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Request for Quotation (RFQ), Explained
· 7 min read
A request for quotation (RFQ) is a sourcing document that asks several suppliers to price the same clearly-specified requirement — item, quantity, delivery and commercial terms — so their bids are directly comparable. It is used when requirements are well defined and price is the main variable, giving buyers genuine competitive leverage.
What is a request for quotation?
A request for quotation (RFQ) is a formal request sent to multiple suppliers asking them to quote a price against a precise, identical specification. Because every supplier quotes on the same basis, the responses can be compared like for like.
An RFQ is the right tool when you already know exactly what you need and the main thing you want suppliers to compete on is price and terms. It is the workhorse of competitive sourcing for defined goods and services.
Who uses RFQs?
Buyers and procurement teams issue RFQs whenever they need a competitive, defensible price for a defined requirement — a bulk order, a new recurring item, or a one-off purchase large enough to justify shopping the market.
It is especially valuable for organisations that need an audit trail: an RFQ produces documented, comparable bids that show due diligence and support a fair award decision.
Why RFQs matter
Without competitive quotation, buyers default to whoever is convenient — forfeiting market pricing and any evidence that the price is fair. A good RFQ creates competitive tension, which is the single biggest driver of a fair market price.
The quality of an RFQ decides the quality of the outcome. A vague request produces incomparable bids and weeks of clarification; a precise one turns a scatter of quotes into a clean, side-by-side decision with real leverage.
How it works
1. Specify the requirement
State exactly what you need: the item (make/model or full technical spec), the quantity, the delivery location and required date, and the commercial terms you expect — payment terms, warranty and how long the quote must stay valid.
2. Invite and collect bids
Send the same structured request to enough qualified suppliers to create genuine competition. Digital RFQ tools issue one request to many verified suppliers at once and collect the responses in a comparable format.
3. Compare and award
Review the bids side by side on price and terms, clarify only where needed, and award to the best value. The winning quote can convert straight into a purchase order, and for recurring needs its price can become catalog contract pricing so future buying skips the RFQ entirely.
Benefits
- Directly comparable bids from a single clear specification.
- Competitive tension that drives a fair market price.
- A documented audit trail supporting a defensible award.
- Faster sourcing when digital RFQ replaces email back-and-forth.
- A winning quote that can convert straight into an order.
Running an RFQ that actually creates competition
A request for quotation only works if it produces comparable bids from suppliers who want to win. Both conditions are easy to break: a vague specification yields quotes you cannot line up against each other, and a lazy invite list yields token responses from suppliers who assume the outcome is decided. The craft of the RFQ is engineering genuine, like-for-like competition.
RFQ, RFP or RFI — choosing the right instrument
The three requests are not interchangeable. Using the wrong one wastes everyone's time and produces bids you cannot fairly compare.
| Instrument | Use it when | You already know | You are asking for |
|---|---|---|---|
| RFI (information) | Exploring an unfamiliar market | Little — you are learning | Capabilities and background |
| RFQ (quotation) | The spec is clear and fixed | Exactly what you need | Price and terms for that spec |
| RFP (proposal) | The problem is clear, the solution is not | The outcome, not the method | Proposed approaches and pricing |
The rule of thumb: RFQ when you can specify the item down to the make, model or full technical detail; RFP when you need suppliers to design the solution. The full comparison, with examples, is in RFQ vs RFP.
The anatomy of a bid-ready RFQ
An RFQ that returns clean, comparable bids always contains the same building blocks. Omit one and you invite the variation that makes comparison impossible.
| Element | Why it matters | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Precise specification | Bids are only comparable if they price the same thing | "Office chairs" instead of a model or spec |
| Quantity and units | Price often depends on volume | Leaving quantity open |
| Delivery location & date | Freight and lead time affect true cost | Ignoring delivery terms |
| Commercial terms | Payment, warranty, validity shape the real deal | Comparing on headline price alone |
| Quote validity period | Locks the price long enough to decide | No deadline, so quotes expire mid-decision |
| Response format | Structured responses compare cleanly | Free-text emails that must be re-keyed |
A worked example: comparing on total cost, not headline price
Three suppliers quote for the same 500-unit order. The headline prices tempt you toward Supplier A — but the total landed cost tells a different story.
| Supplier A | Supplier B | Supplier C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unit price | Lowest | Middle | Highest |
| Delivery | Charged extra | Included | Included |
| Payment terms | Prepay | 30 days | 30 days |
| Lead time | Longest | Short | Shortest |
| Best total value | No | Often yes | If speed is critical |
The lesson of nearly every real RFQ: the lowest unit price is frequently not the best deal once freight, terms and lead time are counted. A structured RFQ forces these factors onto the table so the award decision is made on total value, not the number in the biggest font.
