A Small Business is one that
- is organized for profit;
- has a place of business in the United States;
- makes a significant contribution to the U.S. economy by paying
taxes or using American products, materials or labor; and,
- does not exceed the numerical size standard for its industry.
The business may be a sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation,
or any other legal form.
There is an SBA small business size standard for every private
sector industry in the U.S. Economy. SBA uses the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) to identify the industries.
Size Standards (usually stated in number of employees or average
annual receipts) represent the largest size that a business (including
its subsidiaries and affiliates) may be to remain classified as
a small business for SBA’s programs and for Federal contracting
programs.
SBA has several general Size Standards. A business in one of the
following industry groups is small if it is not greater than the
size standard indicated.
Industry Group |
Size Standard |
Manufacturing |
500 employees |
Wholesale Trade |
100 employees |
Agriculture |
$750,000 |
Retail Trade |
$6 million |
General & Heavy Construction (except Dredging) |
$28.5 million |
Dredging |
$17 million |
Special Trade Contractorss |
$12 million |
Travel Agencies |
$3 million (commissions & other income) |
Business and Personal Services |
Except: |
- Architectural, Engineering, Surveying, and Mapping Services
|
- Dry Cleaning and Carpet Cleaning Services
|
|
$6 million |
|
$4 million |
$4 million |
|
If the size of a business exceeds the size standard for its overall
industry group, it may still be a small business for the specific
NAICS industry in that group. Some industries have higher
size standards than the general one for the industry group. SBA
has a
Table of
Size Standards on
its website.
Don't know the NAICS code? Try
SBA's
Search Routine. Or you may
search for NAICS industries on the U.S. Bureau of the Census website.
For Federal contracting, a small business must not exceed the
size standard stated in the solicitation. The contracting
officer designates the size standard of the procurement by selecting
the
size stanadrds
established for the NAICS industry that best describes the principle
purpose of the procurement.
Need more information on size standards? Please read the Small
Business Size Regulations or our "Guide to SBA's Definitions
of Size Standards. "
For further information, you may write or call the Office of Size Standards.
Office of Size Standards
U.S. Small Business Administration
409 3rd St. , SW, Washington, DC 20416
Phone: (202) 205-6618
Fax: (202) 205-6390
E-mail: sizestandards@sba.gov
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