How to Win Federal Bureau of Investigation Contracts: A Contractor's Guide
Federal Bureau of Investigation is one of the most-searched federal agencies — and one of the most competed. This guide covers what the FBI procures, where they post opportunities, how their proposals are evaluated, and how GovCon helps you write winning responses.
About Federal Bureau of Investigation
The Federal Bureau of Investigation procures investigative and forensic technology, IT and cybersecurity, secure facilities, intelligence systems, and professional services supporting federal law enforcement and national security, often with clearance requirements (NAICS 541512, 541519, 561621).
Where the FBI Posts Opportunities
SAM.gov, DOJ / FBI procurement opportunities, and GSA Schedules and GWACs.
If you're not already monitoring these channels, WinAContract aggregates live opportunities across SAM.gov and federal posting sites — including Federal Bureau of Investigation contracts — so you don't miss anything relevant. Searching is free.
What the FBI Proposals Are Like
Homeland security and justice procurement covers border security, screening and detection, law enforcement, detention, cybersecurity, and emergency response across DHS and DOJ components. Acquisitions follow the FAR (and HSAR for DHS), frequently carry facility and personnel clearance and supply-chain requirements, and are evaluated under best-value tradeoff with technical approach and past performance weighted heavily.
Evaluation Factors You'll Face
- Technical approach and operational capability
- Facility and personnel clearances and supply-chain risk controls
- Past performance (CPARS) on similar mission work
- Small business participation and set-asides (FAR 52.219-9)
- Management approach and surge/response capability
- Price and best value
Non-price factors typically outweigh price under best-value tradeoff, though LPTA awards turn on lowest price among technically acceptable offers. Proposals that score well are specific, evidence-based, and quantified, with clear strengths the evaluators can cite. Generic capability statements rarely win.
How to Write a Winning Proposal for the FBI
The mechanics of writing a winning federal proposal are well-defined. The hard part is doing them under deadline pressure across multiple proposals in parallel. The strongest playbook for small businesses and lean teams is:
- Use a structured bid/no-bid framework before committing to write — not every the FBI opportunity is right for you
- Read the statement of work and Section M evaluation factors carefully — see our guide to writing a winning federal proposal
- Build a proposal library of past responses and evidence so each new proposal compounds
- Use AI proposal writing software like GovCon to generate structured first drafts grounded in your library — saving 60–80% of writing time
- Run your draft through an evaluator before submission — see our 15 proposal writing tips
Should You Use Software or a Proposal Consultant?
For most small businesses bidding for the FBI, software wins decisively on cost. A proposal consultant charges $3,000–$10,000 per proposal; GovCon covers unlimited proposals at $49–$349/month. See our full AI proposal writer vs proposal consultant comparison and the 2026 federal proposal software buyer's guide.
Start Free
Sign up to GovCon Free — no card required, no time limit, 3 AI proposal drafts per month included. Combined with free solicitation discovery on WinAContract, you can find, evaluate, and draft a response to a the FBI opportunity for $0.
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