Skip to main content
BidClarity Resources How to Read a Federal RFP — Section by Section
Procurement Intelligence

How to Read a Federal RFP: A Step-by-Step Guide for Small Businesses

📅 April 2026 ⏱ 12 min read ✍ BidClarity Intelligence Team

Federal RFPs — Requests for Proposals — are dense, jargon-heavy documents that can run 50 to 200 pages. Most small businesses open one, get overwhelmed, and close the tab. That is a mistake that hands contracts to less-qualified competitors who simply knew where to look.

This guide walks you through every section of a federal RFP in the exact order that matters for a bid/no-bid decision. By the end, you will be able to read any federal RFP — from SAM.gov, CanadaBuys, or any other portal — and make a confident decision in under 20 minutes.

What this guide covers
  1. What is a federal RFP and how is it different from a tender?
  2. The anatomy of a federal RFP: every section explained
  3. The 20-minute bid/no-bid decision framework
  4. Five red flags that mean you should not bid
  5. How to read a Canadian federal RFP on CanadaBuys
  6. Questions to submit during the Q&A period
  7. Summary checklist

What Is a Federal RFP and How Is It Different from a Tender?

A federal RFP (Request for Proposal) is how government agencies in the United States solicit competitive bids for goods and services above the simplified acquisition threshold — currently $250,000 for most civilian agencies and $1,000,000 for commercial items.

The equivalent in Canada is typically an RFP posted on CanadaBuys, which follows the Government Contracts Regulations and is governed by Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC). The documents are structurally similar but use different terminology.

TermUS Federal (SAM.gov)Canada (CanadaBuys)
Solicitation typeRFP, RFQ, IFBRFSO, RFP, ITT
Contract vehicleFAR-based (Federal Acquisition Regulation)CAS, PWGSC, PSPC-based
Award methodBest value or LPTABest value or lowest price
Small business set-aside8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, SDVOSBIndigenous, regional suppliers
Security clearanceNISPOM — Confidential, Secret, TSCSP — Protected B, Secret, TS

The Anatomy of a Federal RFP: Every Section Explained

A standard US federal RFP is organized under the Uniform Contract Format (UCF), defined in the federal acquisition regulations (FAR), specifically FAR Part 15. It has 13 sections labelled A through M. Here is what each contains and whether you need to read it closely.

Solicitation/Contract Form (SF-33 or SF-1449)

Read time: 2 minutes. Priority: HIGH. This is the cover page. It contains the solicitation number (e.g. W911QY-26-R-0012), the issuing agency, the NAICS code, the small business size standard, and the response deadline. Write all four down before reading anything else.

⚠ Common mistake on Section A

Many bidders skip directly to the Statement of Work and miss the set-aside designation on the cover page. If the contract is set aside for a specific certification (8a, HUBZone, WOSB) that your business does not hold, you are ineligible. Stop reading and move to the next opportunity.

Supplies or Services and Prices

Read time: 5 minutes. Priority: HIGH. This is the pricing section. It contains the Contract Line Item Numbers (CLINs) — the specific items or services the government wants to buy, and the format in which they want pricing submitted.

Statement of Work (SOW) or Performance Work Statement (PWS)

Read time: 20-40 minutes. Priority: CRITICAL. This is the heart of the RFP. It describes exactly what the government wants delivered, to what standard, on what schedule.

Five questions to answer while reading the SOW

(1) Is the scope of work something your company has done before? (2) Are there security clearance requirements? (3) What are the deliverable deadlines — days after award, or fixed calendar dates? (4) Does the work require on-site presence at a government facility? (5) Are there subcontracting limitations that prevent you from using partners?

Packaging and Marking

Read time: 1 minute. Priority: LOW for services. For service contracts this is usually boilerplate. For goods supply contracts, read carefully — it specifies packaging standards, labelling requirements, and country-of-origin markings. Failing to comply can result in rejection of delivered goods.

Inspection and Acceptance

Read time: 3 minutes. Priority: MEDIUM. Defines who inspects your work and what constitutes acceptance. The critical field is the acceptance location — destination acceptance (at the delivery point) is standard and lower risk than origin acceptance (at your facility).

