SDVOSB government contracts: how to review opportunity fit

Service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses have access to a set of contract opportunities that are not open to the general market. SDVOSB set-asides represent a meaningful share of federal contracting dollars — particularly with the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense — but competing effectively requires more than holding a certification.

The certification gets you in the door. The capability, staffing, compliance readiness, and bid/no-bid discipline determines whether pursuing a specific opportunity makes sense for your business.

What SDVOSB status means for contracting

SDVOSB — Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business — is a federal set-aside designation for businesses majority-owned and controlled by one or more service-disabled veterans. When a contracting officer sets aside an opportunity specifically for SDVOSB firms, only certified SDVOSB businesses can submit a response.

This creates a smaller competitive pool than full and open competition. For a business that qualifies, that is an advantage — but only if the opportunity actually matches the business's capabilities and the business can field a credible response.

Verifying current certification status

Before spending time on any SDVOSB set-aside opportunity, confirm that your certification is active and current. The Department of Veterans Affairs administers the VA's SDVOSB certification program, while other agencies rely on the SBA's CVE (Center for Verification and Evaluation) process or self-certification through SAM.gov, depending on the solicitation.

Key items to verify before pursuing a set-aside opportunity:

Evaluating the full scope of work

A set-aside designation tells you who can compete. It does not tell you whether your business should. The work itself — the actual deliverables, staffing requirements, compliance items, and performance timeline — determines whether the opportunity is worth pursuing.

SDVOSB opportunities frequently involve:

Teaming and partnership options

If an SDVOSB set-aside opportunity requires capabilities your business does not currently have, teaming is a common strategy. A prime contractor and a teaming partner can combine capabilities to respond to a broader scope — but the SDVOSB firm must maintain the role of prime contractor and perform the majority of the work, per subcontracting limitations.

Any teaming arrangement should be reviewed carefully against the solicitation's subcontracting rules before formalizing a teaming agreement.

A practical pursuit checklist for SDVOSB opportunities

  1. Is the set-aside designation SDVOSB or VOSB? (SDVOSB is more restrictive)
  2. Is the business's certification current and accepted by this agency?
  3. Does the NAICS code match services the business performs?
  4. Does the business meet the size standard for this NAICS code?
  5. Can the business staff and manage the scope of work described?
  6. Does the business have relevant past performance to reference?
  7. Are there security, clearance, or background check requirements the business can meet?
  8. Is there enough time to prepare a credible response?
  9. Do subcontracting limitations allow the business to partner if needed?
Reminder: Always verify current SDVOSB and VOSB certification requirements, the specific certification body required by the solicitation, and eligibility rules before submitting a response. Requirements can vary by agency and contract type. CapGen is not a legal or compliance resource — consult an advisor for specific eligibility questions.

Want to find SDVOSB-eligible opportunities matched to your profile?

CapGen filters live government contract opportunities against your certification status and NAICS codes, so you can focus on the ones your business is actually eligible to pursue.