How to Bid for Department for Education: A Supplier's Guide
Department for Education is one of the most-searched UK public sector buyers — and one of the most-bid-for. This guide covers what DfE procures, where they publish opportunities, how their bids are evaluated, and how BidWriter helps you write winning responses.
About Department for Education
The Department for Education procures schools and academies services, IT and edtech, qualification and curriculum services, research and analysis, and apprenticeship support. Contracts often flow through DfE's sector-specific frameworks.
Where DfE Publishes Opportunities
Find a Tender Service, Contracts Finder, DfE Commercial frameworks, Crown Commercial Service.
If you're not already monitoring these channels, WinAContract aggregates live opportunities across all UK public sector portals — including Department for Education contracts — so you don't miss anything relevant. Searching is free.
What DfE Bids Are Like
Education sector procurement covers schools, academies, further education, and higher education. It blends Crown Commercial Service frameworks with sector-specific buying organisations and prioritises supplier track record, safeguarding, and value for money.
Evaluation Criteria You'll Face
- Safeguarding and DBS compliance
- Educational outcomes and learner impact
- Experience in education sector
- Quality of approach
- Social value and community engagement
- Value for money
Quality typically weighs 60–80% with price at 20–40%. Bids that score well are specific, evidence-based, and quantified. Generic capability statements rarely win.
How to Write a Winning Bid for DfE
The mechanics of writing a winning UK public sector bid are well-defined. The hard part is doing them under deadline pressure across multiple bids in parallel. The strongest playbook for SMEs and lean teams is:
- Use a structured bid/no-bid framework before committing to write — not every DfE opportunity is right for you
- Read the specification and evaluation criteria carefully — see our guide to writing a winning UK government bid
- Build a bid library of past responses and evidence so each new bid compounds
- Use AI bid writing software like BidWriter 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 bid writing tips
Should You Use Software or a Bid Consultant?
For most SMEs bidding for DfE, software wins decisively on cost. A bid consultant charges £3,000–£10,000 per bid; BidWriter covers unlimited bids at £49–£349/month. See our full AI bid writer vs bid consultant comparison and the 2026 UK bid writing software buyer's guide.
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Sign up to BidWriter Free — no card required, no time limit, 3 AI bid drafts per month included. Combined with free tender discovery on WinAContract, you can find, evaluate, and draft a response to a DfE opportunity for £0.
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