Deliveries or Performance

Read time: 5 minutes. Priority: HIGH. Contains the performance period, place of performance, and specific delivery dates. For any contract longer than 12 months, look for option periods — the base period plus up to four option years is standard (five years total).

⚠ The place of performance trap

If Section F specifies a place of performance outside your state or province, you may face significant travel, staffing, or compliance costs. Factor this into your pricing before deciding to bid.

Contract Administration Data

Read time: 2 minutes. Priority: LOW. Identifies the Contracting Officer (CO) and the Contracting Officer's Representative (COR — the government's day-to-day point of contact for performance). Note both names. The CO is your legal point of contact. The COR manages day-to-day performance.

Special Contract Requirements

Read time: 10 minutes. Priority: HIGH. One of the most important and most overlooked sections. Contains agency-specific requirements outside standard FAR clauses:

Contract Clauses

Read time: 5 minutes (skim). Priority: MEDIUM. Incorporates FAR and Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) clauses by reference. Focus on any clause marked "DEVIATION" or "ALTERNATE", which signals a non-standard version. Also look for FAR 52.219 clauses, which govern small business requirements.

List of Attachments

Read time: 2 minutes. Priority: HIGH. Lists everything attached to the RFP. Download and review every attachment before starting your proposal. Missing an attachment means missing a requirement.

Representations and Certifications

Read time: 5 minutes. Priority: HIGH. Requires you to certify facts about your business. Most is pre-populated if your SAM.gov registration is current. Verify your SAM registration is active before submitting any proposal.

Instructions to Offerors

Read time: 20-30 minutes. Priority: CRITICAL. Your proposal writing manual. Specifies exactly what volumes you must submit, in what format, with what page limits. Non-compliance with Section L is the single most common reason technically qualified proposals are rejected without evaluation.

Section L page limits are absolute

If Section L specifies a 25-page limit for Volume I, a 26-page submission can be rejected without being read. Print Section L and check every requirement off as you build your proposal outline.

Evaluation Factors

Read time: 10 minutes. Priority: CRITICAL. Tells you exactly how the government will score your proposal and in what priority order. Evaluation factors are listed in descending order of importance.

Evaluation methodWhat it meansYour strategy
Best Value Tradeoff Government balances quality vs price Invest heavily in technical volume; price competitively but not lowest
LPTA Lowest price that meets minimum technical standards wins Meet every technical threshold, then price as low as sustainably possible
Set-aside Only businesses with specific certifications can bid Confirm your certification is active in SAM.gov before proceeding

The 20-Minute Bid/No-Bid Decision Framework

Reading an RFP fully before deciding whether to bid wastes time. Use this sequence to make a bid/no-bid decision in 20 minutes, then read fully only if you decide to proceed.

1
Section A — Check NAICS code and set-aside (2 min)

If your business is ineligible for any reason — stop. Move to the next opportunity. No further reading required.

2
Section F — Check place of performance and period (3 min)

Can your team physically perform this work at this location for this duration? If not — stop.

3
Section C — Skim Statement of Work for scope match (8 min)

Read the first and last paragraph, then all headers. Does the work match what your company actually does? If less than 70% match — stop.

4
Section H — Scan for clearance and key personnel requirements (3 min)

Security clearances take months to obtain. If the RFP requires Secret or Top Secret clearance and your team does not hold it — stop.

5
Section M — Check evaluation factors and competition structure (4 min)

Is this LPTA or best value? Is there an incumbent contractor? If the incumbent is well-positioned and this is LPTA, your chance of winning is low.

BidClarity does this automatically

BidClarity monitors 37+ procurement portals and runs this bid/no-bid analysis for every new opportunity — matching it against your specific capability profile, scoring it 0–100, and delivering only the opportunities worth reading in full. Card required at signup — not charged for 14 days.

