Running procurement and Accounts Payable across a Multi-Academy Trust is not the same as managing finances in a single school. The moment you add multiple sites, mixed governance structures, and a mix of centralized and decentralized teams, the complexity multiplies fast.
And yet most MATs are still doing it with tools that were never designed for the job.
This guide is for trust finance leads, business managers, and CFOs who want to get procurement and AP under control, without adding headcount or cutting corners on compliance.
What Procurement Actually Looks Like in Education
The procurement process in education covers every purchase a trust makes, from stationery and catering contracts to IT infrastructure and professional services.
For MATs, this means managing spend across multiple schools, often with different procurement practices at each site.
Some Trusts centralize purchasing decisions at Trust level. Others delegate budgets to individual school business managers. Many do both, depending on the category of spend.
This hybrid model is not wrong. But without a shared system and a clear procurement strategy, it creates gaps. Duplicate suppliers. Inconsistent pricing. Contracts that no one is monitoring. And a finance team that spends more time chasing paperwork than managing spend.
The Department for Education expects MATs to demonstrate value for money. Ofsted and auditors look at whether financial management meets the standards set out in the Academies Trust Handbook. That means procurement needs to be documented, policy-compliant, and audit ready, not just functional.






