National Treasury Tenders
Find National Treasury tenders, RFQs & RFPs. Access public finance, economic policy, IT systems, and government procurement management opportunities in South Africa 2026.
About National Treasury
The National Treasury is South Africa's finance ministry responsible for managing the national budget, economic policy, and public procurement frameworks. The Treasury issues tenders for financial systems, IT infrastructure, consulting services, research, training, and administrative services. It also manages the eTender Portal and Central Supplier Database.
Common Tender Types
- •Financial Management Systems
- •IT Infrastructure & Software
- •Professional Consulting
- •Research & Policy Advisory
- •Training & Capacity Building
- •Audit & Assurance Services
- •Communication Services
- •Office Equipment & Furniture
- •Event Management
- •Administrative Services
Key Programs
- •eTender Portal Management
- •Central Supplier Database
- •Public Procurement Reform
- •IFMS Financial Systems
- •Budget Management
- •Government Technical Advisory Centre
B-BBEE Requirements
B-BBEE Level 1-4 suppliers preferred. National Treasury sets the standard for government procurement compliance. PPPFA and preferential procurement regulations strictly enforced. Support for black-owned professional service firms.
Tender Landscape Insights
National Treasury issues 60-100 tenders annually. IT and financial systems contracts are the largest categories, ranging from R10M-R1B. Consulting and advisory services R5M-R100M. Training and capacity building R1M-R50M. Treasury tenders are highly competitive due to the department's prestige.
Contact Information
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Latest National Treasury tenders
View all National Treasury tenders →National Treasury tenders, frequently asked questions
Based on the Public Finance Management Act, Treasury Regulation 16A, and the 2022 Preferential Procurement Regulations. Official tender listings appear on the National Treasury eTenders.gov.za portal and on the National Treasury official website.
How do I bid on National Treasury tenders?
Bidding on a National Treasury tender is a five-step process. First, register on the National Treasury Central Supplier Database (CSD) at csd.treasury.gov.za and keep your tax, banking, B-BBEE, and directors' information current. Second, monitor ProTenders (or set a free National Treasury alert) and download the full bid pack, including the technical scope, SBD forms, and returnable schedules, from the eTenders.gov.za portal or National Treasury's own website. Third, attend any compulsory briefing or site meeting (missing one usually disqualifies you). Fourth, complete all SBD forms, pricing schedules, and technical responses exactly as specified, and assemble your compliance pack (tax PIN, B-BBEE certificate, CIPC docs, CSD MAAA report, banking letter, sector licences). Fifth, submit before the closing time in the exact delivery method specified, late submissions are always rejected.
What are National Treasury's procurement requirements?
National Treasury requires every bidder to be registered on CSD with a current SARS Tax Clearance PIN, a valid B-BBEE certificate or EME/QSE affidavit, a CIPC certificate of incorporation, a bank confirmation letter, and signed standard bidding documents (SBDs 1, 4, 6.1 or 6.2, 8, 9, and others specified per tender). Depending on the category, you may also need CIDB grading (construction), ECSA registration (engineering), PSIRA registration (security), HPCSA or SAPC registration (health), a Letter of Good Standing from the Compensation Fund, and professional indemnity insurance. National Treasury also applies the Preferential Procurement Regulations 2022, so your B-BBEE level affects your score on every competitive bid.
How often does National Treasury publish new tenders?
National Treasury publishes new tenders throughout the year, but activity is not uniform. Most South African government departments experience a procurement spike in Q1 (April–June) immediately after the annual budget allocation on 1 April, a second wave in Q2 as operational plans get approved, and often a rush in Q3 (October–December) as departments commit remaining budget before year-end on 31 March. February and March tend to be quieter months due to financial year-end freeze periods. Set a free ProTenders alert with National Treasury as the buyer. You will get an email the moment a new tender is gazetted, usually hours ahead of bidders checking portals manually.
Does National Treasury have set-asides for small businesses?
Yes. National Treasury participates in two national SMME preference mechanisms. First, the 30% subcontracting designation (Regulation 9 of the 2022 Preferential Procurement Regulations) requires tenders above R30 million to subcontract at least 30% of the contract value to EMEs, QSEs, or designated groups. Second, Regulation 4 pre-qualification lets National Treasury restrict specific tenders to EMEs and QSEs only, to B-BBEE Levels 1–4, or to designated groups (black women-owned, youth-owned, persons with disabilities). National Treasury also applies the 80/20 preference split on tenders up to R50 million, meaning your B-BBEE level directly contributes up to 20 of the 100 award points.
Where can I verify an award or past National Treasury tender?
All National Treasury awards must be published on National Treasury's own website under "Awarded Tenders" within 7 days of the decision, listing the successful bidder, contract value, and B-BBEE level. You can also cross-reference the centralised OCDS feed published on eTenders.gov.za, which shows the full procurement lifecycle from notice through award. For historical procurement data you can request a Promotion of Access to Information Act (PAIA, Act 2 of 2000) disclosure from National Treasury's Information Officer, or check the Auditor-General's annual audit report on the department's procurement compliance.
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