Ramesh runs a small supply firm in Pune. On the last day of a big CPWD (Central Public Works Department) tender, he logs into the Central Public Procurement Portal at 11:40 am. The bid closes at noon. He types his password. The portal says: “Account locked.” His heart sinks. The tender is worth two years of work. He cannot email the bid — emailed bids are not valid. The clock is ticking.
If this has happened to you, this page is your minute-by-minute rescue plan. It tells you what to try first, which helpdesk to call, how to escalate, and how to use RTI later to get proof that you tried. For the full long-form guide covering every cause in detail, see E-Procurement Account Locked Before Bid Deadline: Emergency Steps.
## Why emailed bids do not count
Many people think, “I will just mail the PDF to the officer.” That does not work. Government procurement runs on e-portals by rule. The General Financial Rules 2017, Rule 160, says clearly: “It is mandatory for Ministries/Departments to receive all bids through e-procurement portals in respect of all procurements.” So a bid that is not uploaded on the portal is usually treated as not submitted. This is why a lockout is an emergency, not a minor glitch.
## Step 1: Try the 60-second fixes (do this first)
Before you panic, check these four things. Most lockouts are one of them.
If one of these fixes it, upload and sign your bid at once. Do not wait.
## Step 2: Call the helpdesk (do this while still trying)
If the quick fixes fail, call the helpdesk in parallel, not after you give up. Speak clearly: give your bidder ID, the tender number, the error message word-for-word, and the exact closing time.
Central Public Procurement Portal (CPPP, eprocure.gov.in) — designed, developed and hosted by the National Informatics Centre (NIC) with the Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance. 24×7 telephonic helpdesk: 0120-4001002, 0120-4001005, 0120-4493395. Technical email: [email protected]. Policy email: [email protected]. For tender-specific problems (like a wrong tender field), the portal tells you to contact the Tender Inviting Authority directly.
Government e-Marketplace (GeM, gem.gov.in) — seller toll-free helpdesk: 1800-419-3436 and 1800-102-3436, 9 am to 10 pm, Monday to Saturday. Email: [email protected]. You can also raise and track tickets at gem.gov.in/gemtickets.
State portals — many states run their e-procurement portal on NIC or with a private system integrator. Find the helpdesk number on that state portal's home page or “Contact Us” page. Note the number and the ticket ID they give you. You will need it later.
## Step 3: Tell the Tender Inviting Authority in writing
While the clock runs, also send a short written message to the officer who floated the tender (the Tender Inviting Authority). Use email plus SMS plus, if possible, a portal grievance ticket. Write:
Why this matters: even if the bid is not accepted, a written record creates proof that you tried and that the problem was on the portal side, not yours. That proof is gold for a later complaint or RTI.
## Step 4: Save evidence as you go
Do this with your phone, in real time:
This evidence is what an appellate authority or a court will look at. Without it, your complaint is just a claim.
## Step 5: Escalation ladder after the deadline
If the deadline passed and your bid was not accepted, do not stop. Climb the ladder one rung at a time.
1. **Portal grievance** — File a written grievance on the portal and with the Tender Inviting Authority. Keep the grievance number. Most portals reply in a few working days. 2. **Departmental appeal** — If the Tender Inviting Authority does not help, appeal to the next officer: the Head of the procuring Department or PSU (Public Sector Undertaking), or the Chief Vigilance Officer of that body. Attach your evidence bundle. 3. **CVC complaint** — For serious irregularities (such as a lockout that seems designed to favour a rival), you can file a complaint with the **Central Vigilance Commission**. The CVC looks at procurement malpractice in central bodies. 4. **Court or Tribunal** — For a high-value tender, you can approach the High Court by writ (Article 226) or the relevant tribunal, asking for the bid process to be extended or the rejection quashed. This is costly and slow, so use it only when the stakes justify it.
## Step 6: Use RTI to get the proof
After the dust settles, RTI is your best tool to find out what happened on the portal side. File an RTI with the procuring entity (the Ministry, Department, or PSU that floated the tender). Ask for:
One key limit: the 30-day clock. Under RTI Act Section 7(1), the Public Information Officer must reply within 30 days of receiving your application. If they do not, it is a deemed refusal and the information must then be given free under Section 7(6). So RTI is great for proof after the event, but it is usually too slow to save a live bid that closes in hours. Use the helpdesk and written representation (Steps 2 and 3) while the clock runs; use RTI once the bid window has closed.
Another limit: a private company that only runs the IT system under a contract is generally not a “public authority” under RTI Section 2(h) just because it has a government contract. So you cannot file RTI against the system integrator directly. File it against the government department or PSU that floated the tender — that body is the public authority, and it must get the portal records from its IT vendor to answer you.
To file your RTI the easy way, see how to file an RTI online in India.
## Related problems that often come with a lockout
## A quick checklist
## The bottom line
A portal lockout before the deadline feels hopeless, but it is not. The quick fixes catch most cases. The helpdesk and a written representation create a record while the clock runs. RTI gets you the server-side proof afterwards. Move fast, write everything down, and keep the evidence — that is what turns a lost bid into a fightable case.
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If this guide helped you, the RTI Playbook walks you through drafting, filing, and following up on an RTI application step by step, with ready-to-use templates. Download your copy and keep it ready before your next run-in with a government office.
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See E-procurement Account Locked and How to File RTI and Government Tender Process.