HomeNewsIndiaDefence acquisition overhaul on cards with graded local content, single-vendor mode: Report

Defence acquisition overhaul on cards with graded local content, single-vendor mode: Report

The mandate is to accelerate procurement for military modernisation while aligning acquisition rules with Aatmanirbharta and Make in India objectives

December 16, 2025 / 09:20 IST
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Defence acquisition, Defence news, India defence, Atmanirbhar Bharat
Another key recommendation aims to encourage home-grown innovation and R&D through a special single-vendor procurement route for Indian entities. (Photo for representational purpose only)

India's defence procurement framework may be set for a major overhaul, with the government weighing a shift to phased indigenous content norms, a limited single-vendor route for domestic suppliers and a structured vendor qualification system, The Economic Times has learnt.

A high-level committee was constituted in June under the Director General (Acquisition), with former bureaucrat Apurva Chandra as adviser, to review the Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020 and draft a faster, more responsive DAP 2025. The mandate is to accelerate procurement for military modernisation while aligning acquisition rules with Aatmanirbharta and Make in India objectives, the ET report said on Tuesday.

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Sources cited by The Economic Times said the panel has held multiple rounds of deliberations and prepared an initial draft of recommendations. One of the most far-reaching proposals relates to the indigenous content (IC) norms across the five acquisition categories defined under DAP 2020.

Under the existing framework, stringent upfront IC thresholds apply-over 50 per cent for the top-priority Buy (Indian-IDDM) category; 50-60 per cent for Buy (Indian); 50 per cent for Buy (global manufacturer in India); 50 per cent IC in the 'Make' portion of Buy and Make (Indian); and over 30 per cent for Indian vendors under Buy (Global). The panel has proposed replacing this upfront requirement with a graded or phased approach spread over several years, The Economic Times has learnt.