Get My First Report →

Five Red Flags That Mean You Should Not Bid

Red Flag 1: The Incumbent Is Named in the Statement of Work

When an SOW references specific systems or platforms by the current contractor's product name — "the contractor shall maintain the XYZ-Pro tracking system currently in use" — it is written to favour the incumbent. This is called baking in the incumbent. The government is technically required to allow competition, but the criteria are structured to make switching extremely difficult.

Red Flag 2: Fewer Than 15 Days to Respond

A response deadline under 15 days from posting is a warning sign. Legitimate competitive procurements typically allow 30–45 days. A short window usually means the government already has a preferred vendor and the competition is a procedural formality. Exception: emergency procurement or simplified acquisition, where short timelines are standard.

Red Flag 3: Past Performance Requirements You Cannot Meet

If Section L requires three past performance references with contracts over $5 million and your largest contract was $800,000, you cannot satisfy the requirement. Do not waste proposal effort hoping the evaluator overlooks it. They will not.

Red Flag 4: Key Personnel Requirements With Specific Resumes Required

When Section H specifies that the Project Manager must hold a specific certification, a specific degree, and a minimum of 10 years in a narrowly defined field, and you must submit that person's resume with the proposal — the government often has someone specific in mind. Without an exact match, your technical score will be low.

Red Flag 5: The Opportunity Has Been Amended More Than Three Times

Multiple amendments signal confusion in the acquisition office. More than three amendments means requirements are unstable — the agency is struggling to define what it wants, or a protest is underway. These contracts frequently end in delays, re-solicitations, or disputed performance.

⚠ The amendment trap

Always download the latest amendment before writing your proposal. SAM.gov shows amendment history on the opportunity page. Proposals written against an earlier version that was subsequently amended can be disqualified, even if the changes were minor. Set a calendar reminder to check for amendments three days before the deadline.

How to Read a Canadian Federal RFP on CanadaBuys

Canadian federal RFPs follow a similar but distinct structure. Key differences from US federal RFPs:

CanadaBuys tip — GSIN codes

CanadaBuys uses a GSIN (Goods and Services Identification Number) instead of a NAICS code. Your GSIN profile in the Supplier Registration Information (SRI) system determines which opportunities are matched to your business. Keep your SRI profile updated to ensure you receive relevant solicitations.

Questions to Submit During the Q&A Period

Every RFP includes a Q&A period — typically the first 10–15 days of the solicitation window. All questions and answers are published publicly on SAM.gov, meaning every competitor sees both your question and the government's answer.

Questions to ask:

Questions not to ask:

Summary: Your RFP Reading Checklist

SectionWhat to checkPriorityTime
ANAICS code, set-aside type, response deadlineHIGH2 min
BCLIN structure, option years, NTE pricingHIGH5 min
C (SOW)Scope match, deliverables, clearance requirementsCRITICAL20–40 min
FPlace of performance, period of performanceHIGH5 min
HKey personnel, subcontracting limits, cybersecurityHIGH10 min
JAll attachments downloaded and reviewedHIGH5 min
KSAM.gov registration active and currentHIGH2 min
LVolumes required, page limits, format requirementsCRITICAL20 min
MEvaluation factors and award method (LPTA vs best value)CRITICAL10 min
FIND → WIN → DELIVER → WIN AGAIN

Reading and winning an RFP is the front half of the loop. Once awarded, every contract deliverable (CDRL), deadline, subcontractor, and invoice needs to be tracked — and your performance on this contract feeds directly into your CPARS record (your official government performance report card), which evaluators check on your next bid. BidClarity Fulfill tracks every deliverable milestone, manages supplier outreach, and auto-drafts your CPARS narrative at closeout. A strong performance record compounds — each contract makes the next one easier to win. GovWin, GovDash, and every other competitor stop at the proposal. BidClarity runs the full loop.

Stop reading RFPs manually — let BidClarity do it

BidClarity monitors SAM.gov, CanadaBuys, World Bank, TED Europa, UNGM, all 13 Canadian provincial portals, and 20+ more sources globally — scoring every opportunity against your profile with a bid/no-bid recommendation, 5-step action plan, and financing flags. Card required at signup — not charged for 14 days.

Get My First Report →
Found this useful? Share it. Discuss in r/govcon →