Why the invite list decides the outcome
Competition is a function of who you ask. Invite too few suppliers, or only incumbents, and you get comfortable pricing. The discipline that separates strong RFQs from weak ones:
- Invite enough qualified suppliers to create real tension — a handful of genuine contenders, not one incumbent and two also-rans.
- Qualify before you invite. Every bidder should be capable of delivering, so the award can go to the best price with confidence. This is where the RFQ process meets supplier management.
- Give everyone the same information at the same time. Fairness is not only good ethics; it is what makes the bids comparable and defensible in an audit.
Digital RFQ tools help on all three fronts: they issue one structured request to many verified suppliers at once and collect responses in a single comparable view, removing the manual copy-and-paste that limits how many suppliers a buyer can realistically approach.
From winning quote to lasting price
The RFQ is not the end of the story. A one-off award captures a good price once; the real prize is turning a recurring RFQ result into standing catalog pricing so future buying skips the event entirely. This is the bridge from RFQ into the wider source-to-pay loop and, ultimately, into everyday procure-to-pay. For recurring needs, ask whether this quotation should become a contract — the strategic sourcing guide covers when to make that leap.
A realistic RFQ timeline
An RFQ is not instant, and pretending it is leads to rushed specs and thin competition. Planning the calendar backwards from when you need the goods keeps the process honest.
| Step | Typical duration | What must happen |
|---|---|---|
| Prepare the specification | 1–3 days | Nail the item, quantity, terms and delivery |
| Suppliers respond | 5–10 days | Give qualified bidders time to quote seriously |
| Compare and clarify | 1–3 days | Line bids up on total value; ask only real questions |
| Award and convert to PO | 1–2 days | Notify the winner; issue the purchase order |
Compressing the response window is the most common self-inflicted wound: too little time and strong suppliers decline, leaving you with a weaker field. Digital RFQ tools shorten the administrative parts of this timeline — issuing and collecting — without squeezing the response window that competition depends on.
Keeping it fair and auditable
Public-sector and many regulated buyers must document that an award was fair and competitive. Even where you are not obliged to, the same hygiene pays off: retain the specification, the invite list, every bid and the award rationale. Professional standards bodies such as CIPS treat this transparency as a hallmark of ethical procurement, and it is exactly the trail that protects you if a losing bidder — or an auditor — ever asks why you awarded as you did.
Further reading
- CIPS — Ethical and transparent sourcing practice
- Lapasar Mall — RFQ vs RFP · Strategic sourcing guide · Request quotes on Lapasar
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between an RFQ, an RFP and an RFI?
An RFI (request for information) gathers general market or supplier information. An RFQ (request for quotation) asks for pricing against a defined specification and is used when requirements are clear. An RFP (request for proposal) is used for complex needs where you want suppliers to propose a solution, not just a price.
How many suppliers should I include in an RFQ?
Enough to create genuine competition and comparison — commonly three or more qualified suppliers. Digital RFQ tools make it easy to invite a wider pool of verified suppliers without extra administrative effort.
When should I use catalog pricing instead of an RFQ?
For recurring, well-understood items, negotiated catalog contract pricing is faster and more consistent than repeated RFQs. Reserve RFQs for new requirements, large one-off purchases, or when you want to test the market.
How Lapasar Mall RFQ & sourcing delivers this
Lapasar Mall lets buyers issue one structured RFQ to verified suppliers, collect comparable bids in one place, and convert the winning quote directly into an order or catalog contract price.
- One RFQ issued to multiple verified suppliers
- Comparable bids collected in a single view
- Reverse-auction sourcing for competitive tension
- Winning quote converts straight into a purchase order
- Recurring wins captured as catalog contract pricing
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Related concepts
- Source-to-Pay (S2P) — The widest procurement cycle — sourcing and supplier selection on top of the operational procure-to-pay buying process.
- Supplier Management — Onboarding, qualifying, evaluating and governing the suppliers a business relies on — turning a scattered vendor list into a managed supply base.
- Procure-to-Pay (P2P) — The end-to-end operational buying cycle — from requisition and approval to purchase order, receipt, invoice matching and payment.
More in Strategic Sourcing
- Strategic Sourcing
- Request for Proposal (RFP)
- Request for Information (RFI)
- E-Sourcing
- Reverse Auction
- Contract Management
- Supplier Negotiation
- Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)
Key terms
- Request for Quotation (RFQ) — A sourcing document that asks multiple suppliers to price the same clearly-specified requirement so their bids are directly comparable.
- Request for Proposal (RFP) — A sourcing document inviting suppliers to propose how they would meet a requirement, evaluated on approach and value — not price alone.
- Sourcing — The upstream procurement activity of finding, evaluating and selecting the suppliers a business will buy from.
Browse the full procurement glossary
Related reading
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