COMPLIANCE ALERT - APRIL 25, 2026 DEADLINE

Your Federal Contracts Are at Risk. The Anti-DEI Compliance Deadline Is Here.

The March 2026 Executive Order makes non-compliance with anti-DEI provisions a False Claims Act violation. Every invoice you submit is an implied certification. Are you certified?

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FCA Compliance Specialists
Fixed-Price Certification
2-3 Week Delivery
Ongoing Monitoring Available

What the Executive Order Requires - and What Happens If You Fail

On March 26, 2026, the President signed an Executive Order requiring all federal agencies to add mandatory anti-DEI provisions to every contract within 30 days. For federal contractors, the consequences of non-compliance are severe.

The New Contract Clause

Federal agencies must include a mandatory anti-DEI clause in all contracts by April 25, 2026. Every new contract you sign after that date will contain this clause. Every existing contract modification must incorporate it. You are certifying compliance with each invoice.

The Subcontractor Trap

You are not just responsible for your own compliance. The EO requires prime contractors to flow down the clause to all subcontractors and to report violations they knew or reasonably should have known about. Do you know what your subcontractors' DEI programs look like?

False Claims Act Exposure

The EO explicitly makes anti-DEI compliance material to payment decisions. Under the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. § 3729), every invoice you submit is an implied certification. Non-compliance creates exposure to treble damages - three times the contract value - plus civil penalties of up to $27,894 per false claim.

Qui Tam Whistleblower Suits

Any employee, competitor, or subcontractor can file a qui tam lawsuit on behalf of the government and collect up to 30% of the recovery. The government is required to review within 60 days. Your competitors have financial incentive to report your non-compliance.

Consequences of Non-Compliance

  • Contract termination for default or convenience
  • Suspension from all federal contracting
  • Debarment - permanent exclusion from federal contracts
  • False Claims Act treble damages (3x contract value)
  • Civil penalties up to $27,894 per false claim
Reference: 31 U.S.C. § 3729 (False Claims Act) | Executive Order, March 26, 2026 | FAR Part 9 (Suspension and Debarment)

Why Most Small Contractors Aren't Ready

The new EO creates complex, layered compliance obligations that most small federal contractors are not equipped to handle alone.

87%

No Compliance Team

Of federal contractors under 500 employees lack a dedicated compliance officer. The responsibility falls on already-stretched operations or contracts staff.

$750

Per Hour for Counsel

Outside lawyers experienced in government contracting charge $500-$1,000/hr with no fixed deliverable and no guarantee of a clean compliance certification.

6

Distinct Requirements

The EO requires simultaneous compliance across policies, subcontracts, records, reporting procedures, training documentation, and quarterly certifications.

Executive Order Compliance Requirements Checklist

Written anti-DEI compliance policies
Documented prohibition on racially discriminatory DEI activities, signed by executive leadership
Subcontractor flow-down clauses
All subcontracts must include the required anti-DEI provisions with certification requirements
Records access provisions for government auditors
Policies and documentation must be accessible to contracting officers upon request
Subcontractor violation reporting procedures
Written procedures for identifying, documenting, and reporting subcontractor non-compliance
Employee training documentation
Records of anti-DEI policy training for all employees involved in federal contract performance
Quarterly compliance certifications
Ongoing formal certification of continuing compliance submitted to the contracting officer

If you cannot check every box, you have a compliance gap that creates False Claims Act exposure on every invoice.

Federal Compliance Certification and Monitoring

A fixed-price compliance program designed specifically for small federal contractors without in-house compliance teams.

1

Assess

We review your policies, procedures, subcontractor agreements, and training programs against all Executive Order requirements. We identify every gap before your contracting officer does.

2

Certify

You receive a detailed compliance report, a remediation roadmap for any gaps found, and a formal Compliance Certification Letter you can provide to contracting officers on request.

3

Monitor

Ongoing monitoring tracks regulatory changes, your subcontractors' compliance status, and re-certifies you quarterly so you are never caught off-guard by an agency audit or FAR update.

Deliverables Included

  • Formal Compliance Certification Letter (attorney-reviewable)
  • Complete compliance audit report with findings
  • Model anti-DEI policy and procedure templates
  • Subcontractor flow-down clause templates
  • Remediation roadmap (if gaps are found)
Federal Compliance Audit Certification Seal

Invest in Compliance. Avoid the Alternative.

Fixed-price programs with no hourly billing surprises. Every engagement includes a compliance certification letter.

Compliance Audit & Certification

$4,500

One-time, fixed fee

  • Full policy and procedure review
  • Subcontractor agreement analysis
  • DEI program assessment against EO requirements
  • Compliance certification letter
  • Remediation roadmap (if needed)
  • Delivered in 2-3 weeks
RECOMMENDED

Ongoing Monitoring

$995/mo

Monthly, cancel anytime

Everything in the Audit, plus:

  • Monthly compliance status reviews
  • Regulatory change alerts (FAR, DFARS updates)
  • Subcontractor compliance tracking
  • Quarterly re-certification
  • Priority support for agency inquiries
  • Annual full re-audit included

Not sure which plan is right? Schedule a call - we will assess your needs at no cost.

