Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 14A— - AID TO SMALL BUSINESS › § 657s
A covered small business that wins a federal set-aside contract must limit how much it pays to subcontractors. For service contracts, it cannot spend more than 50% of the contract money on subcontractors. For supply contracts (except when buying from a regular dealer), it cannot spend more than 50% of the contract money after subtracting material costs. If a contract has both services and supplies, the business must pick which part is larger, measure that dollar amount, and apply the 50% limit to that part. If a contract is mainly for supplies from a regular dealer and is not mainly for services or construction, the business must use a domestic small business manufacturer unless the Administrator grants a waiver because no small business maker can meet the specs (including time) or the Administrator finds none are available in the market. Money paid to a similarly situated entity (a subcontractor that is the same kind of small business) does not count against these limits. The Administrator can change the percentage limits or make new limits for other contract types (like construction) by rule after public notice and comment. Definitions: “covered small business concern” — a small business eligible for these set-aside programs (includes women‑owned, economically disadvantaged women-owned with at least 51% ownership, HUBZone, and service‑disabled veteran‑owned small businesses); “similarly situated entity” — a subcontractor that is the same type of small business.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 657s
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73