Sources Sought Notices

The earliest signal in federal contracting. A Sources Sought notice means an agency is researching the market before writing its solicitation — and the small businesses that respond shape whether the contract gets set aside at all.

262 active notices. Updated daily from SAM.gov.

U.S. Department of Justice
Small Business

Evidence Collection Equipment & Services

U.S. Department of Justice
$5M – $10M📍 Redstone Arsenal, ALUpdated Jun 26
U.S. Department of Defense
8(a) Disadvantaged

Legacy System Application Management

U.S. Department of Defense
$1M – $10M📍 Fort George G Meade, MDUpdated Jun 26
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Barrier Boat Overhaul

U.S. Department of Defense
$500K – $2M📍 Kittery, MEUpdated Jun 26
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Fort Leonard Wood Community Hospital Shuttle Service

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500K📍 Fort Leonard Wood, MOUpdated Jun 25
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Pressure Intensifier Unit

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500KUpdated Jun 25
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Mechanical Tachometer

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $50K📍 Richmond, VAUpdated Jul 10
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Auxiliary Catholic Priest Services

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500K📍 Hurlburt Field, FLUpdated Jun 25
U.S. Department of Commerce
Small Business

Repair and Renovation of NOAA's Gulf Marine Service Facility

U.S. Department of Commerce
$12.75M📍 Pascagoula, MSUpdated Jun 24
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Switch Assemblies

U.S. Department of Defense
$5K – $50K📍 Redstone Arsenal, ALUpdated Jul 09
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Disabled Veteran-Owned

Create Observation Unit JC

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
$500K – $1M📍 Saint Louis, MOUpdated Jun 24
U.S. Department of Defense
8(a) Disadvantaged

USARCENT G3 Enterprise Support Contract

U.S. Department of Defense
$1M – $10M📍 Shaw AFB, SCUpdated Jun 24
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Small Business

USCGC Sturgeon Ship Maintenance

U.S. Department of Homeland Security
$100K – $500K📍 South Portland, MEUpdated Jun 24
U.S. Department of Defense
Small Business

Abrasive Water Jet Cutting System

U.S. Department of Defense
$100K – $500K📍 Jacksonville, FLUpdated Jun 24
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Small Business

Evaluate Remaining Life of Syracuse VA Garage

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Estimated $100K – $500K📍 Syracuse, NYUpdated Jul 10
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Small Business

USCG Cutter Drydock Repairs

U.S. Department of Homeland Security
$100K – $500KUpdated Jun 23

Sources Sought — common questions

What is a Sources Sought notice?expand_more

It's market research, not a solicitation. Before an agency writes an RFP, it posts a Sources Sought notice asking 'who can do this work?' Businesses respond with a short capabilities statement — there is no bid, no pricing, and no award at this stage.

Why respond if there's nothing to win yet?expand_more

Because responses drive the set-aside decision. If enough capable small businesses respond, the Rule of Two pushes the contracting officer to reserve the eventual contract for small business — possibly for your certification specifically. Responding also puts your firm on the agency's radar before the RFP is written.

How long do I have to respond?expand_more

Response windows are typically two to four weeks from posting, and they're firm. Each notice lists its own response deadline and submission instructions — read the notice itself, since formats vary by agency.

What should a response include?expand_more

A concise capabilities statement: your company profile (UEI, CAGE, size status, certifications, NAICS codes), a point-by-point answer to what the notice asks, and two or three directly relevant past performances. It's market research, not a proposal — a few strong pages beat a long one.

Set-Aside Pro is an independent publication, not affiliated with the SBA or SAM.gov. Each notice's own text controls what a response must include — read it before submitting.