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Every contractor bidding on a Turkish public tender must decide how to furnish performance security: post a performance bond (surety bond) issued by an insurer, or obtain a bank guarantee (teminat mektubu) from a commercial or participation bank. The choice between a performance bond vs bank guarantee in Turkey directly shapes your cash-flow exposure, your enforceability risk if the contracting authority calls the security, and whether your submission even clears EKAP compliance checks. With Turkey’s Public Procurement Authority (Kamu İhale Kurumu, KİK) now integrating electronic guarantee submission through EKAP and tightening standardised-form requirements, procurement teams in 2026 face a materially different landscape than they did even two years ago.
This guide delivers a side-by-side decision framework, complete with cost modelling, statutory references, and concrete “choose when” rules, so you can select the right instrument before your next tender deadline.
A performance bond, often called a surety bond, is a three-party instrument. A licensed surety company (the surety) guarantees to the contracting authority (the beneficiary) that the contractor (the principal) will perform its obligations under the public contract. If the contractor defaults, the beneficiary can claim against the bond, but typically must demonstrate actual default and quantified loss before the surety pays. This conditional structure distinguishes most surety bonds from on-demand bank guarantees.
Some Turkish tender documents accept unconditional surety wording, which narrows the gap with bank guarantees. However, the global and domestic norm for surety bonds remains conditional: the surety retains the right to investigate the claim, verify supporting documents and, where the bond wording permits, dispute the demand before payment. Industry observers expect the conditional model to remain dominant in the Turkish surety market through 2026.
In Turkey, surety bonds are issued by licensed insurance companies or specialised guarantee institutions operating under the oversight of the Insurance and Private Pension Regulation and Supervision Agency (SEDDK). The principal contractor applies to the surety, undergoes credit and technical underwriting, and pays a one-off premium. The beneficiary, typically a public contracting authority, receives the bond document and holds it as performance security under Kamu İhale Kanunu No. 4734.
Surety bonds suit bidders who want to preserve bank credit lines for operational needs and can tolerate a potentially more involved claims process. A frequent bidder with a standing bondability letter from a surety can obtain bonds quickly and at competitive premiums, freeing bank facilities for working-capital needs.
Are bank guarantees and performance bonds the same? No. A bank guarantee is a bilateral undertaking by a bank; a performance bond is a three-party instrument issued by a surety. They differ in claims mechanics, issuer capitalisation, cost structure and, critically, how fast the beneficiary can convert them to cash. Treating them as interchangeable can lead to tender non-compliance or unexpected enforcement outcomes.
A bank guarantee (teminat mektubu) in Turkey is issued by a bank or participation bank promising to pay the beneficiary a stated sum. Most bank guarantees used in Turkish public tender contexts are drafted as on-demand (unconditional) instruments: the beneficiary need only present a written demand, sometimes accompanied by a declaration of default, and the bank pays without investigating the underlying dispute. This gives contracting authorities immediate liquidity and explains why bank guarantees remain the default preference of most Turkish public entities.
Conditional bank guarantees do exist but are far less common in procurement. Where the tender documentation specifies an unconditional, irrevocable letter of guarantee, a conditional instrument will be rejected.
For the contracting authority, the key advantage is speed of enforcement: an on-demand bank guarantee converts to cash within days, not months. For contractors with established bank credit facilities, issuing a guarantee can be same-day, no separate underwriting process, no new insurer relationship. The perceived creditworthiness of systemic Turkish banks also gives beneficiaries greater comfort than smaller surety providers.
Most Turkish public contracting authorities expressly prefer, and many require, a bank letter of guarantee as the performance security instrument. EKAP’s electronic submission platform has been configured primarily around bank-issued teminat mektupları, and the Kamu Teminat Yönetim Platformu operated in cooperation with Takasbank further entrenches the bank guarantee as the operationally streamlined option for electronic tenders.
