Glossary
PIID
A PIID is a unique code assigned to each federal contract, order, or modification for identification and tracking purposes.
Also known as
Definition
The Procurement Instrument Identifier (PIID) is a standardized alphanumeric code used by federal agencies to uniquely identify every contract, task order, delivery order, or modification. The PIID structure is governed by federal regulations to ensure consistency across agencies. It serves as the primary reference number for all procurement actions and is essential for linking related documents and transactions. The PIID remains constant for the life of a procurement instrument, even as modifications are issued.
Why it matters
Accurate use of the PIID is critical for tracking the lifecycle of federal contracts, ensuring data integrity, and enabling transparent reporting. Analysts rely on PIIDs to connect base awards with subsequent modifications or task orders, facilitating comprehensive spend analysis and compliance reviews. Without consistent PIID usage, it becomes difficult to aggregate contract data or analyze trends across agencies and time periods.
How it appears in FPDS
In FPDS, the PIID appears as a key data field for each contract action, typically labeled as 'PIID' or 'Contract Number.' It is used to group related records, such as modifications under a single base contract, and is a common filter or join field in FPDS queries and reports.
Common misunderstanding
A common misunderstanding is assuming that each modification or order receives a completely new PIID; in reality, modifications append to the original PIID, preserving the relationship to the base contract. Users may also confuse the PIID with agency-specific internal numbers or with solicitation identifiers.
Example
For a contract awarded by the Department of Defense, the PIID might be 'W912HQ23C0001.' All modifications to this contract would use the same base PIID with a modification suffix, such as 'W912HQ23C0001-P00001.'
Use in FPDS Query
Researchers often use the PIID to retrieve all actions associated with a specific contract, to track modifications, or to aggregate total obligations for a procurement instrument. Filtering by PIID allows for precise analysis of contract history and performance.
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Related terms
Updated: Mar 17, 2026