2026 GSAR Overhaul Timeline Driving Vendor Impact 2026
Explore how the 2026 GSAR Overhaul reshapes MAS/FSS procurement, reporting migration to SAM.gov, and vendor readiness under the RGO framework.
2026 GSAR Overhaul Timeline Driving Vendor Impact in Federal Procurement
2026 marks a pivotal year for the GSAR Overhaul (RGO), GSA's modernization effort to align the General Services Administration Acquisition Regulation with the FAR Overhaul (RFO) and EO 14275-driven reforms. In 2025–2026, the government advanced class deviations, including RFO-2025-FSS-GSAR 538, to migrate FSS/MAS procedures into GSAR, signaling a broader transition of procurement workflows into GSAR. Vendors should anticipate continued policy updates, the decommissioning of legacy reporting systems like eSRS, and the wind-down of old subcontracting reporting processes as SAM.gov expands its functionality in 2026, with guidance published through Acquisition.gov and GSA policy notices.
What Are GSAR Overhaul (RGO)?
Key 2026 Changes Under RGO and GSAR 538
In 2026, several changes are converging: (a) the FSS/MAS ordering procedures are codified under GSAR subpart 538 as part of the FAR Overhaul alignment; (b) active class deviations like RFO-2025-FSS-GSAR 538 (effective around November 3, 2025) continue to be refined and implemented; (c) the decommissioning and consolidation of legacy reporting systems—eSRS transitioning to SAM.gov—advances in 2026; (d) regulatory signals from FR notices and EO 14275 confirm the broader reform direction; (e) procurement forecasting remains a critical planning tool to map MAS/FSS opportunities in this new framework.
- Shift of FSS/MAS ordering procedures into GSAR 538 under RFO alignment (watch RFO-2025-FSS-GSAR 538 for effective dates) - Source 10
- eSRS decommissioning in early 2026 with SAM.gov subcontracting reporting expansion in Q2 FY 2026 (data migration readiness a must) - Sources 12, 13, 22
- Forecast of Contracting Opportunities remains the leading planning tool for MAS/FSS opportunities under the revised GSAR framework (last updated Jan 24, 2025) - Sources 2, 21
- SAM.gov data migration readiness: begin data collection and validation now to support 2026 transition - Sources 12, 18
How GSAR Overhaul Works
What This Means for Government Contractors
Pro Tip
Begin SAM.gov registration and data migration readiness in 2025; map MAS/FSS opportunities to GSAR 538 workflows; train proposal teams on new deviation language.
| Aspect | 2026 Status |
|---|---|
| FSS/MAS Ordering | Migrated to GSAR 538 as part of RFO alignment (Nov 2025) |
| eSRS Migration | Decommissioning planned for early 2026; SAM.gov transition in 2026 |
| Regulatory Basis | EO 14275, M-25-26, RFO framework |
| Forecast Tool | Last updated 2025-01-24; planning reference for MAS/FSS |
| MAS/FSS Guidance | Shifted into GSAR 538 and ongoing deviations |
Key Takeaways for Government Contractors
- 2026 marks continued GSAR absorption of MAS/FSS; ensure internal policies reflect GSAR 538 flow
- eSRS decommissioning and SAM.gov subcontracting reporting expand in 2026; plan data migration
- Use Forecast of Contracting Opportunities for MAS/FSS planning under the updated framework
- Train teams on RGO/RFO language and update SOPs to GSAR-based processes
- Begin SAM.gov registration and data migration readiness early (2025–Q2 2026)
Ready to Win Government Contracts?
Join thousands of businesses using GovContractFinder to discover and win federal opportunities.
Related Articles
Revolutionary FAR Overhaul (RFO) Reshapes Procurement
A comprehensive look at the Revolutionary FAR Overhaul (RFO): how parts are rewritten, why plain language matters, and implications for vendors in 2025.
Read more →FAR Overhaul Unveils New Part 19 Deviation Model (2025)
A comprehensive look at the FAR Overhaul’s Part 19 deviation model, the Nov 3, 2025 class deviation, and practical guidance for agencies and small businesses navigating the transition.
Read more →2026 FAR Overhaul: Practical Implications for Contractors
A 2026 guide to the Revolutionary FAR Overhaul (RFO) and its practical impact on contractors—from past performance lifecycle to government-wide contracts and deviations.
Read more →