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Federal contracting · answer

What is the difference between suspension and debarment?

Suspension is a temporary exclusion pending an investigation or legal proceeding, usually up to 12 months. Debarment is an exclusion for a fixed term, generally up to three years. Both bar new federal awards under FAR Subpart 9.4.

The facts

Both suspension and debarment are exclusions — official actions that make a party ineligible for new federal awards — and both appear on the SAM.gov exclusions list. They differ in their trigger and their duration.

A suspension is immediate and temporary. It is imposed on adequate evidence of a serious cause, pending the completion of an investigation or legal proceeding, and is generally limited to 12 months (extendable to 18 if legal proceedings have begun) under FAR 9.407. It is a hold, not a final judgment.

A debarment is a final action for a set period. It follows the procedures of FAR 9.406 and is generally limited to three years, though some statutory debarments run longer. While either a suspension or a debarment is in effect, agencies are directed not to award new contracts to the party — the same rule, recorded on the same SAM.gov list, that the Leakage Report tests against the federal award record.

Source: SAM.gov exclusions list (U.S. General Services Administration), the federal system of record. Confirm current status at SAM.gov →

Statutory basis

FAR Subpart 9.4 — Debarment, Suspension, and Ineligibility

The regulatory framework for excluding parties from federal contracting; debarment procedures sit at 9.406 and suspension procedures at 9.407.

FAR 9.407-4 / 9.406-4 — periods

Suspension is generally limited to 12 months (18 if legal proceedings are initiated); debarment is generally for a period commensurate with the seriousness of the cause, usually not more than three years.

Go to the source

  • What is an exclusion? →
  • The Leakage Report →

Related questions

  • What is an exclusion in federal contracting? →
  • Can a debarred company still get a federal contract? →
  • What is FAPIIS? →

More on this

How long does a suspension last?

A suspension is temporary and generally limited to 12 months, extendable to 18 months if legal proceedings have been initiated within that period, per FAR 9.407. It is a hold pending investigation, not a final term.

How long does a debarment last?

A debarment is for a fixed period commensurate with the seriousness of the cause — generally up to three years under FAR 9.406, though certain statutory debarments run longer.

Reviewed by the Fonteum Government Contracts Desk. Federal procurement records analysts. This study reports exact regulatory facts — an award's signed date and an exclusion's active window, each sourced to SAM.gov and USASpending.gov. It makes no determination of wrongdoing and assigns no score.
Published 2026-06-20 · All federal contracting questions · Fonteum.

Fonteum is a public-records evidence platform. This Government Procurement Evidence silo reports exact regulatory facts from federal public records (SAM.gov, USASpending.gov, FAPIIS). It assigns no risk score and makes no determination of wrongdoing; confirm current status at the official source.

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