OFCCP Is Fully Funded for 2026: Part 2 - What Federal Contractors Should Do Now

Even if OFCCP remains quieter than in past years, federal contractors should not interpret that as a compliance “pause.” In 2026, the smartest strategy is quiet preparation.

Contractors should assume:

  • compliance obligations still exist
  • enforcement can resume quickly
  • data and transparency will drive scrutiny
  • complaints and whistleblowers will trigger investigations

The Liability Federal Contractors Can Expect in 2026


Contractors should think in two buckets of liability:

Bucket 1 – Technical compliance failures (still dangerous)

Examples:

  • No Section 503 AAP
  • No VEVRAA AAP
  • Missing self-ID solicitations
  • Missing postings (e.g., Know Your Rights poster)
  • Failure to list jobs with state employment services (where required)
  • No outreach documentation or no evaluation of outreach effectiveness

Bucket 2 – Discrimination claims (higher dollar risk)

Examples:

  • Disability accommodation breakdowns
  • Veteran discrimination claims
  • Retaliation claims
  • Hiring “proxy discrimination” allegations

Best Practices: What Contractors Should Do Immediately


1) Maintain Section 503 and VEVRAA AAPs on time

Even if OFCCP is not auditing widely, contractors should:

  • keep annual plans updated
  • ensure workforce analysis and hiring metrics are current
  • maintain supporting documentation

2) Fix self-identification and applicant flow data now

Many contractors are exposed because:

  • their ATS is not configured correctly
  • self-ID forms are not compliant
  • they cannot report applicant/hire metrics reliably

This is one of the fastest ways for OFCCP (or a plaintiff) to identify weakness.

3) Audit job listing compliance (VEVRAA)

Confirm:

  • all required job openings are listed with the state workforce agency
  • exceptions are properly documented
  • your recruiters understand what qualifies as an exception

4) Strengthen outreach documentation

Contractors should:

  • document outreach events
  • track results
  • measure effectiveness annually
  • show “good faith efforts” with actual analysis

The 2026 Priority Contractors Are Underestimating: EEO-1 Disclosure Preparation


With EEO-1 reports expected to be released publicly under FOIA, contractors should prepare for a new kind of risk: reputational and litigation exposure driven by transparency.

Contractors should run an internal review before disclosure:

  • What will the public assume from our EEO-1 snapshot?
  • Are there obvious demographic “red flags” by job category?
  • Do we have defensible recruiting and selection practices?

This is not about manipulating numbers, it is about ensuring the company can confidently explain:

  • recruiting strategy
  • job requirements
  • selection criteria
  • internal mobility patterns

How Contractors Avoid Problems Without Overreacting


Contractors do not need panic, but they do need discipline.

The safest posture for 2026 is:

  • Stay compliant with Section 503 and VEVRAA
  • Expect transparency to drive litigation
  • Assume “whole-of-government” enforcement
  • Be ready for complaint investigations
  • Treat contract certifications as high-risk statements

Part 2 Takeaway


The OFCCP’s restored funding is a signal, not that everything will go back to the old world, but that the enforcement pause is temporary.

Federal contractors should treat 2026 as a year to strengthen compliance fundamentals, tighten documentation, and prepare for public disclosure and cross-agency enforcement.

Quiet preparation now prevents expensive litigation later.


Our EEO-1 Component 1 Reporting checklist will help you understand the EEO-1 Component 1 reporting process, as well as how to timely and accurately prepare for the submission of this report through the EEOC portal.

 

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