Glossary

IDV

An IDV is a contract vehicle that allows agencies to place orders for supplies or services as needs arise, without committing to a fixed quantity or delivery schedule at award.

Also known as

indefinite delivery vehicle

Definition

In U.S. federal procurement, an Indefinite Delivery Vehicle (IDV) is a broad contract mechanism that enables agencies to acquire goods or services over a set period, typically through subsequent orders. IDVs include types such as Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contracts, Governmentwide Acquisition Contracts (GWACs), and Blanket Purchase Agreements (BPAs). They do not specify exact quantities or delivery times at the outset, offering flexibility for recurring or uncertain requirements. Orders issued under an IDV are called task or delivery orders.

Why it matters

IDVs are central to federal acquisition strategy because they streamline the procurement process for recurring needs and can speed up ordering. Analysts use IDV data to understand agency buying patterns, vendor relationships, and contract vehicles' market share. Properly identifying IDVs is crucial for accurate spend analysis, forecasting, and competitive intelligence. Misinterpreting IDVs can lead to double-counting or misunderstanding the scope of federal contract obligations.

How it appears in FPDS

In FPDS, IDVs are recorded as parent records with unique PIID numbers, and their associated orders are linked as child transactions. Users often filter or group by 'IDV Type' or 'IDV PIID' to analyze contract vehicle usage, track obligations, or distinguish between base vehicles and orders. IDV records include fields indicating the type of vehicle and its relationship to subsequent orders.

Common misunderstanding

A common misconception is that IDVs themselves represent finalized purchases or obligations, when in fact, most spending occurs through the individual orders placed under the IDV. Users sometimes confuse the parent IDV record with the actual delivery or task orders, leading to errors in spend analysis.

Example

For example, the General Services Administration may award an IDIQ contract (a type of IDV) to several vendors for IT services. Agencies then issue specific task orders under this IDV as needs arise, each with its own funding and requirements.

Use in FPDS Query

Researchers use IDV fields in FPDS queries to isolate all orders under a specific contract vehicle, analyze total spend through a particular IDV, or identify which vendors hold major IDVs. Filtering by IDV type helps distinguish between BPAs, GWACs, and other contract vehicles.

Related search intent

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Related terms

Updated: Mar 17, 2026