So which is better for a public tender guarantee in Turkey, the bond or the BG? The answer turns on cost, cash-flow impact, claims risk and tender-document requirements. The decision framework in Section 7 below gives the actionable answer.
| Dimension | Performance Bond (Surety) | Bank Guarantee (BG) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal form (Turkey) | Issued by licensed insurer/surety; conditional wording typical | Issued by bank or participation bank; usually on-demand / unconditional |
| Who issues | SEDDK-licensed surety insurers and guarantee companies | Banks and participation banks (domestic, or foreign with local counter-guarantee) |
| Public procurement acceptance | Accepted where tender docs permit; must meet EKAP standard-form requirements | Widely accepted; most contracting authorities prefer or require bank letters; electronic BG via EKAP supported |
| Typical cost basis | One-off premium, typically 0.5 %–6 % of guaranteed amount (credit-dependent) | Annual commission, typically 0.5 %–3 % p.a. of guaranteed amount; plus possible collateral requirement |
| Timing to obtain | Days to weeks (faster with standing bondability letter) | Same-day to two weeks for well-banked contractors with existing credit lines |
| Duration and renewal | Runs to bond expiry per wording; renewals negotiated with surety | Bank sets expiry; must remain valid through defect-liability period if required |
| Enforceability / pay-on-demand | Surety may investigate and contest claims (conditional bonds); slower cash conversion | On-demand BGs pay on presentation of compliant demand; fast cash conversion for beneficiary |
| Claims / dispute process | Beneficiary must prove default and loss per bond conditions; surety may defend | Bank pays first, then seeks reimbursement from contractor (recourse); disputes follow payment |
| EKAP / electronic submission | Historically accepted; KİK rulings require standard forms and EKAP registry compliance | EKAP platform supports electronic bank guarantee submission via Takasbank integration |
| Issuer insolvency risk | Relies on surety’s financial strength; insurers may be less capitalised than systemic banks | Higher perceived creditworthiness; systemic banks subject to BRSA supervision |
| Operational burden for bidder | Surety underwriting package (financials, project details, corporate indemnity) | Bank credit line / collateral / facility agreement required; constrains working capital |
Top-line interpretation: Bank guarantees remain the safer default for most Turkish public tenders because of universal acceptance, EKAP integration and on-demand enforceability. Performance bonds become the smarter choice when preserving bank credit lines and working capital matters more than beneficiary liquidity speed, provided the tender documents explicitly accept surety-issued instruments.
The dimension-by-dimension analysis below unpacks each row with statutory references, cost modelling and practical examples specific to the Turkey procurement environment.
Turkey’s public procurement framework is anchored by Kamu İhale Kanunu No. 4734, which sets out the types and amounts of security a contracting authority may demand. The statute distinguishes between geçici teminat (temporary/bid security) and kesin teminat (definitive/final performance security). Under standard KİK practice, bid security is set at a minimum of 3 % of the offered price, while final performance security is typically 6 % of the contract price.
Contracting authorities issue their security requirements through the tender document (ihale dokümanı), which specifies acceptable forms. KİK guidance permits letters of guarantee (bank or surety) and cash deposits, among other forms. However, most tender documents default to requiring a teminat mektubu, a letter of guarantee, without distinguishing between bank-issued and surety-issued instruments. Bidders should read the specific tender document carefully: if it names only banks as acceptable issuers, a surety bond will be rejected.
EKAP (Elektronik Kamu Alımları Platformu) has progressively standardised the submission format. Instruments submitted electronically must carry an EKAP identifier number and comply with KİK-prescribed form templates. The 2024 integration of the Kamu Teminat Yönetim Platformu, operated in cooperation with Takasbank, has streamlined electronic bank guarantee submission, giving bank-issued instruments a logistical advantage in tenders that mandate electronic security submission.
The cost comparison between a performance bond and a bank guarantee is not simply about the fee or premium. It must account for collateral requirements, working-capital impact and the time value of tied-up cash. The table below models indicative costs for a 10,000,000 TRY contract with a statutory final security of 6 % (600,000 TRY).
| Cost Item | Performance Bond (Surety) | Bank Guarantee (BG) |
|---|---|---|
| Security amount (statutory) | 600,000 TRY (6 % of contract price) | 600,000 TRY (6 % of contract price) |
| Issuance fee / premium | One-off premium: 0.5 %–6 % of 600,000 TRY = 3,000–36,000 TRY (credit-dependent) | Annual commission: 0.5 %–3 % p.a. of 600,000 TRY = 3,000–18,000 TRY per year |
| Upfront cash / collateral | Limited or none; corporate indemnity may suffice; premium paid up front | Banks often require cash margin (sometimes 100 % of guarantee value) or lien over assets, up to 600,000 TRY locked |
| Working-capital impact | Lower: premium is an expense, not locked capital | Higher: collateral locks cash on balance sheet; opportunity cost significant |
| Tax treatment (indicative) | Premium is deductible business expense; verify with tax adviser | Commission is deductible expense; cash collateral has no tax deduction, only opportunity cost |
Worked example: Assume a contractor with moderate credit obtains a surety bond at a 1 % one-off premium. Total cost: 6,000 TRY, with no collateral. The same contractor’s bank quotes a 1 % p.a. commission plus a 50 % cash margin requirement: annual fee of 6,000 TRY plus 300,000 TRY locked as collateral. Over a two-year contract, the bank guarantee costs 12,000 TRY in commissions and ties up 300,000 TRY of working capital. The surety bond costs 6,000 TRY total and ties up nothing. The cost comparison between a bond and a BG therefore depends heavily on collateral requirements: where the bank demands full or partial cash cover, the surety bond is significantly cheaper on a total-cost-of-capital basis.
