How to Find RFPs and Government Contracts with Google Dorks

By the getdork team — Published June 12, 2026

Government procurement documents — RFPs, RFQs, solicitations, sources-sought notices — are public records. Federal agencies publish active opportunities on SAM.gov. State and local governments post them as PDFs on their .gov domains. Google's filetype:pdf and site:.gov operators let you search across all of these simultaneously, filtering by service category and year to surface solicitations that match what you sell. This guide covers both the dork search workflow and how to use SAM.gov for federal opportunities.
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The procurement landscape: federal, state, and local

Government contracting operates at three levels, each with its own publication channels:

Level Primary source Google dork approach
Federal SAM.gov (official portal for all federal solicitations) site:.gov filetype:pdf "request for proposal" + agency filter
State State procurement office portal (varies by state) site:tn.gov filetype:pdf "solicitation" (replace tn with your state)
Local (county/city) Municipality procurement page site:cityofmemphis.org filetype:pdf "request for proposal"

Dork searches are most valuable for state and local opportunities, where no single aggregation portal exists. For federal contracting, SAM.gov is the authoritative source and should be your first check — but dorks are useful for finding published RFP PDFs from agencies that post them on their own sites before or alongside SAM.gov.

Dork search workflow (6 steps)

  1. Identify which government level you are targeting. Federal, state, or local each has a different domain pattern and procurement culture. Start with the level most relevant to your business size and certifications.
  2. Start with the broad federal dork. filetype:pdf "request for proposal" site:.gov 2026 This returns current-year RFP PDFs across all US government domains. Use it to see what volume of results exists for your category before refining.
  3. Add your service category. Wrap the category phrase in quotes: filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "managed services" site:.gov 2026 Common categories: "information technology", "cybersecurity", "facilities management", "janitorial services", "professional services", "medical equipment".
  4. Target a specific agency domain. Replace site:.gov with a specific domain to focus on one agency's published documents: filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "IT services" site:hhs.gov. Find agency domains by searching Google for the agency name and ".gov".
  5. Use inurl: to target procurement-specific paths. Many agencies publish RFPs in a dedicated procurement or purchasing section: filetype:pdf inurl:procurement site:cityofmemphis.org. Try also: inurl:purchasing, inurl:bids, inurl:rfp.
  6. Verify currency before investing time. Google's index may include old RFPs. Click through to the source page, find the due date on the document, and confirm the solicitation is still open before spending hours on a proposal.

Copy-paste query examples

Federal-level RFPs by category

# IT managed services RFPs from federal agencies
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "managed services" site:.gov 2026

# Cybersecurity RFPs — federal level
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "cybersecurity" site:.gov 2026

# Professional services and consulting solicitations
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "professional services" site:.gov 2026

# Technology hardware procurement
filetype:pdf "solicitation" "hardware" "workstation" site:.gov 2026

State-level RFPs

# Tennessee state government RFPs
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" site:tn.gov 2026

# Any state: replace tn with your two-letter state abbreviation
filetype:pdf "solicitation" site:ca.gov 2026

# State IT contracts specifically
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" "information technology" site:tn.gov

Local and municipal RFPs

# Memphis city government RFPs
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" site:memphistn.gov 2026

# County-level: search by county domain
filetype:pdf "solicitation" site:shelbycountytn.gov

# School district and public institution procurement
filetype:pdf "request for proposal" site:scsk12.org 2026

Procurement pages by URL pattern

# Agency procurement sections
filetype:pdf inurl:procurement site:cityofmemphis.org

# Bid portals
filetype:pdf inurl:bids site:tn.gov

# RFP-labeled URL paths
filetype:pdf inurl:rfp site:.gov 2026

SAM.gov for federal opportunities

For federal contracting, SAM.gov (sam.gov) is the single authoritative source. All federal agencies are required to post active solicitations above the simplified acquisition threshold ($250,000 as of 2026) on SAM.gov. Key SAM.gov features:

Google dork searches and SAM.gov are complementary. Use SAM.gov for active federal monitoring; use dorks to discover state and local RFPs and to find published PDFs from federal agencies that provide more context than the SAM.gov abstract alone.

Qualifying an RFP before responding

Not every RFP is worth pursuing. A few quick qualification checks before investing time in a proposal:

Build filetype: dork queries for RFP hunting in seconds.
Use getdork to set the domain, file type, and keyword filters — it assembles the operator string. Free to generate; Pro to run results in-app with titles, URLs, and snippets.

Start free at getdork.com →

Frequently asked questions

What is the official source for federal RFPs and contracts?

SAM.gov (System for Award Management) is the official portal for all US federal procurement opportunities. It covers all active solicitations above the simplified acquisition threshold from every federal agency. Registration on SAM.gov is free and required to bid on federal contracts. Google dork searches complement SAM.gov by surfacing state and local RFPs, and by finding published PDF documents from agencies with additional context beyond the SAM.gov abstract.

What is the difference between an RFP, RFQ, and RFI?

An RFP (Request for Proposal) asks vendors for a detailed proposal including methodology and pricing; evaluation is based on best value, not just cost. An RFQ (Request for Quotation) asks for a price on a defined scope; selection is typically lowest qualified price. An RFI (Request for Information) is a pre-solicitation market research document — it does not result in a direct award but signals a future procurement is being planned. Responding to an RFI helps you position for the eventual RFP.

Can small businesses compete for government contracts?

Yes. The federal government has statutory small business contracting goals, and many solicitations are set aside exclusively for small businesses. SAM.gov allows filtering by set-aside type. State and local governments similarly have small business programs. SBA certifications (8(a), WOSB, HUBZone, SDVOSB) unlock additional set-aside competitions.

How do I find state and local government RFPs?

Use site:[state].gov filetype:pdf "request for proposal" — for example, site:tn.gov for Tennessee. Many states also run dedicated procurement portals. For local municipalities, find their .gov domain (Google Maps or the city website) and dork it directly: site:memphistn.gov filetype:pdf "solicitation".

How do I know if a found RFP is still open?

The due date is usually on the cover page or in the first section of the PDF. Google may index old documents, so always visit the source URL and confirm the page is live and the solicitation is current. For federal RFPs, cross-reference on SAM.gov by the solicitation number to see current status.

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