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Anyone planning to bid in public procurement in Bulgaria in 2026 must now navigate a revised registration process on the centralised CAIS (Centralised Automated Information System) electronic procurement platform, operated by the Public Procurement Agency (AOP). Since 1 April 2026, new rules require pre-bid CAIS registration and, for many award types, the issuance of a unique supplier identifier, a discrete compliance step that a significant number of bidders have not yet completed. This guide maps the entire procedure from account creation to bid submission, covering eligibility prerequisites, the qualified electronic signature requirement, required documents, realistic timelines, costs, and the specific changes introduced in 2026.
It is written for procurement managers, bid managers, infrastructure contractors and in-house counsel, including foreign bidders, who need a practical, step-by-step plan.
Bulgaria’s public procurement framework is governed by the Public Procurement Act (Закон за обществените поръчки / ZOP), as amended, and is administered by the Public Procurement Agency (AOP). All contracting authorities, central government bodies, municipalities, utilities and certain private-sector entities awarding publicly funded contracts, must publish notices and manage award procedures through the CAIS electronic public procurement portal.
For bidders (referred to in the legislation as “economic operators”), this means that participation in virtually any Bulgarian public tender now begins with a CAIS registration. The platform has two principal components: CAIS EOP (the electronic award platform at eop.bg) and CAIS EAP (the electronic appeals platform). Bidders interact primarily with CAIS EOP for locating tender notices, downloading procurement documents, submitting bids and communicating with contracting authorities.
The obligation to register applies to both above-threshold and below-threshold procedures. Above-threshold procurements (those exceeding the EU directive thresholds, published on Tenders Electronic Daily) have long required electronic submission through CAIS. The 2026 amendments extend the mandatory CAIS registration requirement and the supplier identifier obligation to a wider category of below-threshold procurement requirements. Foreign companies established outside Bulgaria may also register and bid, subject to additional documentary and translation steps described below.
Current tender notices are published in real time on the CAIS procurement register at app.eop.bg. The AOP’s English-language homepage provides guidance on platform navigation, user registration procedures and technical requirements.
Before creating a CAIS account, every prospective bidder should confirm that it satisfies the eligibility requirements under the Public Procurement Act. The core tests are:
Foreign companies registered outside Bulgaria may participate in Bulgarian public procurement on equal terms with domestic bidders. In practice, however, the following hurdles arise. All documents not in Bulgarian must be accompanied by a certified Bulgarian translation. Corporate registration extracts typically require an apostille (or consular legalisation for non-Hague Convention countries). The authorised representative who signs and submits the bid through CAIS will need a qualified electronic signature issued by a provider recognised in the EU or specifically accepted by the CAIS platform. Where the tender notice requires local registration or professional licensing (common in construction), the foreign bidder must demonstrate equivalence or obtain the relevant Bulgarian licence.
Early engagement with local counsel is strongly recommended to avoid disqualification at the evaluation stage.
A qualified electronic signature (QES), known locally as КЕП, is mandatory for signing and submitting bids on CAIS EOP. The QES must comply with Regulation (EU) No 910/2014 (eIDAS) and be issued by an accredited trust service provider. Several Bulgarian PKI providers issue QES certificates; EU-based qualified certificates from providers listed on the EU Trusted List are also accepted. The certificate must be issued in the name of the individual who will sign the bid, and that individual’s identity must be linked to the CAIS user account. Bidders should allow adequate lead time: issuance can take 1–10 business days depending on the provider and the identity verification method (in-person, video identification or postal).
Once received, the QES must be tested on the CAIS platform before the bid submission deadline.
The following numbered steps describe the end-to-end process a bidder must follow to register, prepare and submit a compliant tender through CAIS. Each step is described in the order it should be completed.
Allow 1–5 business days for the full CAIS registration to be verified, depending on the speed of the Commercial Register cross-check and the complexity of any manually submitted foreign-entity documents.
Issuance typically takes 1–10 business days. Bidders participating for the first time should start this step at least three weeks before the expected tender submission deadline.
The supplier identifier is a new 2026 requirement. It functions as a unique registration number assigned to each economic operator within the CAIS system. The identifier is generated through the CAIS platform upon completion of a supplier registration application. The steps are:
Bidders should check the specific tender notice to confirm whether the supplier identifier is mandatory for that award. Industry observers expect the requirement to be extended to all CAIS-managed procedures over the course of 2026.
Pay careful attention to file-size limits. CAIS imposes maximum upload sizes per file and per submission. If a document exceeds the limit, the platform will reject the upload without saving a partial submission.
After submission, the bidder should monitor the CAIS inbox for clarification requests from the contracting authority and respond within the stipulated timeframes.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Create CAIS account (EOP/EAP) | Bidder (company admin) | 1–5 business days (depends on verification) |
| 2. Obtain qualified electronic signature (QES/КЕП) | Bidder / authorised representative via PKI provider | 1–10 business days (longer if postal ID step needed) |
| 3. Apply for / obtain supplier identifier (if required) | Bidder (submission through CAIS to PPA/registry) | 3–14 business days |
| 4. Assemble tender documents & statutory certificates | Bidder / legal & technical team | Typically 2–6 weeks for complex construction tenders |
| 5. Upload, sign and submit bid in CAIS | Bidder (authorised signer) | Submission instantaneous; allow 1–2 hours for final checks |
| 6. Post-submission: respond to clarifications / evaluation | Bidder / legal | 3–20 business days (per tender notice) |
The documents needed for a compliant bid vary by procurement type and contracting authority requirements. The table below consolidates the documents most commonly required across commercial and construction tenders. Bidders should always cross-reference this list against the specific tender notice, which is the authoritative document for each procedure.
