GeM vs CPP Portal vs SECI: Which Tender Portal Should You Track in 2026?


tenderkosh featured image

If you’ve ever tried to chase government tenders in India, you already know the problem.

You log into GeM in the morning. Switch to the CPP Portal at lunch. Open SECI’s tender page in the evening because someone on a WhatsApp group mentioned a 700 MW solar bid. By the time you’ve finished refreshing tabs, half the day is gone — and you still don’t know whether you missed something on a state PSU portal nobody told you about.

So which tender portal should you actually track? GeM, CPP Portal, or SECI?

The honest answer: it depends on what you sell, and “just one” is almost always the wrong answer. Let’s break down what each portal really is, who it’s built for, and where the smart money is going for tender intelligence in 2026.

To explore active and upcoming opportunities, you can visit:


Browse latest tenders

Quick Comparison: GeM vs CPP Portal vs SECI

FeatureGeMCPP PortalSECI
Full nameGovernment e-MarketplaceCentral Public Procurement PortalSolar Energy Corporation of India
URLgem.gov.ineprocure.gov.inseci.co.in
Owned byGovt. of India (100%)NIC, Dept. of ExpenditureNavratna CPSU under MNRE
Primary purposeEnd-to-end marketplace for goods & servicesSingle-window publishing of central govt. tendersRenewable energy tendering & implementation
Who can buyCentral, State, PSUs, autonomous bodiesAll Central Govt. bodies (mandatory)DISCOMs, govt. agencies via SECI
Who can sellAny registered seller (including MSMEs)Any eligible bidderRE developers, EPC contractors, OEMs
Tender typesDirect purchase, L1, bidding, reverse auctione-publishing + e-procurementRFS, NIT, RfP for solar, wind, hybrid, BESS
Best forStandard goods, services, MSME productsTracking PAN-India central govt. bidsRenewable energy developers & suppliers
Mandatory since2017 (for many categories)2012— (sector-specific)

Now let’s look at each one properly.

What is the GeM Portal?

The Government e-Marketplace (GeM) is India’s national online marketplace for government procurement. It launched in 2016 and was made mandatory for many procurement categories in 2017.

Think of GeM as the “Amazon for government buyers.” Central ministries, state governments, PSUs, and autonomous bodies can directly purchase goods and services from registered sellers, with built-in tools for e-bidding, reverse auctions, and demand aggregation.

What you’ll find on GeM:

  • Standard goods (stationery, IT hardware, vehicles, medical supplies)
  • Services (housekeeping, manpower, AMC, transport)
  • Large bid-based procurements with reverse auction
  • Custom bids for specialized products not in the regular catalogue

Best suited for: MSMEs, manufacturers, service providers, and traders who supply commonly procured goods or services. If you sell a product or service that any government office could need, GeM is non-negotiable.

Limitations to know:

  • Only government organisations can register as buyers private companies can’t procure through GeM
  • Heavy on commoditised categories; complex turnkey projects rarely run end-to-end on GeM
  • Catalogue management and product listing have a learning curve

What is the CPP Portal?

The Central Public Procurement Portal (CPPP or CPP Portal) at eprocure.gov.in is the older sibling. Built and run by the National Informatics Centre (NIC) under the Department of Expenditure, it’s been mandatory since 2012 for all Central Government Ministries, Departments, Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs), and Autonomous & Statutory Bodies to publish their tender enquiries here.

CPPP has two distinct modules:

  1. e-Publishing : where every Central Government tender notice, corrigendum, and award of contract gets published
  2. e-Procurement (GePNIC) : the actual bidding engine, with 48 instances integrated with 100+ organisations

What you’ll find on CPP Portal:

  • Active tenders across every central ministry and CPSE
  • High-value tenders, global tenders, and awarded tenders
  • Real-time tender data fetched from over 100 integrated systems
  • Detailed NIT documents, corrigenda, and award details

Best suited for: Contractors and bidders who work with central government departments, CPSEs, and large public sector clients infrastructure, defence (non-classified), railways, PSUs in oil & gas, power, telecom, etc.

Limitations to know:

  • The interface is functional, not friendly search filters are basic
  • You’ll see tenders, but historical analytics, competitor intelligence, and customised alerts are not its strength
  • State-level tenders are partially visible (depending on integration), but not their primary focus


Explore BESS tenders

What is the SECI Tender Portal?

Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) is a Navratna CPSU under the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy. It’s the single largest renewable energy implementing agency in India and has run roughly a quarter of the country’s utility-scale RE tendering capacity in recent years.

SECI tenders are not your everyday goods-and-services bids. They are large, structured, sector-specific instruments — typically tariff-based competitive bidding for solar PV, wind, hybrid, Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS), Firm and Dispatchable RE (FDRE), and pumped storage.

What you’ll find on SECI:

  • RFS (Request for Selection) for solar, wind, hybrid, and storage projects
  • EPC tenders for ground-mounted and rooftop solar plants
  • Specialised RfPs (e.g., RECAP cybersecurity portal for the RE sector, PMUs, manpower contracts)
  • Power trading and project management consultancy bids
  • Recent examples: 1,200 MW solar + 600 MW/3,600 MWh BESS, 700 MW Raghanesda solar, 125 MW/500 MWh standalone BESS in Odisha

Best suited for: RE developers (IPPs), EPC contractors, OEMs of solar modules/inverters / BESS, transmission consultants, and specialised service providers in the clean-energy space.