What's at Stake? The Cost of Non-Compliance

Under the False Claims Act, non-compliance exposure is calculated as treble damages on contract value, plus civil penalties per false claim. Here is what that means in practice.

Annual Contract Revenue FCA Treble Damages Est. Per-Claim Penalties Est. Total Exposure
$5 million $15 million $250,000 - $1M+ $15M+ plus debarment
$10 million $30 million $500,000 - $2M+ $30M+ plus debarment
$25 million $75 million $1M - $5M+ $75M+ plus debarment
$50 million $150 million $2M - $10M+ $150M+ plus debarment
$100 million $300 million $5M - $20M+ $300M+ plus debarment

$4,500 for a compliance audit vs. $30 million+ in potential FCA penalties on a $10M contract.
The math is simple. The decision is yours.

The "We Already Removed Our DEI Programs" Trap

Many contractors believe that removing a DEI policy page or dissolving an ERG is sufficient. It is not. The Executive Order requires:

  • Active written policies prohibiting DEI activities - not merely the absence of DEI programs
  • Records documenting that no DEI activities occurred during the contract period
  • Formal certification to your contracting officer - silence is not certification

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this Executive Order apply to my company?

If your company holds federal prime contracts or subcontracts - including companies receiving federal grants or cooperative agreements - the March 2026 Executive Order applies to you. If you invoice the federal government for goods or services, you are subject to the new anti-DEI compliance requirements.

This includes companies that only hold subcontracts with prime contractors. If a federal prime contractor is your customer, your prime is required to flow down the anti-DEI clause to your agreement, and you must certify compliance.

What is the compliance deadline?

Federal agencies must include the new anti-DEI contract clause in all contracts by April 25, 2026 (30 days from the March 26, 2026 EO signing). The FAR Council is required to issue interim guidance by May 25, 2026, and agency heads must report on compliance by July 24, 2026.

Compliance obligations are ongoing after the initial deadline. Every new contract, every contract modification, and every invoice you submit after April 25 will carry the implied certification of compliance.

What if we already eliminated our DEI programs?

Elimination alone is not sufficient. The Executive Order requires documented policies, reviewed procedures, subcontractor certifications, and audit-ready records. Silence is not certification.

You need active written policies prohibiting DEI activities, records documenting compliance during the contract period, formal certification to your contracting officer, and evidence of subcontractor monitoring. Deleting a webpage or disbanding a committee is the starting point, not the end point.

Do subcontractors need separate certification?

Yes. The EO requires prime contractors to flow down the anti-DEI clause to all subcontractors at every tier. You must obtain certifications from your subcontractors and maintain records of those certifications.

Additionally, as a prime contractor, you are required to report subcontractor violations you knew or reasonably should have known about. This creates an affirmative obligation to monitor your subcontractors - not just to obtain a one-time certification from them.

What happens if we don't comply?

Non-compliance with anti-DEI provisions is explicitly material to government payment decisions under the new EO, creating False Claims Act exposure. Potential consequences include:

  • Contract termination for default (vs. convenience - this affects your record)
  • Suspension from all federal contracting pending investigation
  • Debarment - permanent or extended exclusion from federal contracts and grants
  • False Claims Act treble damages (3x the contract value)
  • Civil penalties of up to $27,894 per false claim submitted
  • Qui tam whistleblower suits brought by employees, competitors, or subcontractors
How long does the compliance audit take?

Our compliance audit and certification process typically takes 2-3 weeks from engagement to delivery of your compliance certification letter. This timeline includes:

  • Week 1: Document collection and initial policy review
  • Week 2: Subcontractor agreement analysis and gap identification
  • Week 3: Report preparation, remediation roadmap (if needed), and certification letter delivery

We can accommodate expedited timelines for urgent situations. Contact us to discuss your specific circumstances.

Are you a law firm?

No. Federal Compliance Audit provides compliance consulting services, not legal advice. Our compliance certification letter is a professional compliance assessment, not a legal opinion.

For legal questions - including matters related to litigation, agency investigations, contract disputes, or specific legal interpretations - we recommend consulting qualified legal counsel experienced in government contracts law. Many of our clients use our compliance certification as a starting point for their legal review, which significantly reduces attorney time and cost.

The April 25 Deadline Is Approaching

Every day without compliance certification is a day of False Claims Act exposure on every invoice you submit.

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Schedule Your Compliance Assessment Now
Questions before booking? contact@DOMAIN_TBD  •  1-800-000-0000