The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has announced a new OneGov agreement that will enable the General Services Administration (GSA) to secure DocuSign discounts projected to save $1.3 billion annually. This announcement was shared in a post on X.
According to the General Services Administration, the OneGov initiative is designed to consolidate software procurement across federal agencies to achieve substantial savings and improve consistency in IT acquisition. Launched in April 2025, OneGov creates enterprise-level software agreements that reduce licensing complexity, unify security compliance, and offer deep discounts through centralized negotiation. This approach is part of GSA’s broader strategy to modernize government-wide IT infrastructure by treating software acquisition as a single, coordinated enterprise.
As reported by Nextgov, the OneGov agreement with DocuSign includes a 70% discount on the eSignature Enterprise Pro plan and a 50% discount on the Intelligent Agreement Management (IAM) platform. Both platforms are FedRAMP Moderate and IL4 authorized, ensuring they meet federal cybersecurity standards and are approved for secure use across both civilian and defense agencies. The agreement runs through January 31, 2027, and is available to all federal agencies via GSA Advantage, streamlining access to secure digital signature and contract automation tools.
The General Services Administration estimates that this DocuSign OneGov agreement could deliver $1.3 billion in annual savings based on existing agency usage patterns. As more agencies adopt the tools covered under the agreement, that savings figure could rise significantly due to increased volume-based pricing efficiencies and reduction in duplicative contracts. According to Nextgov, this deal is part of a broader series of software consolidations—including agreements with Google, Salesforce, and Adobe—that aim to modernize IT systems while reducing federal software expenditures.
DOGE is a federal agency focused on optimizing government spending, reducing waste, and ensuring accountability in contract management, according to X. By reviewing expenditures and canceling non-essential contracts, DOGE aims to improve fiscal responsibility and enhance the effectiveness of public resource allocation.