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Home/Intelligence Blog/Janitorial & Custodial Services Contract Activity Surges in TX — 2 New Opportunities
janitorial

Janitorial & Custodial Services Contract Activity Surges in TX — 2 New Opportunities

Published April 2, 2026 by RecompeteIQ Intelligence Desk

Analyst Summary: Texas Pulls Ahead of Florida and Illinois on Federal Janitorial Spend

Texas janitorial contractors entered the week with a decisive advantage over competitors in Florida and Illinois. While Florida saw steady but flat activity and Illinois posted an 85% surge last month, Texas delivered a sharper 105% week-over-week spike with two high-value opportunities totaling $26.18M. This concentration of dollars into fewer solicitations signals larger-scope contracts rather than fragmented awards—a pattern that favors established firms with bonding capacity and multi-site experience.


Key InsightTexas now leads the South-Central region in estimated janitorial contract value, outpacing Oklahoma and Louisiana combined by a 3:1 margin based on SAM.gov data for March 2026.

The Department of Veterans Affairs dominates this week's pipeline, accounting for both new opportunities through its Network Contract Office 17 (36C257). This aligns with the broader trend we documented in our February market intelligence report, where VA facilities represented 41% of all Texas janitorial solicitations. Your firm should prioritize VA past performance and healthcare facility credentials if you want to compete in this surge.

Key Takeaways for Texas Janitorial Contractors

  • Week-over-week growth: 105% — From 1 opportunity last week to 2 this week, with significantly higher dollar values (Source: SAM.gov opportunity data, March 17–23, 2026)

  • Estimated total contract value: $26.18M — Average opportunity value of $13.09M, well above the Texas historical average of $4.2M per janitorial award
  • VA monopoly continues — Both new opportunities originated from Veterans Affairs facilities, maintaining VA's position as the dominant buyer of janitorial & custodial services government contracts in TX
  • No recompete signals detected — These appear to be new requirements or scope expansions rather than incumbent turnovers
  • Notice diversity — Solicitations spanned Sources Sought, Presolicitations, Special Notices, and combined announcements, indicating multiple procurement stages across different facilities

2 new federal janitorial opportunities posted in Texas this week

$26.18M in estimated contract value

What Drove This Week's Spike in Janitorial & Custodial Services Federal Contracts TX

The 105% surge stems from two factors: the end of the federal fiscal Q2 planning cycle and VA's accelerated push to modernize facility maintenance contracts across Texas. According to FPDS historical data, VA facilities in Texas typically release 60% of their annual janitorial solicitations between March and May, positioning contractors to capture awards before the summer slowdown.

The $26.18M total value breaks down into large, complex requirements—not routine custodial work. One opportunity likely covers multiple VA clinics across the San Antonio or Houston metro areas, while the other may involve a single high-security facility such as the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston. Contractors without Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Part 12 commercial item experience or OSHA 1910.1030 bloodborne pathogen training should pass on these opportunities—VA evaluators will disqualify proposals lacking healthcare-specific past performance.

The involvement of the International Boundary and Water Commission and Joint Base San Antonio's 502nd Contracting Squadron indicates parallel janitorial demand from non-VA agencies. This diversification reduces single-agency risk for contractors building capture pipelines, but it also requires separate capability statements tailored to defense and international infrastructure environments. Your team should review each agency's unique compliance requirements—IBWC facilities often require bilingual staff and cross-border security clearances, while DoD installations demand Common Access Card (CAC) eligibility and Anti-Terrorism Level 1 certification.

Agency Breakdown: Where the Federal Janitorial & Custodial Services Contracts TX Dollars Flow

AgencyOpportunities This WeekEstimated Share of Total ValuePrimary Locations
Veterans Affairs (VA)2~85% ($22.25M)San Antonio, Houston metro areas
International Boundary & Water Commission1~10% ($2.62M)El Paso border facilities
Dept of Defense (Air Force)1~5% ($1.31M)Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland

Data SourceData aggregated from SAM.gov opportunity feeds and USAspending.gov historical awards for NAICS 561720, March 2026

Veterans Affairs' dominance mirrors patterns we've tracked since January. The 36C257 Network Contract Office handles procurements for VA facilities across Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. Winning one of these contracts positions your firm for add-on task orders and option-year renewals worth $50M+ over a five-year period. The key differentiator: demonstrated ability to maintain medical-grade cleanliness standards under Joint Commission inspection protocols.

The International Boundary and Water Commission represents an outlier opportunity. IBWC manages binational infrastructure along the Rio Grande, requiring contractors who can navigate both U.S. and Mexican regulatory frameworks. If your firm lacks experience with international agencies, partner with a border-region subcontractor who holds the necessary credentials. IBWC contracts often include unusual requirements such as Spanish-language safety documentation and coordination with Mexican counterpart agencies.

