[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR16.504]

[Page 310-312]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
 
PART 16--TYPES OF CONTRACTS--Table of Contents
 
               Subpart 16.5--Indefinite-Delivery Contracts
 
Sec. 16.504  Indefinite-quantity contracts.

    (a) Description. An indefinite-quantity contract provides for an 
indefinite quantity, within stated limits, of supplies or services 
during a fixed period. The Government places orders for individual 
requirements. Quantity limits may be stated as number of units or as 
dollar values.
    (1) The contract must require the Government to order and the 
contractor to furnish at least a stated minimum quantity of supplies or 
services. In addition, if ordered, the contractor must furnish any 
additional quantities, not to exceed the stated maximum. The contracting 
officer should establish a reasonable maximum quantity based on market 
research, trends on recent contracts for similar supplies or services, 
survey of potential users, or any other rational basis.
    (2) To ensure that the contract is binding, the minimum quantity 
must be more than a nominal quantity, but it should not exceed the 
amount that the Government is fairly certain to order.
    (3) The contract may also specify maximum or minimum quantities that 
the Government may order under each task or delivery order and the 
maximum that it may order during a specific period of time.
    (4) A solicitation and contract for an indefinite quantity must--
    (i) Specify the period of the contract, including the number of 
options and the period for which the Government may extend the contract 
under each option;
    (ii) Specify the total minimum and maximum quantity of supplies or 
services the Government will acquire under the contract;
    (iii) Include a statement of work, specifications, or other 
description, that reasonably describes the general scope, nature, 
complexity, and purpose of the supplies or services the Government will 
acquire under the contract in a manner that will enable a prospective 
offeror to decide whether to submit an offer;
    (iv) State the procedures that the Government will use in issuing 
orders, including the ordering media, and, if multiple awards may be 
made, state the procedures and selection criteria that the Government 
will use to provide awardees a fair opportunity to be considered for 
each order (see 16.505(b)(1));
    (v) Include the name, address, telephone number, facsimile number, 
and e-mail address of the agency task and delivery order ombudsman (see 
16.505(b)(5)) if multiple awards may be made;

[[Page 311]]

    (vi) Include a description of the activities authorized to issue 
orders; and
    (vii) Include authorization for placing oral orders, if appropriate, 
provided that the Government has established procedures for obligating 
funds and that oral orders are confirmed in writing.
    (b) Application. Contracting officers may use an indefinite-quantity 
contract when the Government cannot predetermine, above a specified 
minimum, the precise quantities of supplies or services that the 
Government will require during the contract period, and it is 
inadvisable for the Government to commit itself for more than a minimum 
quantity. The contracting officer should use an indefinite-quantity 
contract only when a recurring need is anticipated.
    (c) Multiple award preference--(1) Planning the acquisition. (i) 
Except for indefinite-quantity contracts for advisory and assistance 
services as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the 
contracting officer must, to the maximum extent practicable, give 
preference to making multiple awards of indefinite-quantity contracts 
under a single solicitation for the same or similar supplies or services 
to two or more sources.
    (ii)(A) The contracting officer must determine whether multiple 
awards are appropriate as part of acquisition planning. The contracting 
officer must avoid situations in which awardees specialize exclusively 
in one or a few areas within the statement of work, thus creating the 
likelihood that orders in those areas will be awarded on a sole-source 
basis; however, each awardee need not be capable of performing every 
requirement as well as any other awardee under the contracts. The 
contracting officer should consider the following when determining the 
number of contracts to be awarded:
    (1) The scope and complexity of the contract requirement.
    (2) The expected duration and frequency of task or delivery orders.
    (3) The mix of resources a contractor must have to perform expected 
task or delivery order requirements.
    (4) The ability to maintain competition among the awardees 
throughout the contracts' period of performance.
    (B) The contracting officer must not use the multiple award approach 
if--
    (1) Only one contractor is capable of providing performance at the 
level of quality required because the supplies or services are unique or 
highly specialized;
    (2) Based on the contracting officer's knowledge of the market, more 
favorable terms and conditions, including pricing, will be provided if a 
single award is made;
    (3) The expected cost of administration of multiple contracts 
outweighs the expected benefits of making multiple awards;
    (4) The projected orders are so integrally related that only a 
single contractor can reasonably perform the work;
    (5) The total estimated value of the contract is less than the 
simplified acquisition threshold; or
    (6) Multiple awards would not be in the best interests of the 
Government.
    (C) The contracting officer must document the decision whether or 
not to use multiple awards in the acquisition plan or contract file. The 
contracting officer may determine that a class of acquisitions is not 
appropriate for multiple awards (see subpart 1.7).
    (2) Contracts for advisory and assistance services. (i) Except as 
provided in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section, if an indefinite-
quantity contract for advisory and assistance services exceeds 3 years 
and $10 million, including all options, the contracting officer must 
make multiple awards unless--
    (A) The contracting officer or other official designated by the head 
of the agency determines in writing, as part of acquisition planning, 
that multiple awards are not practicable. The contracting officer or 
other official must determine that only one contractor can reasonably 
perform the work because either the scope of work is unique or highly 
specialized or the tasks so integrally related;
    (B) The contracting officer or other official designated by the head 
of the agency determines in writing, after the evaluation of offers, 
that only one offeror is capable of providing the services required at 
the level of quality required; or
    (C) Only one offer is received.

[[Page 312]]

    (ii) The requirements of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section do not 
apply if the contracting officer or other official designated by the 
head of the agency determines that the advisory and assistance services 
are incidental and not a significant component of the contract.

[65 FR 24318, Apr. 25, 2000]