How to win government contracts in Oregon.
From your first vendor registration to your first submitted bid — here's exactly how public contracting works in Oregon, and where to find the opportunities.
Step 1 — Register as a vendor
Oregon centralizes most state purchasing through its eProcurement system, OregonBuys (the modern replacement for the legacy ORPIN system). Registering is free and lets you receive bid notifications, download solicitation documents, and submit responses electronically.
- State agencies: register in OregonBuys at oregonbuys.gov.
- Counties, cities & school districts: many run their own portals — register everywhere you want to sell. Your county and largest nearby city are the best places to start.
- Federal (optional): if you'll ever bid federal, get a free SAM.gov registration and a UEI number.
Step 2 — Get certified (it unlocks set-asides)
Oregon's Certification Office for Business Inclusion and Diversity (COBID) certifies eligible businesses, which opens the door to contracts and goals reserved for certified firms. Certification is free and can be a real edge on the right bids.
- Minority-Owned Business (MBE)
- Woman-Owned Business (WBE)
- Emerging Small Business (ESB)
- Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business
- Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) — for federally funded work
Apply through Oregon COBID. If you qualify for more than one, list them all on your capability statement.
Step 3 — Find the right opportunities
Don't try to bid everything. Find the contracts that match what you already do well, in the geography you can serve.
The biggest mistake new vendors make is chasing huge statewide bids first. Start with your county, your city, and your local school district.
- State bids: browse open solicitations in OregonBuys.
- Local bids: check the "bids & RFPs" page on your county, city, and school-district websites.
- Universities & special districts: ports, transit, water, and fire districts all buy independently.
Who buys in Oregon
"Government contracts" is much bigger than the state itself. Your local buyers include:
- State of Oregon agencies (transportation, corrections, human services, and more)
- All 36 counties and hundreds of cities
- 197 school districts and community colleges
- Public universities
- Special districts — water, fire, transit, ports, parks
Step 4 — Submit a bid that doesn't get tossed
Public bids are won on responsiveness as much as price. Miss a required form, signature, or certification and a great offer is disqualified before anyone reads it. That's exactly what the guide's bid checklist and templates are built to prevent.
Ready to win in Oregon?
The guide turns these steps into a done-for-you action plan, with 10 templates including an Oregon-ready bid checklist.