Public procurement glossary
/
Purchase Order (PO)

Purchase Order (PO)

A Purchase Order (PO) is a formal document issued by a buyer to confirm an order of goods or services under agreed terms. It outlines the key details of the purchase, including descriptions of items or services, quantities, unit prices, delivery timelines, and any applicable contract references or terms and conditions. Once the supplier accepts the PO, it becomes a legally binding agreement, forming a simplified contract between the two parties.

In public procurement, purchase orders are widely used for routine, low-value, or call-off purchases under existing agreements. For example, under a framework agreement or dynamic purchasing system, POs are the mechanism through which actual orders are placed—without needing to re-negotiate terms or run a new competition. Public sector buyers use POs to ensure compliance, traceability, and control over decentralized purchasing activities while maintaining administrative efficiency.

In practice, purchase orders help streamline procurement and ensure accountability. They provide clear instructions to suppliers and an auditable record for buyers. When issued under established frameworks or catalog systems, POs allow for rapid, compliant ordering that supports operational needs without duplicating procurement effort. For suppliers, an accepted PO offers assurance of payment based on pre-agreed conditions.

Source(s):
See which tenders are worth your time to explore
Start your free 7-day trial and review real opportunities with the context you need to make decisions on whether to bid or not.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
It takes only 15 seconds to get tender matches for your company
Get your first relevant tenders in under 5 minutes
Free preview
No credit card needed
Pulling tenders from EU & national portals. Helping 100+ companies across 23 EU countries discover high-fit public tenders.