The Small Business Advantage in Federal Contracting
The US federal government has a statutory goal of awarding at least 23% of all federal prime contracting dollars to small businesses. In practice, small business contracting has consistently exceeded this target, with over $160 billion awarded to small businesses annually. The government maintains a robust ecosystem of programmes, set-asides, and incentives designed to level the playing field and ensure small businesses can compete for federal work.
Understanding these programmes is not optional — it is a core competitive strategy. Small businesses that leverage the right certifications and programmes can access sole-source opportunities, compete in restricted pools, and build the past performance needed to grow into larger competitive procurements.
SBA Certification Programmes
8(a) Business Development Programme
The 8(a) programme is the SBA premier business development initiative for socially and economically disadvantaged small businesses. The programme provides a nine-year term during which participants can receive sole-source contracts up to $4.5 million for goods and services (or $7.5 million for manufacturing), compete in 8(a) set-aside procurements, and access mentoring, training, and technical assistance.
Eligibility requirements include: the business must be at least 51% owned and controlled by one or more socially and economically disadvantaged individuals, must be a small business under its primary NAICS code, must demonstrate potential for success (typically at least two years of operation), and the owner personal net worth must not exceed $850,000 (excluding the value of the business and primary residence). The application process is rigorous and typically takes 2-3 months.
8(a) firms in the early stages of the programme (developmental stage, years 1-4) may receive sole-source contracts more readily, while the transitional stage (years 5-9) emphasises competitive 8(a) set-asides and preparation for open market competition.
HUBZone Programme
The Historically Underutilized Business Zones (HUBZone) programme supports small businesses located in economically distressed areas. HUBZone-certified firms receive a 10% price evaluation preference in full and open competitions and can compete for HUBZone set-aside contracts. Sole-source awards are available up to $4.5 million for goods and services or $7.5 million for manufacturing.
To qualify, the business must be a small business, its principal office must be in a HUBZone, and at least 35% of its employees must reside in a HUBZone. The SBA maintains an interactive HUBZone map at maps.certify.sba.gov to verify location eligibility. The programme has a government-wide contracting goal of 3% of prime contract dollars.
Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB/EDWOSB)
The Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) Federal Contracting Programme allows set-asides and sole-source awards for WOSBs and Economically Disadvantaged WOSBs (EDWOSBs) in industries where women are underrepresented. EDWOSBs can receive sole-source awards up to $4.5 million for goods and services or $7.5 million for manufacturing.
To qualify as a WOSB, the business must be at least 51% owned and controlled by one or more women who are US citizens, and the women must manage the daily operations. EDWOSB certification adds an economic disadvantage requirement. Certification is obtained through SBA certification portal or approved third-party certifiers.
Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB)
The SDVOSB programme supports small businesses owned and controlled by service-disabled veterans. SDVOSBs can compete for SDVOSB set-aside contracts and receive sole-source awards up to $4.5 million for goods and services or $7.5 million for manufacturing. The government-wide goal is 3% of prime contract dollars.
Certification requires that the business be at least 51% owned by one or more service-disabled veterans, with the veteran(s) managing day-to-day operations. The SBA now manages SDVOSB certification through its Veterans Small Business Certification (VetCert) programme, consolidating what was previously managed separately by the VA for VOSB/SDVOSB status.
Mentor-Protege Programmes
The SBA All Small Mentor-Protege Programme allows established businesses (mentors) to partner with small business protege firms to compete for contracts as joint ventures. This is one of the most powerful tools in federal small business contracting because the joint venture can leverage the mentor past performance and capabilities while maintaining the protege small business status for size determination purposes.
Key benefits include: the joint venture can bid on set-aside contracts using the protege size status, the mentor provides technical, management, and financial assistance, and the arrangement can last up to six years (two three-year terms). Many successful small businesses use mentor-protege relationships to rapidly build capabilities and past performance for larger opportunities.
GSA Schedule for Small Businesses
The GSA Multiple Award Schedule (MAS) offers specific advantages for small businesses. GSA sets aside certain schedule opportunities for small businesses, and many ordering agencies use the GSA Schedule to fulfil their small business contracting goals. The application process for small businesses follows the same general path as for large businesses, but GSA provides dedicated support through its Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU).
Small businesses on the GSA Schedule can leverage their certifications — buyers searching the GSA Advantage catalogue can filter by small business status, 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, and SDVOSB certifications. This makes the GSA Schedule an effective discovery mechanism, allowing certified small businesses to be found by contracting officers seeking to meet their small business goals.
SBIR and STTR Programmes
The Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programmes provide over $4 billion annually in funding for small businesses to conduct research and development with commercial potential. Eleven federal agencies participate in SBIR, and five in STTR.
The programmes operate in three phases: Phase I provides proof-of-concept funding (typically $50,000-$275,000 over 6-12 months), Phase II provides full R&D funding (typically $500,000-$1.5 million over 2 years), and Phase III involves commercialisation using non-SBIR/STTR funds, including federal procurement of the developed technology. Phase III represents a particularly valuable pathway, as there is no dollar limit on Phase III contracts and they can be awarded sole-source.
Subcontracting Strategies
Federal contracts over $750,000 ($1.5 million for construction) require large business prime contractors to submit subcontracting plans with specific small business utilisation goals. This creates significant subcontracting opportunities for small businesses across all certification categories.
Subcontracting is often the best entry point for small businesses new to federal contracting. It allows you to build past performance, learn the regulatory environment, develop relationships with agencies, and generate revenue while pursuing prime contract opportunities. Many large primes actively seek small business subcontractors to meet their plan goals, and the SBA SubNet database connects small businesses with subcontracting opportunities.
Sole-Source Thresholds and Set-Asides
Understanding sole-source thresholds is essential for small business strategy. For general small business set-asides, contracts between the micro-purchase threshold ($10,000) and the simplified acquisition threshold ($250,000) are automatically reserved for small businesses. Above $250,000, contracting officers apply the Rule of Two — if two or more small businesses can perform the work at fair market prices, the procurement is set aside for small businesses.
For certified businesses, sole-source thresholds provide opportunities without competition: 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB/EDWOSB, and SDVOSB firms can all receive sole-source awards up to $4.5 million for goods and services or $7.5 million for manufacturing. These thresholds make certifications extremely valuable for small businesses in the early stages of federal market development.
Building Past Performance
Past performance is the currency of federal contracting, and building it from scratch is one of the greatest challenges for new entrants. Effective strategies include: pursuing small contracts under the simplified acquisition threshold (where past performance requirements are less stringent), subcontracting under established primes, leveraging 8(a) sole-source opportunities, using SBIR/STTR Phase III as a past performance vehicle, highlighting commercial past performance on similar work, and emphasising key personnel experience from prior federal positions. Every contract, no matter how small, is an opportunity to build the past performance record that will enable future growth.