Know whether to bid before you spend a week writing

Upload a public SAM.gov solicitation. FedBid Pro turns it into a source-cited bid decision memo with key dates, compliance risks, evaluator flags, company-fit notes, and a plain-English go/no-go recommendation.

No account required. Payment handled by Stripe. Brief delivered by email.

Former CO review lens
Built around the questions source selection teams actually score.
Public SAM.gov only
Upload guardrails reject restricted markers before checkout.
Decision memo, not chat
Compliance matrix, evaluator risks, dates, and company-fit notes.

Built by a former VA, BLM, and Air Force Contracting Officer with 9+ years federal contracting experience and warrant authority up to $10M.

Why it is not just AI chat

A fixed bid-review workflow, not a loose solicitation summary

Blank AI chat can summarize a PDF. FedBid Pro forces the same federal proposal questions every time: what must be submitted, what could make the proposal nonresponsive, where the evaluator will scrutinize the offer, and whether the opportunity fits your company before proposal labor starts.

Compliance matrix

Source-traceable bidder actions from Section L/M, clauses, dates, and requirements.

Evaluator risk lens

Risks framed around responsiveness, responsibility, price, past performance, and technical scoring.

Company-fit check

Your certifications, bonding, states, trade keywords, and past performance shape the go/no-go memo.

Decision packet

A plain-English recommendation, top risks, key dates, and next actions for the bid meeting.

Not sure where to start?

Send one public SAM.gov link

Send one public SAM.gov opportunity link and your bid/no-bid question. We'll point you to the right FedBid Pro workflow before you upload. Do not send CUI, proprietary, or non-public data.

Email a public SAM.gov link

Three ways to use FedBid Pro

Recommended first step

Compliance Analyzer

$99

A source-cited compliance and evaluator risk brief for deciding whether the opportunity is worth proposal labor before your team starts writing.

Start an analysisSee a sample brief

Response package add-on

Response Builder

$299

After Analyzer, build a draft RFQ, IFB, or RFP response package map with offeror questions, clause/provision actions, attachment tracking, pricing worksheet, and DOCX export.

Start with Analyzer

Next step after bid decision

Proposal Drafter

$199

Once the bid decision is made, draft Technical Approach, Management Approach, and CPARS-style Past Performance narratives in a formatted .docx. Includes reviewer checklist and DOCX export; final wording stays yours to verify.

Start Proposal DrafterView sample draft

Team access

Reviewing several solicitations a month?

Team subscription

$299/mo

For teams reviewing 3+ public solicitations per month. Includes unlimited Analyzer access after dashboard sign-in, report history, and future SAM.gov opportunity monitoring. Team access means anyone on your company's email domain shares the subscription — free-email checkouts (gmail.com, yahoo.com) cover only the paying address.

Payment handled by Stripe. Teammates with email on the same company domain can sign in to share the subscription.

Frequently asked

Can I upload CUI or classified documents?

No. FedBid Pro only accepts public SAM.gov solicitations. Files named or marked as CUI, FOUO, ITAR, classified, secret, or NOFORN are rejected at upload.

How is this different from uploading a solicitation to ChatGPT or Claude?

FedBid Pro is not a blank chat box. It follows a fixed federal bid-review workflow: contract type, set-aside, key dates, Section L/M requirements, FAR/VAAR flags, bonding and licensing, subcontracting limits, evaluator risks, and company fit. The result is a repeatable decision memo, not a loose summary.

Why does the Analyzer cost $99?

Because the expensive mistake is not the upload. It is spending days on a solicitation you should not bid, or missing a requirement that makes the proposal nonresponsive. The Analyzer gives you a structured review before you commit proposal time.

Is the output a final proposal?

No. Every output is advisory and requires qualified human review before submission. Some solicitations include technology-use disclosure rules; check Section L.