Tender (ITT) — for contracts above S$90,000. Structured competitive process with detailed specifications, longer submission windows, and formal evaluation criteria. More preparation required but significant contract values available.
Period Contracts appoint a supplier for ongoing supply over a fixed period — providing recurring revenue without repeated competitive bidding. Particularly valuable for businesses supplying standardised goods or services consistently.
Singapore procurement policy explicitly supports SME participation. For certain categories, government buyers must consider local SMEs for quotation requests below S$90,000 before approaching larger suppliers. SME sellers are also exempt from Earnest Money Deposit (EMD) requirements — reducing the cash flow burden of participating in multiple tenders simultaneously. Building a track record of successful ITQ delivery is the most reliable route to being invited to participate in larger ITT competitions.
Registration is free and open to any ACRA-registered business. The process requires Corppass credentials. During registration, you select your UNSPSC commodity codes — the classification system that determines which opportunities you receive notifications for. This step requires genuine attention: codes that are too narrow mean you miss relevant ITQs; codes too broad generate irrelevant notifications. Map your products and services against the UNSPSC hierarchy carefully before completing your profile, and revisit your selections quarterly.
Singapore government buyers evaluate on price, technical capability, delivery reliability, and increasingly sustainability and social responsibility criteria. The Whole-of-Government supplier database means agencies share performance data — a strong delivery record with one agency directly supports your credibility with others when bidding for new contracts.
Common reasons SME submissions fail: late submission (automatic rejection), incomplete documentation, UNSPSC codes not matching the ITQ category, and no established track record in the specific procurement category.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Programme details, eligibility, and funding amounts change frequently. Always verify on official government websites or with a qualified advisor before acting.
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