Past performance in government contracting

Past performance is one of the most important evaluation factors in federal contracting. It tells the government whether a business has delivered on similar work before — and whether previous clients considered that work successful. For small businesses entering government contracting, understanding how past performance is evaluated — and how to build it — is essential to becoming competitive.

Why past performance matters

Federal agencies use past performance to reduce the risk of awarding contracts to businesses that may not be able to deliver. A strong past performance record signals that a business understands the type of work involved, can manage contract requirements, and has satisfied prior clients at a comparable scale and scope.

In competitive solicitations, past performance is frequently weighted as a significant evaluation factor. In some solicitations, it is given more weight than technical approach or price. A business with excellent past performance can win contracts against lower-priced competitors if the past performance evaluation creates enough confidence for evaluators.

What evaluators look for

When reviewing past performance, federal evaluators typically assess:

How to document past performance

In a proposal, past performance is typically documented through references — descriptions of prior contracts with client contact information for verification. A strong past performance reference includes:

Agencies may contact references directly. Always inform your references before submitting their contact information and ensure they are prepared to speak positively and accurately about the work.

Building past performance from zero

Businesses new to federal contracting often face the challenge of lacking documented past performance on government contracts. Strategies to build it:

Maintaining past performance quality

Every contract your business performs becomes a future reference. Delivering consistently — meeting deadlines, managing problems proactively, communicating transparently, and exceeding minimum requirements where possible — builds the track record that makes future proposals competitive.

A single poor past performance evaluation can follow a business for years. The best past performance strategy is simply to perform well on every contract.

Important: Past performance references should be accurate. Misrepresenting prior work, inflating contract values, or submitting references without client permission can have legal consequences and disqualify a proposal.

Find contracts that match your current past performance.

CapGen matches live opportunities to your capability profile — including the types of work and NAICS codes where your past performance is most relevant.