The new below-threshold reservation powers are likely to attract immediate interest from local authorities because they sit at the point where legal compliance, local economic growth, and political visibility meet. The opportunity is clear, but so is the need for discipline.

Why this matters

Authorities will want to understand when a reservation is genuinely allowed, how it should be documented, and how to avoid confusing a local preference with a lawful reservation power. The practical value of the change lies in giving authorities a more explicit route to support local and UK suppliers in the right circumstances.

What should be checked first?

Before applying any reservation, teams should confirm the contract value, the type of authority involved, the legal basis they are relying on, and whether internal standing orders or procurement rules need amending. A short internal briefing note and updated template wording will usually save a large amount of confusion later.