Procurement Insights Dashboard
Government procurement payment data to track spending and combat tender corruption
Launched November 12, 2025: Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana unveiled this dashboard during the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) to enhance transparency and prevent corruption schemes in public procurement.
Dashboard Features
Spending Trends
Track government spending patterns across departments and time periods to identify anomalies
Payment Transparency
View actual payments made to suppliers from national and provincial governments
Supplier Analysis
Analyze which suppliers do business with the state and monitor contract awards
Payment Analytics
Interactive analysis of BAS/CSD payment data • Real-time insights from 29,999+ transactions
Coming Soon: Demographic Insights
Advanced demographic analytics powered by National Treasury data
PPPFA Categories
Black, Women, Youth, Disabled, Military Veteran, Rural Township ownership tracking
Monthly Trends
Track demographic spend changes month-over-month (6 months available)
Supplier Classification
CIPC Company, Government Entity, SOE, NPO, and more (R93.5B tracked)
Commodity Breakdown
UNSPSC commodity segments with complete spend analysis (R85.7B tracked)
Launching Soon: ProTenders will be the ONLY platform offering all 6 PPPFA demographic categories with monthly trends
- • Filter opportunities by demographic ownership (Black, Women, Youth-owned businesses)
- • Track B-BBEE compliance across all 6 PPPFA categories
- • Analyze supplier type preferences by department
- • Identify high-spend commodity categories for market intelligence
Procurement Payments Dashboard (BAS)
Data from Basic Accounting System (BAS) and Central Supplier Database (CSD) • Powered by National Treasury
Fighting Procurement Corruption
This dashboard was specifically designed to prevent corruption schemes like those exposed at Tembisa Hospital, where officials manipulated procurement processes to award numerous small contracts to associates, bypassing the scrutiny applied to larger tenders.
By making payment data public, citizens, academics, oversight institutions, and civil society can now track how public money is spent, who gets paid, and when payments are made—enabling accountability and early detection of suspicious patterns.
Data Source: National Treasury eTender Portal • Basic Accounting System (BAS) and Central Supplier Database (CSD) View original source →