[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR19.102]

[Page 337-339]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
 
PART 19_SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
                       Subpart 19.1_Size Standards
 
Sec.  19.102  Size standards.

    (a) The SBA establishes small business size standards on an 
industry-by-industry basis. (See 13 CFR part 121.)
    (b) Small business size standards are applied by--
    (1) Classifying the product or service being acquired in the 
industry whose definition, as found in the North American Industry 
Classification System (NAICS) Manual (available via the Internet at 
http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/naics.html), best describes the principal 
nature of the product or service being acquired;
    (2) Identifying the size standard SBA established for that industry; 
and
    (3) Specifying the size standard in the solicitation, so that 
offerors can appropriately represent themselves as small or large.
    (c) For size standard purposes, a product or service shall be 
classified in only one industry, whose definition best describes the 
principal nature of

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the product or service being acquired even though for other purposes it 
could be classified in more than one.
    (d) When acquiring a product or service that could be classified in 
two or more industries with different size standards, contracting 
officers shall apply the size standard for the industry accounting for 
the greatest percentage of the contract price.
    (e) If a solicitation calls for more than one item and allows offers 
to be submitted on any or all of the items, an offeror must meet the 
size standard for each item it offers to furnish. If a solicitation 
calling for more than one item requires offers on all or none of the 
items, an offeror may qualify as a small business by meeting the size 
standard for the item accounting for the greatest percentage of the 
total contract price.
    (f) Any concern submitting a bid or offer in its own name, other 
than on a construction or service contract, that proposes to furnish an 
end product it did not manufacture (a ``nonmanufacturer''), is a small 
business if it has no more than 500 employees, and--
    (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (f)(4) through (f)(7) of this 
section, in the case of Government acquisitions set-aside for small 
businesses, furnishes in the performance of the contract, the product of 
a small business manufacturer or producer. The end product furnished 
must be manufactured or produced in the United States or its outlying 
areas. The term ``nonmanufacturer'' includes a concern that can, but 
elects not to, manufacture or produce the end product for the specific 
acquisition. For size determination purposes, there can be only one 
manufacturer of the end product being acquired. The manufacturer of the 
end product being acquired is the concern that, with its own forces, 
transforms inorganic or organic substances including raw materials and/
or miscellaneous parts or components into the end product. However, see 
the limitations on subcontracting at 52.219-14 that apply to any small 
business offeror other than a nonmanufacturer for purposes of set-asides 
and 8(a) awards.
    (2) A concern which purchases items and packages them into a kit is 
considered to be a nonmanufacturer small business and can qualify as 
such for a given acquisition if it meets the size qualifications of a 
small nonmanufacturer for the acquisition, and if more than 50 percent 
of the total value of the kit and its contents is accounted for by items 
manufactured by small business.
    (3) For the purpose of receiving a Certificate of Competency on an 
unrestricted acquisition, a small business nonmanufacturer may furnish 
any domestically produced or manufactured product.
    (4) In the case of acquisitions set aside for small business or 
awarded under section 8(a) of the Small Business Act, when the 
acquisition is for a specific product (or a product in a class of 
products) for which the SBA has determined that there are no small 
business manufacturers or processors in the Federal market, then the SBA 
may grant a class waiver so that a nonmanufacturer does not have to 
furnish the product of a small business. For the most current listing of 
classes for which SBA has granted a waiver, contact an SBA Office of 
Government Contracting. A listing is also available on SBA's Internet 
Homepage at http://www.sba.gov/gc. Contracting officers may request that 
the SBA waive the nonmanufacturer rule for a particular class of 
products.
    (5) For a specific solicitation, a contracting officer may request a 
waiver of that part of the nonmanufacturer rule which requires that the 
actual manufacturer or processor be a small business concern if the 
contracting officer determines that no known domestic small business 
manufacturers or processors can reasonably be expected to offer a 
product meeting the requirements of the solicitation.
    (6) Requests for waivers shall be sent to the Associate 
Administrator for Government Contracting, United States Small Business 
Administration, Mail Code 6250, 409 Third Street, SW., Washington, DC 
20416.
    (7) The SBA provides for an exception to the nonmanufacturer rule 
if--
    (i) The procurement of a manufactured end product processed under 
the procedures set forth in part 13--
    (A) Is set aside for small business; and

[[Page 339]]

    (B) Is not anticipated to exceed $25,000; and
    (ii) The offeror supplies an end product that is manufactured or 
produced in the United States or its outlying areas.
    (g) In the case of acquisitions set aside for very small business in 
accordance with 19.904, offerors may not have more than 15 employees and 
may not have average annual receipts that exceed $1 million.
    (h) The industry size standards are published by the Small Business 
Administration and are available via the Internet at http://www.sba.gov/
size.

[48 FR 42240, Sept. 19, 1983 as amended at 51 FR 2652, Jan. 17, 1986; 51 
FR 27489, July 31, 1986; 51 FR 31426, Sept. 3, 1986; 52 FR 21887, June 
9, 1987; 52 FR 30076, Aug. 12, 1987; 53 FR 661, Jan. 11, 1988; 53 FR 
34227, Sept. 2, 1988; 53 FR 43390, Oct. 26, 1988; 54 FR 5055, Jan. 31, 
1989; 54 FR 13023, Mar. 29, 1989; 54 FR 25062, June 12, 1989; 55 FR 
3882, Feb. 5, 1990; 55 FR 25529, June 21, 1990; 57 FR 60580, 60610, Dec. 
21, 1992; 59 FR 11376, 11387, Mar. 10, 1994; 59 FR 17723, Apr. 14, 1994; 
60 FR 34756, July 3, 1995; 61 FR 31622, June 20, 1996; 61 FR 39208, July 
26, 1996; 61 FR 67410, Dec. 20, 1996; 63 FR 58602, Oct. 30, 1998; 63 FR 
70292, Dec. 18, 1998; 64 FR 10536, Mar. 4, 1999; 64 FR 51850, Sept. 24, 
1999; 65 FR 46056, July 26, 2000; 66 FR 65370, Dec. 18, 2001; 68 FR 
28081, May 22, 2003]