Claims risk differs sharply. Under a conditional surety bond, the beneficiary must present evidence of contractor default and quantified loss. The surety investigates the claim and may defend against unfounded or inflated demands, a process that can delay payment by weeks or months. For the contractor, this is protective: a conditional bond reduces exposure to abusive or premature calls.
Under an on-demand bank guarantee, the bank pays on presentation of a compliant written demand. The bank does not adjudicate the underlying dispute. After payment, the bank exercises its recourse rights against the contractor. For the contractor, this means the money leaves the account first; the dispute is litigated afterwards. Contracting authorities in Turkey overwhelmingly prefer this model because it eliminates enforcement delay.
Contractors with existing bank facilities can obtain a bank guarantee within one to three business days. Surety bonds may take longer, particularly for first-time applicants, where underwriting can take one to three weeks. Frequent bidders with a standing bondability arrangement can match bank-guarantee speed. The practical advice: begin guarantee procurement at least two weeks before the tender submission deadline, and confirm EKAP participation with your issuer.
From the beneficiary’s perspective, enforceability of a surety bond is weaker than an on-demand bank guarantee. An on-demand BG is convertible to cash upon compliant demand, with disputes resolved after payment. A conditional surety bond may require the beneficiary to litigate or arbitrate the claim before receiving payment. For smaller contracting authorities dependent on immediate liquidity to cover replacement-contractor costs, the on-demand bank guarantee is functionally essential. Turkish courts will enforce on-demand guarantees according to their terms, and the issuing bank’s insolvency risk, supervised by BRSA, is generally lower than that of a surety company.
Foreign companies bidding on Turkish public tenders typically cannot submit a guarantee issued by a foreign bank or surety unless the tender documents expressly allow it. Standard KİK practice requires either a guarantee issued by a Turkish bank or a foreign-bank guarantee confirmed or counter-guaranteed by a Turkish bank registered on EKAP. Foreign bidders establishing a presence in Turkey, whether through corporate structuring or branch registration, should arrange Turkish banking relationships well before tender deadlines. Verify the issuer’s EKAP registration status: if the bank or surety is not listed on the platform, electronic submission will fail.
Two developments have reshaped the performance bond vs bank guarantee decision for Turkish public tenders since 2024:
The likely practical effect: bank guarantees now carry a measurable compliance and workflow advantage in electronically conducted tenders. Contractors who prefer surety bonds should confirm, before procurement, that their surety provider can generate EKAP-compliant documents with the required identifier codes. Where the tender mandates electronic submission exclusively, a surety that cannot participate in the EKAP platform is simply not an option.
Use the decision table below to match your situation to the right instrument. Each row names a specific priority or constraint and identifies which option best serves it.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Preserving bank credit lines for operational cash flow | Performance bond (surety) |
| Minimising upfront collateral and working-capital lockup | Performance bond (surety) |
| Maximum acceptance by Turkish contracting authorities | Bank guarantee |
| Fastest enforcement / cash conversion for the beneficiary | Bank guarantee (on-demand) |
| EKAP electronic-submission compatibility (2026) | Bank guarantee (via Takasbank platform) |
| Protection against abusive or premature calls by the authority | Performance bond (conditional wording) |
| Tender documentation explicitly requires bank letter of guarantee | Bank guarantee, no alternative |
| Foreign bidder without Turkish bank relationship | Bank guarantee via Turkish counter-guarantee (start early) |
Choose a performance (surety) bond when:
Choose a bank guarantee when:
Most straightforward tenders with standard security requirements do not require legal counsel for the guarantee selection alone. However, the following situations move the decision into territory where professional advice protects against costly errors:
At a minimum, provide your lawyer with the tender conditions (ihale dokümanı), the proposed guarantee wording or draft, the underwriting or bank facility terms, and your company’s current bondability or credit-line position.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Işıl Kılıç Erol at Kılıç Hukuk Danışmanlık, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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