Small business set-asides explained

A set-aside is a federal contracting mechanism that restricts competition for a specific contract to a defined category of businesses. When a contracting officer designates an opportunity as a set-aside, only businesses that meet the designated criteria can submit a proposal or receive the award.

Set-asides exist to ensure that small businesses — including those owned by veterans, women, and economically disadvantaged groups — have meaningful access to federal contract dollars. They represent a significant portion of federal contracting activity and are one of the most important factors to understand when building a government contracting pursuit strategy.

The main set-aside categories

Small Business Set-Aside (Total or Partial) — The most common set-aside. Restricts competition to businesses that qualify as small under the SBA size standard for the relevant NAICS code. A total set-aside reserves the entire contract; a partial set-aside reserves only a portion.

SDVOSB — Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business — Reserved for businesses majority-owned and controlled by service-disabled veterans. Used across all federal agencies and administered through SBA certification.

VOSB — Veteran-Owned Small Business — Similar to SDVOSB but available to veterans without a service-connected disability. Primarily used at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

WOSB — Women-Owned Small Business — Restricted to businesses majority-owned and controlled by women. Available in specific NAICS codes designated by the SBA as underrepresented.

EDWOSB — Economically Disadvantaged Women-Owned Small Business — A subset of WOSB with an additional economic disadvantage threshold. Available in a broader range of NAICS codes than standard WOSB.

HUBZone — Historically Underutilized Business Zone — Reserved for businesses certified by the SBA as operating in and employing residents of designated HUBZones. Includes a 10% price evaluation preference in full-and-open competition.

8(a) Business Development Program — Managed by the SBA for small businesses owned by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals. Provides access to sole-source contracts below specific thresholds and set-aside contracts within the 8(a) program.

How set-aside eligibility is determined

A business's set-aside eligibility is based on its registrations, certifications, and representations made during the federal contracting registration process. Eligibility is not automatic — it must be actively maintained and updated as business circumstances change.

Key factors that affect set-aside eligibility:

Using set-aside status strategically

Holding a set-aside designation is an advantage — but only if you are pursuing opportunities where that designation is relevant and where the work actually matches your capability.

Practical considerations:

What "full and open competition" means

Not every federal contract is a set-aside. Many are designated as full and open competition, meaning any qualified business — small or large — can compete. Small businesses can and do win full-and-open contracts, particularly when their pricing and past performance are competitive. Set-aside status provides a narrower competitive pool, but full-and-open contracts are not off the table.

Important: Misrepresenting set-aside eligibility in a federal proposal is a federal offense. Always verify your current certification status and size standard compliance before submitting a response to a set-aside opportunity. CapGen does not certify businesses or determine eligibility.

See which set-aside opportunities match your profile.

CapGen filters live federal contracts against your registered certifications and NAICS codes — so you only see opportunities you are actually eligible to pursue.