Eight months have now passed since the Procurement Act 2023 (“the Act”) came into force on 24 February 2025, representing one of the most significant overhauls of the UK’s public procurement regime in a decade. For contracting authorities, the new regime offers opportunities for simplification and flexibility, but it also introduces fresh obligations – and with them, new litigation risks.
Although there have not yet been any significant legal cases that have settled key issues under the Act, the potential areas of challenge are already becoming clear. In this article, we set out some of the key provisions and the kinds of disputes we expect to arise, together with practical steps authorities and suppliers can take to protect their position.
Assessment summaries: greater transparency, greater risk
Transparency remains a cornerstone of the new regime. Authorities must now issue assessment summaries setting out transparent and detailed feedback to suppliers as to how each tender met (or failed) each award criterion. These replace traditional standstill letters and are likely to be the first point at which a supplier identifies potential grounds for a challenge. Whilst the assessment summaries are broadly similar to the previous standstill letters in terms of the information that they cover, the key difference is that now there is no longer a requirement to include a direct comparison between the successful supplier’s assessed tender and the unsuccessful supplier – instead a contracting authority has to provide a copy of the information that it has provided to the successful supplier (redacted if required) explaining how its tender was scored against each criteria. This will likely cause issues either relating to disclosure of confidential information or will relate to unsuccessful supplier challenging the scoring.
Whilst the intention is to improve understanding, the increased level of detail gives disappointed suppliers more material to scrutinise and contest. Disputes may arise where suppliers allege inconsistencies or variations between evaluators.
Practical tip: Authorities should invest time in drafting robust evaluation and moderation criteria that set out a clear rationale as to how each criterion is to be scored, including relevant information from the tender which will be scored and the weighting or importance of each criterion.