If you run a service business in the Austin metro — cleaning, HVAC, landscaping, electrical, IT, construction, supplies — the local government is one of the largest, most reliable customers in town. Public agencies pay on terms, renew contracts for years, and are legally required to post their buying opportunities in public. The catch: those opportunities are scattered across half a dozen separate systems, and each agency posts dozens of unrelated solicitations for every one that fits what you do.
This guide walks through who the buyers are, where they post, how to register and certify, and how to actually surface the bids worth your time.
Who buys: the Austin-area public agencies
"Government contracts" in Austin isn't one buyer — it's a stack of independent agencies, each with its own budget, purchasing office, and portal:
- City of Austin — the largest local buyer, covering everything from facilities and fleet to professional services and construction.
- Travis County — county roads, facilities, health and human services, and technology.
- Austin Independent School District (AISD) — one of the biggest districts in Texas, buying construction, food service, technology, and supplies.
- Central Health — the county hospital district, purchasing healthcare-adjacent goods and services.
- Capital Metro, special districts, and the State of Texas — transit, MUDs, and statewide agencies that buy from Austin vendors through the Electronic State Business Daily.
Each of these is a separate door. Winning work from one doesn't register you with the others.
The portals you have to monitor
Here's where the fragmentation bites. The major Austin-area buyers don't share a single bid board — they each run a different platform:
Where each agency posts
- City of Austin
- Austin Finance Online (register + submit via eResponse) — full guide
- Travis County
- BidNet Direct (free "Limited" registration) — full guide
- Austin ISD
- Bonfire e-bidding platform — full guide
- Central Health
- BidNet Direct + vendor list — full guide
- State of Texas
- Electronic State Business Daily (ESBD) & TxSmartBuy
To see every opportunity, you'd register on all of them, set up notifications on each, and still check manually — because portal email alerts are notoriously broad, blasting you every solicitation in a category whether or not it fits. Most owners give up and check one or two sites occasionally, which means the contracts they could have won close without them ever seeing the posting.
This is the problem BidScout solves. Instead of registering on five portals and drowning in irrelevant alerts, you tell us your trade and service radius once, and we read every new Austin-area posting and email you only the ones worth bidding.
Step 1 — Register as a vendor
Registration is how an agency knows you exist and how you become eligible to submit. It's free everywhere that matters in Austin:
- City of Austin: create a vendor account on Austin Finance Online. You'll select the commodity codes that describe what you sell; this drives which solicitations you're notified about. Questions go to [email protected] or 512-974-2018.
- Travis County & Central Health: register once on BidNet Direct and choose the free "Limited" package. One account covers both.
- Austin ISD: register in Bonfire — if you're not registered, you won't be notified of or able to view AISD solicitations.
Get your commodity/NIGP codes right. Pick too few and you miss relevant bids; pick too many and you're buried in noise. (BidScout sidesteps this by matching on the actual content of each posting, not just a code.)
Step 2 — Get certified (and why it pays)
You don't have to be certified to bid — but for many Austin small businesses, certification is the edge. The City of Austin's Small and Minority Business Resources (SMBR) department certifies Minority-Owned (MBE), Women-Owned (WBE), and Disadvantaged Business Enterprises (DBE), plus a Small Business Enterprise track.
- Certification is free, and most complete applications are reviewed in about seven business days.
- Certified firms count toward the subcontracting goals primes must meet on City contracts — which makes your phone ring.
- Central Health runs a parallel Historically Underutilized Business (HUB) program for minority- and women-owned firms.
Apply through the SMBR certification system (austintexas.mwdbe.com) or call 512-974-7600. Note that federal DBE/ACDBE rules changed in late 2025, so confirm current eligibility before relying on a DBE goal.
Step 3 — Find the bids you can win
This is where most time gets wasted. A single agency can post 20+ solicitations a day across every category of spending — paving, catering, legal services, playground equipment — and maybe one in fifty is something your business could deliver. Multiply that by five portals and you have a part-time job just reading bid titles.
The businesses that win consistently do one of three things:
- Hire someone to monitor the portals daily (expensive).
- Rely on portal email alerts and accept the flood of irrelevant notices (low signal).
- Use a relevance filter that reads every posting and surfaces only the matches (what BidScout does).
Get only the Austin bids that fit your business
Tell us your trade and service area. We read every new posting across Austin's portals and email you the ones worth bidding — every morning at 6am.
Free during beta · No credit card required
Step 4 — Respond before the deadline
Public solicitations have hard deadlines and exact submission rules. A few habits separate the winners:
- Read the whole solicitation, not just the scope — insurance, bonding, and certification requirements disqualify more bids than price does.
- Submit electronically and early. The City of Austin requires offers through eResponse; Travis County and Central Health through BidNet; AISD through Bonfire. Portals lock at the deadline to the second.
- Use the Q&A window. Ask questions through the official channel before the cutoff; the answers are shared with all bidders and often reveal what the buyer actually wants.
- Track renewals. Most contracts come up again. Note when today's awards expire so you're ready to bid the recompete.
The single biggest lever, though, is upstream: you can't win a bid you never saw. Win one solid contract and it can cover a year of monitoring many times over.
Frequently asked questions
Where are City of Austin bids posted?
On Austin Finance Online. You register there as a vendor and submit offers electronically through eResponse. See our City of Austin bids guide.
Is it free to register and bid?
Yes. Vendor registration on Austin Finance Online, BidNet Direct, and Bonfire is free, and SMBR certification is free. You only spend money if you choose paid bid-aggregation services.
Do I need certification to win contracts?
No, but City of Austin MBE/WBE/DBE certification through SMBR makes you eligible for subcontracting goals and is reviewed in about seven business days. It's free, so for most small firms it's worth doing.
How do I keep up with bids across all these agencies?
Each agency uses a different portal, so most owners can't. That's why BidScout exists — we monitor every Austin-area portal and email you only the solicitations that match your business.