| Document | Notes (Issuing Authority, Format, Validity) |
|---|---|
| Company registration extract (Commercial Register excerpt) | Issued by the Bulgarian Commercial Register (Търговски регистър). Foreign entities provide equivalent certificate from national registry; apostille and certified Bulgarian translation required. Typically valid 30–90 days from issue. |
| VAT registration certificate / tax identification number | Issued by the National Revenue Agency (НАП / NRA). Provide the VAT number and proof of active registration. Foreign entities provide equivalent home-country tax registration. |
| Recent financial statements / audited accounts | Prepared by the company; format: QES-signed PDF. May require certified Bulgarian translation and local accountant confirmation for foreign entities. Usually the last 3 financial years. |
| Tax clearance certificate | Issued by the NRA (National Revenue Agency). Confirms no outstanding tax liabilities. Validity period varies, include the issue date. Foreign entities provide equivalent from home-country tax authority. |
| Social security clearance | Issued by the National Social Security Institute (НОИ / NSSI) where required by the tender notice. Confirms no outstanding social-security contributions. |
| European Single Procurement Document (ESPD) | Self-declaration covering exclusion grounds, selection criteria and technical/professional capacity. Completed electronically in the ESPD service or as a structured XML/PDF uploaded to CAIS. |
| Technical qualifications & experience references | Employer references, completion certificates, contract summaries. For construction tenders: FIDIC completion certificates, works-acceptance protocols. QES-signed PDFs. |
| Power of attorney / corporate authorisation | Original or QES-signed; required where the signatory is not the statutory legal representative. Must clearly authorise the named individual to sign and submit bids on the company’s behalf. |
| Qualified Electronic Signature certificate (QES/КЕП) | Issued by accredited PKI provider (eIDAS-compliant). Must be bound to the authorised person in the CAIS account. File format per CAIS technical instructions. |
| Bid bond / tender security (if required) | Bank guarantee or insurance instrument. Scanned and QES-signed, or the instrument reference entered in the designated CAIS field. Check CAIS-allowed formats and the tender notice for exact requirements. |
| Supplier identifier (if required) | New 2026 requirement for certain awards. Enter the identifier number in the designated CAIS field at the time of bid submission. Confirm issuance details (date, issuing body) in the supplier profile. |
For construction tenders specifically, bidders should expect additional requirements: proof of registration in the Central Professional Register of Builders (ЦПРС), professional indemnity insurance certificates, and evidence of health-and-safety management systems. Always verify the exact list against the tender notice and any published clarifications.
Timing is one of the most common failure points for bidders in Bulgarian public procurement. The procurement timeline involves both external deadlines set by the contracting authority and internal preparation lead times that the bidder must manage independently.
Key regulatory date: 1 April 2026, mandatory CAIS registration and supplier identifier requirements in effect for covered award categories.
The following countdown checklist provides a practical framework for managing internal deadlines relative to a known tender submission date:
| Countdown | Action |
|---|---|
| T−30 days (or as soon as the tender notice is published) | Confirm CAIS account is active. Verify QES is valid and bound to CAIS. Check whether supplier identifier is required for this tender. Begin assembling tender documents and statutory certificates. Request tax and social-security clearances. |
| T−14 days | Complete technical proposal and financial proposal drafts. Obtain bid bond (if required). Submit any clarification requests to the contracting authority via CAIS. |
| T−7 days | Finalise all documents. Convert to PDF/A and apply QES signatures. Upload documents to CAIS in draft mode. Perform internal review of the CAIS submission preview. |
| T−1 day | Final review of CAIS submission. Confirm all signatures, file names and mandatory fields. Verify CAIS system status (check for maintenance windows). Submit 1–2 hours before the deadline to allow for technical contingencies. |
After submission, bidders should be prepared for the evaluation phase, which typically lasts 3–20 business days depending on the complexity of the tender. If the contracting authority requests clarifications or supplementary documents, the bidder must respond within the timeframe specified in the request, usually 3–5 business days. Appeal deadlines for challenging award decisions are prescribed in the Public Procurement Act and run from the date of notification of the decision; these are strictly enforced.
Registering on CAIS itself is free of charge. However, several ancillary costs arise during the bid preparation process. The table below summarises the typical cost items. All amounts are approximate and should be verified directly with the relevant provider or authority.
| Item | Approximate Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Qualified electronic signature (QES) issuance | €20–€200+ | Varies by PKI provider, certificate duration (1–3 years) and identity verification method. Verify with chosen provider. |
| Commercial Register or certified extracts | €5–€50 | Fees depend on issuing authority. Apostille and certified translation costs are additional for foreign documents. |
| Bid bond (bank guarantee or insurance) | Percentage of contract value (per tender) | Specified in the tender notice. Typically 2–5% of the estimated contract value; bank guarantee fees vary by institution. |
| Supplier identifier application | Varies / often nil | Check PPA guidance, administrative fees for the identifier may be waived. Confirm with the official source before applying. |
| Professional translations & apostilles | €50–€500+ per document | Relevant for foreign bidders. Costs depend on document length and urgency. |
Foreign suppliers should also consider VAT implications. Non-resident entities providing services or supplies to a Bulgarian contracting authority may need to register for Bulgarian VAT. The 2026 amendments to the VAT Act may affect registration thresholds and reverse-charge applicability. Bidders are advised to consult a Bulgarian tax adviser before submitting a bid that could trigger a local VAT registration obligation.
The amendments to the Public Procurement Act effective from 1 April 2026 introduce several changes that directly affect how to bid in public procurement in Bulgaria in 2026. The most consequential are:
The likely practical effect of these changes is a short-term compliance squeeze: bidders who have not yet registered on CAIS or obtained a supplier identifier may be excluded from upcoming tenders simply for failing to complete a procedural step. Acting promptly eliminates this risk.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yavor Tankov at Penkova & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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