Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE III— - FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT › Chapter CHAPTER 35— - ACCOUNTING AND COLLECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - PROCUREMENT PROTEST SYSTEM › § 3553
The Comptroller General must decide protests sent under the rules in section 3555. Within one day of getting a protest, the Comptroller General tells the Federal agency involved. That agency must send a full report and all related documents to the Comptroller General within 30 days unless the Comptroller General in writing allows more time and explains why, or says the case is for the special express option and then the agency has 20 days. The agency does not need to send a report if the Comptroller General tells it the protest was dismissed under section 3554(a)(4). A contract generally cannot be awarded after the agency is told about a protest and while the protest is open. The official in charge can still allow an award if they write that urgent and compelling circumstances affecting U.S. interests prevent waiting, and they tell the Comptroller General; that finding can be made only if the award is likely within 30 days. A contractor may start work during the short post-award waiting period unless the contracting officer withholds permission because a protest is likely and starting work is not in the U.S. interest. If a protest arrives during that period, the officer must stop or block performance while the protest is pending. The head official may allow work to continue if they write that it is in the U.S. interest or is urgent, and they notify the Comptroller General. The waiting period runs from award until the later of 10 days after award or 5 days after a requested debriefing date. For Department of Defense buys, the 5-day clock starts when the government gives written answers to certain questions under 10 U.S.C. 3304(c)(1)(G). The head official cannot delegate these decision powers. Agencies must give interested parties relevant documents on the Comptroller General’s schedule if doing so won’t give an unfair advantage and is allowed by law. The Comptroller General can order protective terms to shield trade secrets and other sensitive commercial information, but that does not let agencies withhold information from Congress or executive agencies. For public‑private competitions, a person who represents a majority of the agency employees doing the work may join the protest.
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Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 3553
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73