Last reviewed on May 12, 2026.
What SEWP is
SEWP (Solutions for Enterprise-Wide Procurement) is a Government-Wide Acquisition Contract (GWAC) operated by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The contract focuses on IT products and product-based services — hardware, software, related installation and maintenance, and bundled solutions that center on the product. SEWP is open for use by all federal agencies; NASA earns a small administrative fee on each order to fund operations.
SEWP has consistently been one of the most-used federal IT vehicles. Agencies favor it for fast order cycles, low fees relative to GSA Schedule, broad product catalog access, and well-regarded customer support from the SEWP Program Management Office.
What SEWP is good for
SEWP is designed for IT products and the services directly attached to them. Common categories:
- Servers, workstations, laptops, and peripherals
- Networking equipment and infrastructure hardware
- Storage systems and backup hardware
- Audiovisual and conferencing equipment
- Software products and licenses
- Cloud services packaged as a product
- Cybersecurity products
- Maintenance, warranty, installation, and training tied to the product
SEWP is not the right vehicle for pure professional services (staff augmentation, consulting, software development without an associated product). Those buys go to OASIS+, CIO-SP4, GSA Schedule labor categories, or agency-specific IDIQs.
How SEWP differs from GSA Schedule
| Dimension |
SEWP |
GSA Schedule |
| Operator |
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center |
GSA Federal Acquisition Service |
| Scope |
IT products and product-based services |
Broad — products and services across many categories |
| Fee |
Low fee per order (capped) |
Industrial Funding Fee (0.75% of sales, no cap) |
| Number of holders |
Fewer (group-based) |
Many thousands |
| Order process |
Fast quote-driven through the SEWP portal |
FAR 8.4 ordering through GSA Advantage or eBuy |
| Best for buyer |
Bulk IT product purchases with quick quote turnaround |
Mixed product and service buys; broader vendor selection |
How orders work in practice
- Buyer identifies need. An agency IT buyer needs hardware, software, or a product-based bundle.
- Quote request through the SEWP portal. The buyer issues a quote request to SEWP contract holders. Selection rules apply (typically, three-quote minimum for fair competition).
- Contract holders respond. Holders provide quotes within the SEWP portal, generally within days.
- Buyer awards. Based on price, technical fit, and delivery. Award is typically firm-fixed-price.
- Order placement and delivery. The SEWP order is placed; the contract holder delivers the products and any associated services.
- Reporting. Contract holders report sales to SEWP for fee remittance.
The cycle from quote request to award is often days to a few weeks, which is materially faster than open-market procurement or even most Schedule task orders.
SEWP groups and contract holders
SEWP organizes contract holders into groups based on size and business type — typically including large business, small business, and various socioeconomic categories. Each procurement cycle (SEWP IV, V, VI, etc.) introduces refinements to the group structure.
For prospective contract holders, getting on SEWP means responding to a SEWP solicitation when the next iteration is competed. SEWP contracts have multi-year base terms with options, so opportunities to bid the contract itself come along on a multi-year cycle. Between solicitations, on-ramps are limited compared to other GWACs.
For firms that are not SEWP contract holders, the path to SEWP business is partnering with a holder as a reseller, manufacturer's representative, or distribution channel partner. The buying agency interacts with the SEWP contract holder; the holder works behind the scenes with manufacturers and distributors to fulfill orders.
Why agencies favor SEWP
- Speed. The portal-based quote process is one of the fastest competitive paths in federal procurement.
- Lower fees. SEWP fees are competitive with most federal vehicles, and the per-order fee structure caps cost on large purchases.
- Customer support. SEWP's program office is consistently rated highly by buying agencies. Disputes and quote issues are typically resolved quickly.
- Catalog depth. SEWP contract holders together carry an enormous range of IT products from most major manufacturers.
- Compliance pre-built. Federal compliance requirements (Section 508, BAA, TAA, Section 889) are layered into the contract, reducing per-order due diligence at the agency level.
Compliance overlays at the order level
SEWP orders carry the same federal compliance overlays as other federal IT acquisitions:
- Section 889 — prohibitions on covered telecommunications equipment from specific manufacturers.
- Trade Agreements Act (TAA) — country-of-origin requirements for products above the TAA threshold.
- Buy American Act (BAA) — domestic content requirements for orders below the TAA threshold.
- Section 508 — accessibility requirements for software and IT.
- CMMC — DoD orders may require contractor CMMC certification when the order involves CUI handling. See CMMC certification.
Common mistakes
- Using SEWP for pure services. Quote requests for staff augmentation or consulting do not fit SEWP's product-centric scope and will be rejected or recompeted on the right vehicle.
- Quoting non-TAA-compliant products on TAA orders. SEWP enforces country-of-origin rules; non-compliant quotes are disqualified.
- Treating SEWP as a substitute for buying relationships. SEWP holders that don't actively engage their buying agencies see lower order volume regardless of catalog depth.
- Underpricing to win one order without considering replenishment cost. Heavily discounted quotes can win the order but produce losses when actual manufacturer pricing or shipping costs land differently than projected.
- Missing reporting deadlines. SEWP fee reporting has a regular cadence; repeated late reporting causes administrative issues with the contract.