How to find public tenders in Germany (DOE guide)
German public procurement is split across sixteen federal states and dozens of platforms — but a single federal data service now aggregates the notices. Around 85 live competitions a day, and how to tap the feed without monitoring Germany platform by platform.
German public procurement has a deserved reputation: sixteen federal states, dozens of publication platforms, and below-threshold rules that differ by state. What's less known is that since the eForms era, a single federal service quietly aggregates the notices — and it hands us around 85 live open competitions every day.
Where German tenders are published
Above the EU thresholds: TED, as everywhere. Below them is where Germany gets fragmented — federal, state, and municipal buyers publish across their own portals under state-level rules.
The shortcut is the DOE (Datenservice Öffentliche Einkäufe, oeffentlichevergabe.de): Germany's official procurement data service, which collects notices submitted in the standardized eForms-DE format across government levels and republishes them as open data. One feed instead of sixteen-plus platforms.
What the feed actually contains
Two honest caveats from operating it daily. First, the raw stream is much bigger than the useful one — it carries award notices, changes, and expired calls; the ~85/day figure is what remains after we filter down to live, open competitions. Second, DOE covers what flows through the eForms-DE channel. German publication practice is still consolidating, and some state and municipal tenders travel other routes — DOE is the best single German source that exists, not a guarantee of totality. Anyone claiming "all German tenders in one place" is overselling; we'd rather tell you what the feed is.
A technical quirk that affects freshness: DOE is a bulk data export, not a live API. Data arrives in daily batches — fine for a daily digest rhythm, not a real-time ticker.
Using DOE directly
The portal's search is public and the underlying data is open — you can browse at oeffentlichevergabe.de without an account, in German. For a single narrow niche, a bookmarked search plus discipline works. The catch is volume and language: 85 live calls a day, German-only titles, across every sector from road salt to radiology.
What BidScout covers
We pull the DOE export daily, filter it to live competitions, machine-translate the German titles to English, and match everything against your company profile. German coverage is part of BidScout Pro (€49/month); the free plan's TED layer carries the above-threshold slice — which for Germany is the minority of notices.
The practical route
Germany rewards patience: high volume, procedural buyers, and a below-threshold layer most foreign suppliers never see. Start with the DOE feed (directly or through us), narrow by what you can actually deliver in German — most German buyers expect German-language bids — and treat TED as the above-threshold subset it is, not as German coverage.
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