Public contracts in Zambia add up to billions of kwacha each year, covering everything from office stationery to large-scale infrastructure. To bid legally—and competitively—you must first become a registered tender supplier in Zambia through the Zambia Public Procurement Authority (ZPPA). This step-by-step guide walks you through the entire process, highlights common mistakes, and explains how to keep your registration active long-term.

Why Register as a Tender Supplier?

  • Eligibility to bid: Procuring entities may only invite suppliers that appear in the official ZPPA database.

  • Visibility: Registration makes your profile searchable by central government, local authorities, and parastatals.

  • Credibility boost: Meeting compliance tests (tax, PACRA, NAPSA, etc.) assures buyers that you are a low-risk partner.

  • Streamlined bidding: Once your documents sit on the e-Government Procurement (e-GP) portal, you can attach them to multiple tenders with a single click.

Step 1 – Incorporate and Structure Your Business

  • Register with PACRA. Choose an entity type that matches your growth plans (e.g., private limited company for scalability).

  • Secure a TPIN. Register with the Zambia Revenue Authority and activate your e-services profile for easy tax clearance requests.

  • Open a corporate bank account. A fresh, six-month bank statement or bank-reference letter is mandatory evidence of financial standing.

Tip: Use a dedicated procurement email (e.g., tenders@yourcompany.co.zm) to keep tender notices out of cluttered inboxes.

Step 2 – Compile Mandatory Compliance Documents

To complete supplier registration, gather digital copies (PDF, 5 MB max) of:

  • Certificate of Incorporation (PACRA)

  • Current Tax Clearance Certificate (ZRA)

  • VAT Registration Certificate (if you cross the VAT threshold)

  • Annual Return acknowledgement from PACRA (Form 42/53 or BN Form VII)

  • NAPSA registration acknowledgement

  • Company profile—brief history, core products/services, past contracts, and key personnel

  • Bank statement or reference letter issued within the last six months

  • Any sector-specific licences (e.g., Health Professions Council for medical supplies)

Use clear file names such as “CompanyProfile_ABC Ltd_May 2025.pdf” to speed up evaluator review.

Step 3 – Create Your ZPPA e-GP Account

  • Visit the e-GP portal (https://eprocure.zppa.org.zm).

  • Click “Supplier Self-Registration.”** **

  • Fill in company particulars exactly as they appear on your PACRA certificate—spelling matters.

  • Upload each compliance document in the slot provided.

  • Submit the form and await an automated acknowledgement email.

Foreign bidders: The Public Procurement Act requires you to partner with a citizen-owned business (min. 50 % Zambian shareholding) before you can bid.

Step 4 – Pay the Registration Fee

After form submission, the portal generates a reference number and prompts for a small, non-refundable fee (payable via bank deposit, online transfer, or mobile money). Retain your proof of payment—ZPPA will request a scanned copy or transaction number to validate the application.

Step 5 – Submit and Track Your Application

  • Electronic pathway: Most ministries now accept only e-GP submissions, so check your dashboard for status updates (“Pending,” “Clarification,” “Approved”).

  • Hybrid pathway: Some parastatals still maintain in-house supplier lists. If a tender advert instructs you to email or deliver a printed vendor-registration pack, comply with their format in addition to e-GP.

Respond quickly to any “Clarification Required” notices—they usually give five working days to correct errors.

Step 6 – Maintain Your Supplier Status

Registration lasts one year. Begin renewal three months before expiry to avoid bidding blackouts. Keep the following items evergreen:

| Compliance Item | Renewal Frequency | Practical Tip | | Tax Clearance Certificate | Every 6–12 months | Apply online; allow five working days. | | Annual Returns (PACRA) | Yearly | File early to avoid penalties that can flag you as non-compliant. | | Bank Statement | Every 6 months | Download a certified PDF from your bank’s portal. | | Sector Licences | Per regulator | Mark expiry dates on your calendar and set reminders. |

Failure to renew results in automatic suspension from the supplier database.

Common Pitfalls—and How to Avoid Them

  • Expired documents – Update certificates before uploading.

  • Mismatched names – Ensure your PACRA and ZRA details match line-for-line. Even a missing comma can trigger rejection.

  • Large file sizes – Compress PDFs below 5 MB to prevent upload errors.

  • Director conflicts – Companies with directors recently convicted of procurement-related offences are ineligible. Conduct internal due diligence.

Conclusion

Becoming a registered tender supplier in Zambia is a structured, repeatable process: incorporate, gather compliance documents, register on the e-GP platform, pay the fee, and keep everything current. Once approved, your business can bid confidently for public contracts and build a proven track record—and that credibility often opens doors in the private sector, too.