Janitorial Government Contracts

Federal janitorial and custodial contracts set aside for small business — recurring cleaning work in government buildings.

Custodial services for federal office buildings, clinics, courthouses, and base facilities: daily cleaning, floor care, window washing, and porter services, usually as multi-year contracts with option years. GSA, the VA, and installation contracting offices are the steady buyers.

151 active opportunities right now. Updated daily from SAM.gov.

U.S. Department of Defense
Econ. Disadv. Women-Owned

Janitorial Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $50KUpdated Feb 10
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Custodial Services for Army Reserve Facility TX212

U.S. Department of Defense
$50K – $250KUpdated Feb 06
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Janitorial Services for a National Cemetery

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
$100K – $500K📍 Riverside, CAUpdated Feb 04
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Regional Swimming Pool Maintenance Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500K📍 Norfolk, VAUpdated Jan 30
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Non-Personal Custodial Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Jan 23
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Non-Personal Custodial Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Jan 16
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Janitorial Services for Pine Creek Lake Office

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $50KUpdated Jan 15
U.S. Department of Defense
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Janitorial Services for Army Bases

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Jan 14
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Janitorial Services for Omaha National Cemetery

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
$100K – $500K📍 Omaha, NEUpdated Jan 13
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Small Business

Janitorial Services for a Public Service Center

U.S. Department of Agriculture
Estimated $50K – $250K📍 Deming, WAUpdated Jan 13
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Snow Removal Services for a Mississippi Army Base

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Dec 17
U.S. Department of the Army
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Custodial Services for Homewood, IL

U.S. Department of the Army
$100K – $500KUpdated Dec 12
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Snow Removal Services in Minnesota

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Dec 12
U.S. Department of Defense
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Hoods and Ducts Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500K📍 Tucson, AZUpdated Dec 10
U.S. Department of Defense
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Aquatic Center Pool Service and Maintenance

U.S. Department of Defense
Estimated $50K – $250K📍 San Antonio, TXUpdated Dec 05

Janitorial & Cleaning contracts — common questions

How do I get janitorial contracts with the federal government?expand_more

Register free on SAM.gov under NAICS 561720, watch the federal buildings in your area, and respond to Sources Sought notices — custodial work is a classic first federal contract because past performance from commercial cleaning translates directly. Note that some custodial requirements are channeled to the AbilityOne program (nonprofits employing people with disabilities) before they ever reach open competition.

What NAICS codes cover cleaning work?expand_more

NAICS 561720 (Janitorial Services) is the main one; 561790 (Other Building Services) picks up window cleaning and pressure washing, and 561740 covers carpet and upholstery cleaning. All use receipts-based size standards that most independent cleaning companies fall well under.

Is janitorial work really set aside for small business?expand_more

Yes — it's one of the most set-aside-heavy trades in federal contracting, with steady 8(a), SDVOSB, WOSB, and HUBZone activity on top of plain small-business set-asides. For the plain ones, self-certified size is all you need.

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.