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How to Find Construction Work to Bid On in Georgia
Georgia DOT, state, and local bid sources - plus the bond you need to win the work
The short answer for Georgia
Public construction work in Georgia is posted in four places: GDOT (Georgia Department of Transportation) for highway and civil work, the Georgia Procurement Registry and Team Georgia Marketplace for state agency projects, your local city, county, and school district bid boards, and SAM.gov for federal work. Most are free to search. To win the work you will usually need a bond - Georgia requires a 100% performance and payment bond on public works contracts over $250,000.
Finding public construction work in Georgia
If you build in Georgia and want into public and commercial work, the jobs are not hidden - they are advertised in the open, and most of the sources are free. Here is where to look, who runs each one, and the bond you will need to actually win the work.
Before you bid in Georgia: Georgia posts state and local opportunities on the Georgia Procurement Registry, and vendors register in Team Georgia Marketplace to bid state work. Register in Team Georgia Marketplace
Georgia highway and civil work: GDOT (Georgia Department of Transportation)
GDOT publishes monthly letting schedules, with bids submitted through Bid Express. Anyone bidding or performing GDOT work must be prequalified as a contractor or registered as a subcontractor, applied at least 10 days before the let date. See the prequalification requirements.
Start here: GDOT (Georgia Department of Transportation) bidding.
Georgia state agency work: the Georgia Procurement Registry and Team Georgia Marketplace
State agencies, universities, and many other public bodies in Georgia post their construction solicitations through the Georgia Procurement Registry and Team Georgia Marketplace. You can browse opportunities there, and you will usually need to register to download documents or submit a bid.
Go to: the Georgia Procurement Registry and Team Georgia Marketplace.
Georgia local government work: city, county, and school district bid boards
This is where most contractors should start. Cities, counties, school districts, and special districts build constantly and have to advertise it publicly. The jobs are smaller, the competition is thinner, and the bonding is more reachable for a growing company. Major Georgia bid boards:
- City of Atlanta
- Fulton County
- DeKalb County
- Gwinnett County
- Cobb County
- City of Savannah
- City of Augusta
- Columbus Consolidated Government
More Georgia bid sources
Transit and water agencies
Schools, colleges, and universities
- Gwinnett County Public Schools
- University System of Georgia
- Georgia Tech
- Technical College System of Georgia
Builders exchanges and plan rooms
Weighing a paid platform to find leads faster? See our comparison of construction bid sites and plan rooms - free and paid.
Federal work in Georgia: SAM.gov
Every open federal construction contract is posted on SAM.gov, and it is free to search and register. You need an active registration and a Unique Entity ID before you can bid. Federal jobs over $150,000 require performance and payment bonds under the Miller Act - see our Miller Act guide.
The bond you need to bid public work in Georgia
Georgia requires a performance and payment bond, each at 100% of the contract value, on public works contracts over $250,000 - a threshold raised from $100,000 by House Bill 137 effective July 1, 2025 (O.C.G.A. 13-10-1 and 36-91-70). (O.C.G.A. § 13-10-1 and § 36-91-70.) Below those points many jobs still require a bid bond just to submit. The bottom line: if you want public work in Georgia, you have to be bondable.
That is where contractors lose jobs to competitors who are no better at the work - the other bidder could produce the bond and they could not. It is usually more reachable than contractors assume. If you are not sure where your bonding stands, start with what a surety bond is, see how contractors qualify, or read the full national guide on how to find construction work to bid on.
Georgia certification programs
Georgia certifies firms for the federal DBE program through the Georgia Unified Certification Program (GDOT, with MARTA certifying the metro Atlanta counties). Federal DBE rules changed in late 2025 - confirm current status and eligibility before relying on it.
See where your bonding stands in Georgia
The work is out there. The bond is what lets you win it. Take the Grit Bond Scorecard to see where your bonding readiness stands and what to work on to grow your limits - or call our bond team and we will walk through it with you.
Call the Grit team: (801) 505-5500
Georgia construction bidding FAQ
Where do I find construction jobs to bid on in Georgia?
Start with GDOT (Georgia Department of Transportation) for highway and civil work, the Georgia Procurement Registry and Team Georgia Marketplace for state agency projects, and your local city, county, and school district bid boards. For federal work, use SAM.gov. Most are free to search.
Do I need to be prequalified to bid public work in Georgia?
GDOT publishes monthly letting schedules, with bids submitted through Bid Express. Anyone bidding or performing GDOT work must be prequalified as a contractor or registered as a subcontractor, applied at least 10 days before the let date. Requirements vary by agency and project, so confirm with the awarding authority before you bid.
What bond do I need for public construction work in Georgia?
Georgia requires a 100% performance and payment bond on public works contracts over $250,000 (O.C.G.A. § 13-10-1 and § 36-91-70), and many jobs require a bid bond to submit. If you are not bonded yet, that is the first thing to solve - take the Bond Scorecard or call (801) 505-5500.
A note on the details: Bidding rules, registration steps, and bond thresholds change over time and vary by project and by awarding agency. Use this page as a starting map, not legal advice. Always review the specific requirements in each bid solicitation and confirm the current rules with the awarding authority before you bid.
This page is part of Grit's national guide on how to find construction work to bid on.