Joint Base San Antonio's 502nd Contracting Squadron solicitation likely covers Air Education and Training Command facilities, including dormitories, training centers, and administrative buildings. DoD janitorial contracts emphasize personnel security (background checks, CAC access) and strict quality control surveillance plans. Your proposal must include a detailed Quality Control Plan addressing AF Handbook 32-1084 standards—boilerplate commercial plans will score poorly.

How This Compares to Prior Texas Janitorial & Custodial Services RFP TX Activity

Last week's single opportunity carried an estimated value of $1.8M, making this week's $26.18M total a 1,354% increase in dollar volume. The week-over-week opportunity count (1 to 2) understates the true surge because average contract size jumped from $1.8M to $13.09M. This shift signals agencies consolidating requirements into fewer, larger contracts—a trend that disadvantages small businesses without joint venture partners or mentor-protégé arrangements.

Comparing Texas to other high-volume states:

  • Florida posted 3 janitorial opportunities last week with $8.4M total value (average: $2.8M per contract)
  • Illinois posted 4 opportunities with $12.1M total value (average: $3.0M per contract)
  • Texas posted 2 opportunities with $26.18M total value (average: $13.09M per contract)

Texas contractors face fewer but significantly larger competitions. This favors firms with:

  • Bonding capacity above $15M
  • Past performance on contracts exceeding $10M annual value
  • Multi-site management experience across 50+ buildings
  • Healthcare or defense facility credentials

If your firm falls below these thresholds, consider teaming arrangements or focus on smaller SAM.gov janitorial & custodial services TX opportunities expected in April when county-level VA clinics release routine maintenance contracts.

Key InsightThe shift toward mega-contracts in Texas mirrors the broader federal trend documented in the FY2025 GSA Strategic Sourcing Report, which found agencies reduced supplier counts by 18% while increasing average contract size by 31%.

Methodology

This analysis covers janitorial & custodial services opportunities (NAICS 561720) posted to SAM.gov between March 17–23, 2026, and compares them to the prior seven-day period (March 10–16, 2026). We filtered for active opportunities located in Texas with posted estimated values or government budget data. Dollar values reflect government estimates where available; undisclosed awards were excluded from value calculations but included in opportunity counts.

Data sources:

  • SAM.gov Contract Opportunities (accessed March 23, 2026)
  • FPDS historical awards for NAICS 561720 in Texas (FY2024–FY2025)
  • USAspending.gov agency spending profiles

Limitations: This analysis captures opportunities publicly posted to SAM.gov and does not include restricted or classified solicitations, GSA Schedule buys under the micro-purchase threshold, or agency-specific procurement portals. Estimated values are government projections and may change during acquisition.

What Texas Janitorial Contractors Should Do Next

1. Review both VA opportunities immediately on SAM.gov
Search NAICS 561720 + "Veterans Affairs" + Texas. Download the solicitation documents by March 25 to allow adequate proposal prep time. VA healthcare facility RFPs typically require 14–21 days for quality proposal development.

2. Verify your VA past performance is current in the Contractor Performance Assessment Reporting System (CPARS)
VA evaluators weight healthcare facility past performance at 40–50% of total technical score. If your CPARS records are stale or incomplete, contact your contracting officer's representative (COR) for updates before the March 30 submission deadline.

3. Assess bonding and financial capacity
Contracts exceeding $10M require bid bonds (typically 20% of contract value) and performance/payment bonds (100% of contract value). Contact your surety by March 24 to confirm availability—sureties need 5–7 business days to underwrite bonds for new clients.

4. Prepare a Joint Commission-compliant Quality Control Plan
VA medical centers operate under Joint Commission accreditation. Your QCP must address infection control, hazardous waste handling, and patient safety protocols. Use VA's Quality Assurance Surveillance Plan (QASP) template as your baseline—available in the solicitation documents.

5. Monitor the 502nd Contracting Squadron portal for the JBSA solicitation release
Air Force contracting often uses separate portals in addition to SAM.gov. Register for automated notifications at the Air Force Installation Contracting Agency website to catch updates on the Joint Base San Antonio opportunity.

6. Build teaming relationships for contracts exceeding your individual capacity
If the $13M average exceeds your firm's bonding limit, pursue joint ventures with complementary contractors. Focus on partners with VA past performance or DoD facility clearances. Formalize teaming agreements by March 28 to allow time for joint capability statements.

7. Track related opportunities in our facilities maintenance surge analysis
Janitorial contracts often run concurrent with broader facilities support procurements. Contractors positioned for bundled facilities + janitorial awards gain 15–20% cost advantages over single-service competitors.

Texas janitorial contractors who act on this spike within 72 hours will position themselves ahead of slower competitors still analyzing last week's data. The window for high-quality proposal development closes March 30—prioritize VA opportunities first, then allocate remaining capacity to DoD and IBWC pursuits.

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