Last reviewed on May 12, 2026.
Two markets running in parallel
Virginia is unusual in the state-procurement landscape because two markets coexist in the same geography. The Commonwealth itself runs state procurement under the Virginia Public Procurement Act. Northern Virginia (and to a lesser extent Hampton Roads) is also one of the densest federal contractor markets in the country — home to large defense, intelligence, and civilian-agency primes, plus thousands of subcontractors. Vendors operating in Virginia frequently sell into both markets and need to understand each.
This page focuses on Virginia state and local procurement. For federal work performed from Virginia, see the federal pages on defense contracting, IT government contracts, and the broader compliance section.
The state procurement system
eVA
- Virginia's online procurement platform
- Vendor registration, solicitation posting, and order processing
- Used by state agencies and many local governments
- Vendor fees apply to certain transactions
Department of General Services (DGS)
- Operates statewide term contracts
- Manages procurement policy and training
- Resolves protests above local thresholds
- Oversees eVA
Agency procurement
- Major agencies (VDOT, VITA, DBHDS, DSS) run their own procurements
- Each has a procurement office and delegated authority
- Solicitations cross-posted on eVA
SWaM certification
The Department of Small Business and Supplier Diversity (DSBSD) administers Small, Women-owned, and Minority-owned business (SWaM) certification. Virginia state agencies have aspirational SWaM utilization goals — currently 42% of discretionary spend at this writing — which makes SWaM certification economically significant for qualifying vendors.
SWaM eligibility:
- Small — generally fewer than 250 employees and less than $10 million in average annual gross revenue over the prior three years
- Women-owned — 51% owned, operated, and controlled by women
- Minority-owned — 51% owned, operated, and controlled by individuals from defined minority groups
- Micro — fewer than 25 employees and less than $3 million in average annual revenue (additional preference tier)
- SDV (Service Disabled Veteran) — 51% owned and controlled by service-disabled veterans
SWaM is separate from federal SBA certifications. A federally certified 8(a), WOSB, or SDVOSB firm must still apply through DSBSD to obtain Virginia SWaM status. Certification is generally valid for three to five years depending on category, with annual recertification reporting.
Solicitation types under VPPA
- Invitation for Bid (IFB). Used when specifications can be defined precisely; lowest responsive, responsible bidder wins.
- Request for Proposals (RFP). Used for negotiated procurement; evaluation considers technical, management, and price factors per the stated criteria.
- Sole-source procurement. Requires written justification and posting; limited in availability.
- Emergency procurement. Limited to genuine emergency conditions; documented after the fact.
- Cooperative procurement. Virginia allows piggybacking off contracts awarded by other public bodies, including out-of-state agreements that include cooperative language.
Major Virginia buyers
| Entity |
Procurement focus |
Notes |
| Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) |
Construction, engineering, maintenance, materials |
Statewide network with multiple district offices; major construction primes |
| Virginia Information Technologies Agency (VITA) |
IT services, security, infrastructure |
Manages the state's IT services contract; significant outsourcing model |
| Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services |
Behavioral health services, IT, facilities |
Operates multiple state psychiatric hospitals |
| Department of Social Services |
Case management, IT, professional services |
Significant federal pass-through funding (Medicaid, TANF) |
| State universities |
Construction, IT, professional services, research |
UVA, Virginia Tech, VCU, GMU, and others each procure independently |
| Local governments (Fairfax, Loudoun, Arlington, Prince William) |
Infrastructure, IT, public safety, education |
NoVA jurisdictions have substantial budgets and active vendor competition |
The federal contractor density advantage — and disadvantage
Northern Virginia's concentration of federal contractors shapes the local procurement environment in two ways:
- Advantage. Local vendors have unusually deep technical and management talent pools, easy proximity to most federal customers, and ready access to teaming partners. Many state and local procurements benefit from this depth.
- Disadvantage. Competition is fierce. State and local opportunities are often pursued by firms whose primary book is federal — meaning they bring federal-contracting discipline, scale, and overhead to compete for state work. Smaller local vendors compete on agility and price.
Vendors moving in from out of state should not underestimate the depth of the bench in NoVA. Vendors based in NoVA targeting federal work should not underestimate state work as a foundation for past performance.
Local procurement in the Commonwealth
Virginia's localities operate under the VPPA but each has its own procurement office. The largest:
- Fairfax County — the largest local government in Virginia, with significant IT, infrastructure, and human services procurement
- Loudoun County — among the fastest-growing counties; large data center economy and supporting infrastructure
- Arlington County — dense urban procurement with strong technology and professional services demand
- Prince William County — significant public works and education procurement
- City of Virginia Beach and the Hampton Roads region — military adjacency, port infrastructure, tourism
- City of Richmond — the state capital with overlap into Commonwealth procurement
Each locality has its own vendor portal. Most use eVA for posting solicitations, but vendor registration is typically separate.
Protests and dispute resolution
VPPA Section 2.2-4360 governs protest procedures. The protest must be filed within 10 days after the protester knows or should have known the facts giving rise to it, or no later than 10 days after award if the basis is the award itself. The agency reviews and issues a written decision. Adverse decisions can be appealed to the appropriate circuit court within 10 days.
Compared to federal GAO protests, Virginia protests are simpler, less expensive, and faster — but also less likely to generate dramatic outcomes. Successful protests typically result in re-evaluation or re-solicitation, not damages.
Common mistakes
- Mistaking federal proximity for state procurement understanding. A NoVA firm with deep federal experience may underestimate how different state procurement procedures are.
- Treating SWaM as automatic. Federal small business certifications do not transfer; DSBSD application is a separate process.
- Ignoring VITA's role. IT procurements often run through VITA rather than the using agency, with implications for who the actual customer is during capture.
- Underbidding to win state work then struggling with state rates. State rates are typically below federal rates; firms with federal-scale overhead need to be deliberate about which state opportunities they pursue.
- Skipping cooperative purchasing. Virginia readily piggybacks off cooperative contracts; vendors with a cooperative contract elsewhere have a faster path into Virginia agencies.