Skip to content
Back
Gatekeeper Contract and Vendor Management Glossary

Search common contracting language and take a deeper dive to discover what each means

Subrecipient Monitoring

Subrecipient monitoring is the primary recipient's ongoing duty to oversee any organisation it passes federal funds to, so the subaward is used for its intended purpose and complies with the terms of the award. The duty stays with the primary recipient. It differs from vendor management, where a contractor simply supplies goods or services rather than carrying out part of the program. The obligation is set by 2 CFR Part 200 Subpart D, the OMB Uniform Guidance.

When is subrecipient monitoring required?

Subrecipient monitoring is required whenever a federal award recipient passes a portion of its federal funding to another organisation to carry out part of the program. It applies at every tier of funding, not just the first pass-through. The 2025 OMB Compliance Supplement expanded the documentation and oversight expectations on primary recipients, with more granular evidence required at each tier.

In practice the duty runs across a handful of activities. You classify the party correctly as a subrecipient rather than a contractor, perform a subrecipient monitoring risk assessment before funding, and set a monitoring plan proportionate to that risk. You then collect and review evidence that funds are used as intended, review the subrecipient's own Single Audit reports, and keep that oversight current rather than checking it once a year.

The stakes are documented. A March 2025 GAO report reviewing 3,680 single audit findings from 2022 to 2024 found that in nearly half of the cases recipients lacked the internal controls for basic subaward oversight, with some not conducting risk assessments of subrecipients and others failing to review their audit reports. These are evidence gaps, not exotic errors, and they sit squarely within the wider nonprofit compliance picture.

How is subrecipient monitoring different from vendor management?

The distinction is functional, not just contractual. A subrecipient carries out part of the federal program in its own name and is accountable for program outcomes and compliance. A vendor, or contractor, provides goods or services within a competitive market and is not subject to the program's compliance terms. Under 2 CFR Part 200, that classification decision drives which oversight rules apply, so getting it right matters before any monitoring begins.

Both relationships require third-party oversight, but the depth and purpose differ. Subrecipient monitoring tests program and compliance performance against the award terms. Vendor management tests delivery, security posture and contract obligations. Many lean teams conflate the two and under-document the subrecipient side.

Subrecipient monitoring is continuous third-party due diligence: checking who you are funding, collecting the evidence that funds are used correctly, and keeping it current. This is where Gatekeeper's AI agents do the execution work, screening parties, collecting and chasing documents, and flagging changes, while your team keeps the judgement on risk. The same discipline underpins vendor risk monitoring on the supplier side. A system of record helps you evidence monitoring; it does not manage the grant or make compliance decisions for you, and the duty to monitor sits with the primary recipient.