Federal Contractor Intelligence

See when your competitor's
federal contracts expire

Search any federal contractor. See their contract cliffs, concentration risk, and spending trends — free.

32.9M
Contracts
211K
Companies
359K
Active Cliffs
111
Agencies

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See exactly when their contracts expire — and where the opportunities are.

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Understanding Contract Intelligence

What is a contract cliff?

A contract cliff occurs when a federal contract reaches its end date without a renewal or follow-on award. This creates revenue risk for the contractor and potential service disruption for the agency. ContractCliff tracks these upcoming expirations so contractors, BD teams, and investors can plan ahead.

What does the HHI concentration score mean?

The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) measures how concentrated a company's revenue is across its government customers. A score above 2,500 means HIGH concentration (heavily dependent on one agency or contract), 1,500-2,500 is MEDIUM, and below 1,500 is LOW (well-diversified). High concentration means more risk if a single contract isn't renewed.

Where does this data come from?

All contract data comes from USAspending.gov, the official source for federal spending data maintained by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. We process bulk award archives covering fiscal years 2020-2026, including contract values, agencies, NAICS codes, start/end dates, and recipient information.

How often is the data updated?

Contract data is refreshed periodically from USAspending.gov bulk award archives. New contracts and modifications are added as updated archives become available. Contract cliff dates and concentration scores are recomputed after each data refresh.

Who uses contract cliff data?

Government contractors use it to track competitor contract expirations and find recompete opportunities. Business development teams identify upcoming renewals. Investors and analysts assess revenue risk for publicly traded defense contractors. Subcontractors monitor prime contract timelines that affect their work.