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Your Project Changed After Approval. Here’s What You Can Do Next.

If you’ve worked through an E-rate project from planning to implementation, you know one thing is almost guaranteed: something will change. Whether it’s discontinued equipment, shifting needs, or vendor updates, substitutions give applicants a way to adapt without jeopardizing funding.  

But here’s the catch: service substitutions are not a free pass to change your project. They are tightly tied to the procurement process, and misunderstanding this connection is where a lot of compliance issues arise.  

Here’s how to tell the difference.

A substitution allows you to modify the products or services approved on your Form 471 after funding has been committed. This could include changing equipment models, adjusting quantities, or updating technical components. At its core, it’s about adapting your project while staying true to what was originally bid and approved.  

A valid substitution passes all five of these tests:

The 5 Tests of a Valid Substitution: 1. Funding request cannot increase, a substitution cannot raise the overall amount of funding requested. 2. Same functionality, the replacement serves the same purpose as the original. 3. Within the original Form 470 scope, vendors could have bid on it during the original procurement. 4. Complies with contract and procurement rules, consistent with your contract and state or local rules. 5. No ineligible costs added, a substitution cannot introduce ineligible products or services.

If your change falls outside any one of them, it’s not a valid substitution. It’s a new procurement, which means competitive bidding starts over. That isn’t a dead end, though. It’s a clear way to get the change you need while staying compliant. You can upgrade, pivot, or adjust, but you can’t rebid through a substitution.

Substitutions exist for the sake of program integrity. Technology evolves quickly, supply chains change, and projects rarely go exactly as planned. 

As an applicant, you’ll want to avoid using substitutions to expand scope or treating substitutions like post-award redesigns. These are the kinds of missteps that can cost applicants funding even when an application looks clean.

You’ll want to document the “why” clearly – is this substitution a result of product discontinuation, network compatibility, supply chain issues? Being able to tie the substitution back to the original Form 470/RFP is key to make sure the substitution does not affect the scope of work. Substitutions are a helpful, but misunderstood, tool in E-rate. They allow you to adapt your project without starting over, but only if you stay rooted in the original procurement.   

Want to see and hear more about substitutions? Watch Heidi’s June 4, 2026 My E-rate Guides (MEG) webinar on service substitutions, available now on demand: Watch the recording. New topics every month. Register for the July 9 MEG today.

About the Author:  Heidi Leonard has been an E-rate Guide at Funds For Learning for nearly three years. Before joining the GuideTeam, she was a classroom teacher. She started as a substitute, then taught second grade, then eighth, which means she worked in the frontlines. Outside of work, Heidi is training for a 5K with her parents this June, and she gardens, cooks, and reads in roughly equal measure.

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