The Government Commercial Function and Government Legal Department have unveiled three standard contracts for use by Government Departments, “and many other public sector organisations”, as part of their commercial activity.

The contents of the Procurement Policy Note (PPN), Using Standard Contracts, apply to all Central Government Departments, their Executive Agencies and Non-Departmental Public Bodies.

The PPN says: “Where In-Scope Organisations are purchasing bespoke goods or services, or goods or services that cannot be facilitated by a suitable government framework, such as a Crown Commercial Service Framework, Dynamic Purchasing System, or Low Value Purchase System, they should adopt one of the Standard Contracts as the basis for all relevant procurements, rather than creating bespoke contracts.”

The three Standard Contracts in the suite are:

The PPN stresses that these standard contracts need not be used where a more suitable form of contract is available – “for example, Departmental terms and conditions attached to purchase orders for very low value procurements, a government framework, or an industry-specific contract, such as those available for construction”.

It adds that In-Scope Organisations should always seek appropriate legal advice, “as these template Standard Contracts will need to be tailored to specific procurements and any Department-specific needs”.

Organisations which are not in scope of this PPN, such as NHS bodies, should consider having regard to these Standard Contracts when updating their own terms and conditions, the PPN says.

The PPN, which replaces PPN 04/14 and PPN 06/14, says other public sector bodies may wish to apply the approach set out.

The policy note calls on ‘In-scope Organisations’ to apply the PPN as soon as practicable after its publication date. “It is understood that different In-Scope Organisations are at different levels of maturity and may have complex operating environments in terms of adopting the Standard Contracts, and adoption may take longer for some organisations than others.”