Limitations to know:

  • Sector-specific — useless if you’re not in renewables
  • Tenders often appear simultaneously on SECI’s site, CPPP, and a third-party bidding portal (TCIL, ISN-ETS) — easy to miss versions or corrigenda
  • Bid documents are dense; missing one annexure can disqualify you

So, Which Portal Should You Actually Track?

Here’s the uncomfortable truth most contractors learn the hard way:

You rarely get to track just one.

A solar EPC company has to monitor SECI and CPPP (because state DISCOM tenders sit there) and GeM (because government buyers procure inverters, cables, and O&M services there). A stationery supplier living on GeM will still want CPPP visibility for large CPSE bulk orders. A defence-adjacent contractor will track CPPP, defproc.gov.in, and the relevant PSU portals.

Here’s a rough rule of thumb:

  • Sell standardised goods or services? → GeM is your primary, CPPP is your secondary
  • Bid on infrastructure, EPC, large PSU contracts? → CPPP is your primary, GeM is your secondary, plus relevant state portals
  • In renewable energy? → SECI + CPPP + state RE portals + GeM (for ancillary procurements) — all four

Now multiply that by the number of state portals (Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat, UP each have their own e-procurement systems), PSU-specific portals (Defence, Indian Railways, NTPC, ONGC, Coal India), and you’re looking at 15–50+ websites to monitor for a single business.

That’s where the real problem starts.


Book a demo

The Hidden Cost of Manual Multi-Portal Tracking

Most businesses run tender tracking with one of two methods:

  1. A junior employee manually checks 8–15 portals every morning and misses corrigenda, addenda, and pre-bid meeting updates roughly 20–30% of the time
  2. A WhatsApp group or industry contacts fast for forwarding, but always reactive, never comprehensive

Here’s what that costs you:

  • Missed deadlines because a corrigendum extending a date got buried on page 4 of a portal
  • Wasted effort preparing for tenders where eligibility quietly changed
  • Lost context by the time you spot a SECI bid, you’ve lost two weeks of prep
  • No competitive intelligence you don’t know who else is bidding, who’s been winning, or at what price

A serious bidder doesn’t need more portals. They need one place that pulls from all of them, filtered to what their business can actually win.

How TenderKosh Fits Into This Picture

TenderKosh is built around a simple idea: stop treating GeM, CPP Portal, SECI, and every state and PSU portal as separate problems. Treat them as one stream of opportunity, filtered to your business.

What that looks like in practice:

  • Unified search across GeM, CPPP, SECI, state e-procurement portals, and major PSU sources — so you don’t lose tenders just because a buyer chose to publish on a less-known portal
  • Smart filtering by category, location, value, and authority finds only the tenders your business is actually eligible for
  • Real-time alerts on new tenders, corrigenda, and addenda so you never miss a date change buried inside a 200-page document
  • Tender history and award data see who has been winning similar tenders, at what price, and how often
  • MSME-friendly workflows, no team of analysts required to make sense of bid documents

Instead of asking “which portal should I track?”, you ask the better question: “Which tenders, across every portal, can my business win this month?

That’s the shift TenderKosh is built for.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is GeM the same as the CPP Portal?

No. GeM is a transactional marketplace where government buyers can directly purchase goods and services. The CPP Portal is primarily a publishing and e-procurement platform for tender notices and bid submissions across central government bodies. They are integrated bids on CPPP get a GeM-generated GeMARPTS ID but they serve different functions.

Are SECI tenders only for big companies?

No. While SECI’s flagship RFS tenders for utility-scale solar and wind are dominated by large IPPs, SECI also issues smaller rooftop solar tenders under RESCO mode, EPC packages, and service contracts that MSME-scale developers and contractors can bid on.

Do I need separate registrations for GeM, CPPP, and SECI?

Yes. Each portal has its own registration and authentication requirements. GeM requires seller onboarding with a catalogue listing. CPPP needs bidder enrolment with a Digital Signature Certificate (DSC). SECI tenders are often published on third-party bidding portals (like TCIL or ISN-ETS) which need their own registration.

Are tenders on GeM or CPPP free to access?

Yes, viewing and downloading tender documents on both GeM and the CPP Portal is generally free. Some specific tenders may have a tender fee or processing fee at the time of submission, mentioned in the NIT.

How does TenderKosh access these tenders if they’re already on government portals?

TenderKosh aggregates publicly published tender notices from official government sources and structures them into a single, searchable, alert-driven platform. The data is from official portals; the value is in unification, filtering, and intelligence on top of it.

The Bottom Line

GeM, CPP Portal, and SECI aren’t competing portals — they’re three different windows into how the Indian government procures. Each one matters for different business categories, and each one is impossible to ignore if you’re serious about government tenders.

But asking “which one should I track?” is the wrong frame. The businesses winning consistently in 2026 are the ones tracking all the portals their business touches — without spending three hours a day doing it.

That’s the problem TenderKosh exists to solve. One platform, every relevant tender, filtered to what you can actually win.

Have a question about a specific portal or sector? Drop it in the comments — we read every one and turn the best ones into future guides.

Need Assistance?

For more details or support, feel free to contact our team.
Contact Tender Kosh

Scroll to Top