Equipment Repair Government Contracts
Federal machinery and equipment repair contracts set aside for small business — industrial, commercial, and heavy-equipment maintenance for government owners.
Repair and preventive maintenance of generators, pumps, cranes, kitchen and laundry equipment, and industrial machinery at bases, depots, and federal facilities. Often awarded as recurring service contracts with option years.
78 active opportunities right now. Updated daily from SAM.gov.
Crane Maintenance Services
Frequency Converters Diagnostic and Report
Chiller and Cooling Tower Water Treatment Services
Medical-Grade Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Systems
Fire Ground Ladder and Hose Testing
Emergency Generator Maintenance and Repair
Replace Electronic Modular Control Panel
Work Platforms Repair
Generator Set Preservation and Layup
Vibration Chamber System Maintenance & Calibration
Laser Cleaning Services for PVD Machines
iPad Redactions
Triennial Electrical Power Distribution System Maintenance and Testing
EWP Systems Maintenance and Repair
Replacement of Condenser Water Pump Skid
Equipment Repair & Maintenance contracts — common questions
How do I get federal equipment repair work?expand_more
Register on SAM.gov under NAICS 811310 (Commercial and Industrial Machinery and Equipment Repair and Maintenance), and search the board for the equipment classes you service — solicitations name the machinery specifically, so keyword alerts work well in this trade.
What size standard applies?expand_more
811310 uses a receipts-based standard most independent repair shops fall under. Self-certify in SAM.gov and you're eligible for the small-business set-asides where much of this work lives.
What wins these contracts?expand_more
Proof you can service the specific equipment: OEM certifications and factory training where they exist, response-time commitments, and past performance on comparable fleets. Federal buyers renew reliable maintainers — the first win compounds.
Set-Aside Pro is an independent publication, not affiliated with the SBA or SAM.gov. Size standards shown are from the SBA's published table — confirm the current figures and each solicitation's requirements before bidding.