/ comparison
DeliverOps vs Procore
— for federal, not commercial construction
Procore is excellent at what it does — commercial construction project management. But federal delivery runs on CDRLs, CPARS, FAR clauses, and SF 1034 invoicing. Procore wasn't built for any of that, and retrofitting it never works.
Deliverables = Submitted + In Review + Accepted
97%
On-time CDRL submissions
0
Open compliance findings
12 d
Avg invoice → payment
$1.84M
Burned of $4.2M
23
Active deliverables
4 / 4
CPARS narratives drafted
100%
DD-1423 coverage
3
Subs flow-down compliant
Very Good
Projected CPARS
/ feature by feature
Side by side, honestly.
No marketing fluff. The features that matter for delivery — and how each side stacks up.
/ what hurts
Why GovCons leave Procore
- Procore is built for construction — CDRLs, CPARS, and FAR clauses aren't in its vocabulary
- Zero federal invoicing — no SF 1034, no PIEE, no agency format support
- $375+/mo starting price with upcharges for federal-facing features
- Built for general contractors managing subs, not program managers running CDRL submissions
- Compliance features assume OSHA, not DCAA
/ what helps
Why they pick DeliverOps
- Purpose-built for federal delivery from day one — not retrofitted from construction
- Every federal acronym — CDRL, CPARS, FAR, DFARS, SF 1034, DD-1423 — is native vocabulary
- Works alongside Procore if you run both commercial and federal projects
- Priced for firms that don't bill Procore-scale revenue
- CPARS journal and FAR clause tracking that Procore will never add
/ make the switch
Built for the way you actually deliver.
Founding cohort locks in $59/mo for life — 40% off Starter, every Pro feature included.