Contracting Solutions
Streamlined Federal Contracting — 8(a) Pending
Trusted NHO partner delivering speed, certainty, and mission-ready solutions.
Agency Decides to Issue Direct Award
The agency determines it will award a sole source 8(a) contract to the NHO-owned firm (e.g., EIS) under FAR 19.805-1 and 6.302-5. No synopsis is required in SAM.gov.
Agency Submits Offer to SBA
SBA Reviews the Offer
SBA Issues Letter of Acceptance
SBA accepts the offer into the 8(a) program and notifies the Contracting Officer (CO).
Negotiations Begin
Contract is Awarded
Regulatory References
- 13 CFR § 124.517(a) — Non-protestable sole source NHO contracts
- FAR 19.805-1 — 8(a) sole source award procedures
- FAR 19.808-1 — Contracting process for 8(a) awards
- FAR 6.302-5(b)(4) — Authorized or required by statute (supports NHO, ANC, tribal exemptions)
Key Notes
There is no dollar limit on sole source awards to NHOs. However, any award over $100 million requires senior-level approval within the federal agency.
Teaming & Joint Ventures under FAR Subpart 9.6
A Strategic Framework for Winning Government Contracts
In today’s competitive federal marketplace, contractor team arrangements are a powerful tool for businesses seeking to:
- Expand capabilities
- Strengthen proposals
- Win larger government contracts
FAR Subpart 9.6 provides the regulatory foundation for:
- Joint ventures and teaming partnerships
- Combining strengths across multiple firms
- Sharing resources to maximize efficiency
- Delivering integrated solutions that meet complex government needs
Definition (FAR 9.601)
A Contractor Team Arrangement refers to an arrangement where:
- Two or more companies form a partnership or joint venture to act as a potential prime contractor; or
- A potential prime contractor agrees with one or more companies to have them act as its subcontractors under a specified government contract or acquisition program.
General Policy (FAR 9.602)
Contractor team arrangements can be beneficial for both the government and industry by:
- Allowing companies to complement each other’s unique capabilities.
- Offering the government the best combination of performance, cost, and delivery for the system or product being acquired.
By aligning under FAR Subpart 9.6, contractors not only enhance their competitiveness but also position themselves as agile, capable partners ready to meet the evolving demands of federal agencies.