Last reviewed on May 12, 2026.

The Florida procurement landscape

Florida is one of the largest state procurement markets in the United States by population and by procurement spend. The state runs a centralized vendor and bidding platform — MyFloridaMarketPlace — while individual agencies, universities, and the State University System retain meaningful purchasing authority. The Department of Management Services (DMS) Division of State Purchasing operates the state's strategic sourcing contracts.

Florida's procurement statute (Chapter 287, Florida Statutes) governs state agency contracting. The Florida Administrative Code rule chapters under 60A implement the statute. Together they shape how solicitations are structured, what protest procedures look like, and what vendor registration is required.

Key procurement systems

MyFloridaMarketPlace (MFMP)

  • State-wide eProcurement platform
  • Vendor registration and bidding
  • Most state agency solicitations posted here
  • Transaction fee charged on awards (typically a low single-digit percentage)

State Term Contracts

  • Pre-negotiated contracts managed by DMS
  • Mandatory for state agencies for covered categories
  • Multi-year terms with options
  • Optional use by other public entities

Agency-direct procurement

  • Agencies retain authority for items not on state term contracts
  • Each agency has its own purchasing office
  • Some agencies have higher thresholds for delegated authority
  • Solicitations cross-posted on MFMP and the agency site

Solicitation types under Chapter 287

The ITN is the procurement vehicle most distinctive to Florida. It allows the agency to issue a solicitation, evaluate responses, hold negotiations with multiple short-listed offerors, and award based on the negotiated outcome. ITNs are common for technology, professional services, and managed services.

Vendor registration and certifications

CBE certification is separate from federal SBA certifications. A firm holding federal 8(a), WOSB, or SDVOSB status must still apply through Florida's process to obtain state CBE status. The agency point of contact is the Florida Department of Management Services Office of Supplier Diversity.

Major Florida buyers

Entity Procurement focus Notes
Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) Construction, engineering services, materials, maintenance Large engineering services contracts under Chapter 287.055 (CCNA) competitive negotiation
Department of Health (DOH) Healthcare services, public health programs, IT County health departments add additional procurement points
Department of Children and Families (DCF) Social services, case management, IT Significant outsourcing through community-based care lead agencies
Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) Medicaid managed care, healthcare IT Multi-billion managed care contracts on a regional basis
State University System Construction, IT, professional services, research support Each university (UF, FSU, USF, FIU, etc.) procures independently
K-12 districts Educational technology, food service, transportation, construction 67 county districts, each with its own procurement office

Local government opportunities

Florida has 67 counties and roughly 400 municipalities, each with its own procurement function. The largest metropolitan markets:

Local government procurement portals are independent of MyFloridaMarketPlace. Vendors targeting local work need to register separately with each jurisdiction. Cooperative purchasing through OMNIA, Sourcewell, and Florida-specific cooperatives (FANG, etc.) can simplify multi-jurisdiction selling.

Hurricane and emergency procurement

Florida's exposure to hurricanes drives a distinctive procurement category: emergency contracting. When a state of emergency is declared, agencies can use emergency procurement procedures that bypass normal competitive requirements. Categories include debris removal, generator services, temporary housing, food and water, and emergency healthcare.

Vendors interested in emergency work should pre-position by registering with the Florida Division of Emergency Management's vendor database, holding any required licenses (debris removal contractors are particularly regulated), and being prepared to mobilize quickly when activated. Emergency contracts often have less negotiation runway but predictable terms based on standardized FEMA-aligned templates.

Protest and dispute procedures

Florida procurement protests are governed by Section 120.57(3), Florida Statutes. Key features:

Florida's 72-hour notice window is among the shortest in any state procurement system. Vendors who intend to bid serious work should have the protest review process pre-staged with counsel familiar with Chapter 120 administrative practice.

Common mistakes

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