
Our History
The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority (PPDA) is a parastatal organisation in Uganda that is responsible for regulation and supervision of procurement and disposal of government-owned property and other assets.
In 2003, the Ugandan parliament enacted the Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority Act (PPDA Act). Following that, in February 2003, the Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority (PPDA), was created and became operational. It is the "regulator of public procurement and disposal of public assets in Uganda".
Vision & Mission Statement
Our Mission
To Promote Service Delivery Through Effective Regulation of the Public Procurement and Disposal System.
Our Vision
A Dynamic Facilitator of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal System for Sustainable National Development.
Our Values
Integrity, Customer Focus, Professionalism, Innovation and Team work.
Our Tag Line
Procurement that Delivers.
The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Act 1 of 2003 set up the Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority (PPDA) as the principal regulatory body for public procurement and disposal of public assets in Uganda. The amendments to the PPDA law have introduced several changes prominent of which is the strengthening and enhancement of the role of PPDA in the execution of its regulatory mandate.
What is the role of PPDA?
The Act sets up the Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority to:
The Authority, may following the recommendation of a Procuring and Disposing Entity, or after investigations on its own initiative suspend a provider from engaging in any procurement and disposal process for a period determined by the Authority. The grounds for suspension include:
- Breach of the Code of Ethics of providers
- Debarment from the procurement process of an international agency of which Uganda is n member
- After investigations by the Auditor General and the provider is found to have a record of unsatisfactory performance
- Conviction of provider of a corrupt practice or fraudulent practice under the PPDA Act
- Failure by the provider to substantially perform its obligations under the contract
- Suspension of the provider by a professional body for professional misconduct
- Default by the provider of its obligations specified under the law
The Authority may at its own initiative or on application from an entity accredit an alternative public procurement or disposal system for an entity that may not able to comply with a procurement or disposal procedure required under PPDA Act.
The Authority does not grant waivers / deviations from procurement or disposal methods and procedures including variations. The Authority only considers applications to deviate from the use of standard bidding documents, procedural forms or any other attendant documents which are not suitable for a procurement and disposal process.
When conducting procurement audits, compliance checks or investigations, an authorised officer of the Authority may enter any premises of a Government Entity, at a reasonable time and inspect the premises to make any inquiries that may be necessary for the collection of information.
Where there is persistent or serious breach of the PPDA Act, regulations or guidelines made under the Act, the Authority may direct the concerned Government entity to take the necessary corrective action to set right the breach.
PPDA in consultation with a competent authority and relevant stakeholders, is mandated to specify the public procurement contracts to be subject to a reservation scheme and to designate the particular sectors, within a specified geographical area, that are eligible to participate in the reservation scheme.

