Security Government Contracts

Federal security contracts set aside for small business — guard services and electronic security systems for government sites.

Two distinct markets under one trade: armed and unarmed guard services for federal buildings and installations (561612), and electronic security — access control, cameras, intrusion detection — installed and maintained under 561621. Both are recurring, both lean on set-asides.

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

U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Fire Alarm Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $25K📍 Fort Drum, NYUpdated Jan 14
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Alarm Maintenance

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $50KUpdated Apr 14

Security Services & Systems contracts — common questions

How do I get government security contracts?expand_more

Register on SAM.gov under 561612 (guard services) or 561621 (security systems) depending on your business. Guard contracts hinge on state licensing, cleared and trained officers, and past performance managing posts; systems work hinges on manufacturer certifications and the ability to service what you install.

What clearances do security contracts require?expand_more

It varies by site — many federal guard posts require suitability determinations or clearances for officers, and the solicitation will say so. Build your hiring pipeline around those requirements before you bid, because staffing speed is a scored factor.

Are these contracts set aside?expand_more

Guard services are a longstanding 8(a) and SDVOSB category, and systems work is frequently a small-business set-aside. For the plain small-business ones, self-certified size under the receipts-based standards is all that's required.

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.