Oracle wins $396M federal HR contract to unify government workforce systems

The 10-year award will consolidate more than 100 fragmented HR platforms used by federal agencies into a single cloud system.

Oracle wins $396M federal HR contract to unify government workforce systems

The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has awarded Oracle a nearly $396 million, 10-year contract to build the federal government's first-ever unified human resources platform, replacing more than 100 fragmented agency-level HR systems with a single cloud-based solution covering more than two million federal employees.

OPM Director Scott Kupor announced the award on June 10, 2026, calling it "a foundational investment in the future of federal workforce management." Kupor said the existing state of play was unsustainable.

"Historically, federal agencies have relied on fragmented, aging HR systems that are costly to maintain and difficult to scale," he said.

The platform will handle personnel action processing, payroll and benefits integration, time and attendance tracking, talent acquisition, and performance management, and must comply with federal employment law and cybersecurity standards including FISMA and FedRAMP. Senior HR leaders tracking the latest developments in cloud Human Capital Management platforms will recognize the scope of what OPM is attempting.

A procurement process marked by setbacks

The road to the Oracle award was far from straightforward. In May 2025, OPM attempted a sole-source contract with Workday, arguing it was the only vendor capable of delivering on the administration's modernization agenda. That award was abruptly canceled, and OPM launched open competition. Oracle ultimately beat out bids from Workday, IBM, SAP, and Economic Systems Inc. The award was then delayed by bid protests from IBM and Economic Systems, both resolved by June 1, 2026. Organizations navigating their own HR technology platform selection and procurement challenges will find the federal experience instructive.

Oracle's selection has drawn scrutiny on two fronts. Much of OPM's current HR infrastructure already runs on PeopleSoft, a platform Oracle acquired in 2005 and has extended support for through 2037. Oracle executive chairman Larry Ellison also serves on President Trump's science and technology council.

The contract is the latest step in the Trump administration's push to modernize federal workforce management systems and reduce government operating costs, an effort that began with the Department of Government Efficiency under Elon Musk before he departed the administration in mid-2025.

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