The DoD Multi-Cloud Pivot Is Quietly Locking Out Mid-Tier Integrators
JWCC was supposed to broaden access. Eighteen months in, the obligations data tells a different story.

JWCC was sold to the small-business defense community as a broadening of cloud access. The obligations data through the first eighteen months tells a different story: four CSPs, a handful of large primes brokering task orders, and a small-business participation rate well below the FY23 forecasts.
We have spent the better part of three months running the underlying obligations data against agency strategic plans and the FY26 President's Budget Request. The result is less a story than a pattern — and the pattern is not what the trade press has been describing.
Small-business share of JWCC task-order obligations, FY25
— FPDS, JWCC vehicle code; author analysis
Why mid-tier integrators are getting squeezed
The task-order architecture inside JWCC rewards integrators who can resell hyperscaler consumption at scale. That is structurally a large-prime advantage. The mid-tier integrator wins through specialization, not consumption volume.
"We bid JWCC twice and lost on cost both times. We will not bid it a third time. The vehicle is not for us."
What that means for an operator at $5M to $50M in annual federal revenue is unambiguous: the surface area you can reasonably cover is shrinking, and the cost of being wrong about which vehicles to chase has roughly doubled since FY23.
We will keep tracking this through the end of the fiscal year. If the pattern holds through Q4, the implications for the FY27 budget cycle are larger than anything we have written about in the past twelve months.
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