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Texas Bid Network is a Texas procurement information network managed by North America Procurement Council, positioned as a government-to-business (G2B) and business-to-business (B2B) platform. It mainly publishes procurement bids from Texas government agencies, with some opportunities from private organizations as well. Its content covers bid advertisements, RFPs, RFQs, RFIs, and similar notices, and it is not intended for consumer transactions.
Based on the information shown on the site, the platform’s core function is aggregating and publishing bid leads. Users can view newly added or updated Texas projects in areas such as construction, roads, bridges, equipment, and public facilities. Members can access more complete market intelligence, including bid results, bid tabulations, low bidders, and contract awards. Buyers can post bid advertisements for free. The site also offers classified ads and cross-promotes traffic with multiple state-level, regional, and industry portals under NAPC.
The business model is subscription-based. The main text only mentions a “low monthly fee” subscription and does not publicly disclose exact pricing, plan tiers, seat counts, or payment methods. Companies should therefore confirm costs and cancellation rules before purchasing. In terms of collaboration, the site only shows basic account functions such as username, password, registration, password reset, and plan-holder records; there is no visible support for team roles, permission management, approval workflows, or CRM-style follow-up. On the integration side, there is no explanation of common third-party app connections. However, the terms mention that data republishers may receive an automated data feed after registering as a publisher and signing an agreement, which looks more like a controlled data source than an open API.
The platform has basic account security requirements: passwords must be at least 8 characters and include letters, numbers, and special characters, and accounts may be suspended if a compromise is suspected. The terms strictly prohibit crawling, data mining, deep linking, hacking, and excessive-load access. Notably, the site explicitly states that it is not GDPR-compliant and prohibits access by EU-related entities, which is a clear limitation for multinational compliance teams.
Its strengths are its regional focus, the breadth of government construction-related opportunities, and access to award-result intelligence. Its drawbacks are that the site and product information feel relatively traditional, with limited disclosure around pricing, payments, APIs, security certifications, and mobile experience. It is best suited for contractors, engineering firms, equipment suppliers, and government procurement consultants tracking opportunities in the Texas market. If you need full bid management, team collaboration, and compliance auditing, you may still need to pair it with a dedicated procurement or CRM tool.
Access from mainland China is not stated in the main text, so its availability is unknown. Payment methods are also not disclosed. Domestic companies should confirm whether international credit cards, invoices, and contract processes are supported before subscribing. Alternatives to consider include SAM.gov, BidNet Direct, GovWin IQ, Bonfire, OpenGov Procurement, and procurement portals run by Texas local governments.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on texasbids.net official site.
texasbids.net is an United States SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach texasbids.net directly.