Forecast intelligence
Transportation & Warehousing: what's coming up before the RFP
Before an agency posts a formal solicitation in Transportation & Logistics, it tips its hand — through Sources Sought, Presolicitation, and Special Notices. These are the early signals of Transportation & Logistics work that's coming, drawn live from SAM.gov, so you can position before your competition sees the RFP.
What's Coming Up/Transportation & Logistics
173
early signals tracked
30
new this week
110
new this month
12
agencies signalling
How to read this
These are pre-solicitation signals, not formal agency forecasts. Federal buyers publish Sources Sought, Presolicitation, and Special Notices in Transportation & Warehousing while they're still researching and planning — weeks or months before the formal RFP. We surface them as a leading indicator of demand: a way to spot, shape, and prepare for Transportation & Logistics work before it becomes a deadline-driven competition. Always confirm the specifics against the source notice on SAM.gov.
Who's planning to buy
The agencies signalling most in Transportation & Logistics
Federal buyers with the most early-stage Transportation & Logistics notices in the tracked corpus — these are the agencies actively researching their next Transportation & Logistics buys. Click any to see what they're signalling.
Just signalled in Transportation & Logistics
The latest Transportation & Logistics early notices
The most recent pre-solicitation notices in Transportation & Warehousing. Each links to the full notice — get in early.
Scheduled Air Liner Support Services
Homeland Security, Department of
V226--VA Spokane WA Healthcare System New Wheelchair Transportation Services Requirement
Veterans Affairs, Department of
Joint Personal Property Shipping Office(JPPSO-MA) Transportation
Dept of Defense
Sources Sought Notice - Domestic JAA Transportation Services
Dept of Defense
RSLP Logistics Support
Dept of Defense
Operation & Maintenance of Five (5) Government-Owned Maritime Prepositioning Ships (MPS)
Dept of Defense
DRY VOYAGE CARGO CHARTER
Dept of Defense
USMC Burmese Chase 2026 Joint Terminal Attack Controller (JTAC) Training Requirements
Dept of Defense
66-day Dry Cargo Time Charter
Dept of Defense
Synopsis for 19MU2026Q0014 Diplomatic Pouch Services
State, Department of
V--GA WARM SPRINGS FHC LAB MOVE
Interior, Department of the
Sources Sought: Diesel Storage Tank for Rosebud Indian Health Services in Rosebud, SD
Health and Human Services, Department of
INL Haiti Freight Forwarding
State, Department of
FRCASE MRO Maintenance Strategy
Dept of Defense
See all early-stage Transportation & Logistics notices in search →
Why getting in early wins Transportation & Logistics contracts
- Responding to a Transportation & Logistics Sources Sought can shape the requirement — and the set-aside — in your favour before it's locked.
- Presolicitation notices buy you weeks to build the right team and capture plan, instead of scrambling at RFP release.
- Special Notices and industry days put you in front of the contracting officer while the field is still small.
- By the time the formal RFP posts, the firms that engaged early already have the relationships and the inside track.
Get tomorrow's Transportation & Logistics RFPs in your inbox today
Tell us your NAICS codes and target agencies, and we'll alert you to the Transportation & Logistics early signals — Sources Sought, Presolicitation, Special Notices — that match, the moment they post. Get a head start on every bid.
Methodology. "Coming up" signals are notices whose SAM.gov notice type is Sources Sought, Presolicitation, or Special Notice — the early stages an agency posts while researching and planning a procurement. Transportation & Warehousing notices are matched on the 48/49 2-digit NAICS prefixes. They are leading indicators of buying intent, not formal agency procurement forecasts, and not every signal becomes a solicitation. Counts are of the live US federal opportunity corpus WinAContract tracks, sourced from SAM.gov and refreshed daily. As of June 2026. Always verify any specific notice against the source on SAM.gov.

