Debarment

Exclusion of a contractor from government contracting for a specified period due to misconduct.

Definition

Debarment is an administrative action that excludes a contractor, individual, or organization from receiving federal contracts and participating in government-approved subcontracts for a specified period, typically not exceeding three years. Debarment is imposed when a contractor has engaged in conduct demonstrating lack of business integrity or honesty, including conviction of fraud, antitrust violations, bribery, making false statements, tax evasion, or willful failure to perform contracts. The debarment process includes notice to the contractor, opportunity to respond, and decision by a debarring official. Debarred parties are listed in SAM exclusions and the action applies government-wide. Debarment is a serious remedy intended to protect the government, not punish contractors, and is distinct from contractual remedies.

Also Known As

  • Contractor Debarment
  • Exclusion
  • Blacklisting

Examples

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Believing debarment only affects the specific contract where violation occurred
  • Not understanding that individual employees can also be debarred
  • Failing to disclose debarment of affiliates in representations

Who Should Know This Term

Contractors, compliance officers, legal counsel, senior executives

Official Source

FAR Subpart 9.4