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Home Logo: Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR)
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Broad Agency Announcement and Commercial Solutions Opening

DoD uses the Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) funding mechanism to procure basic and applied research via announced scientific study and experimentation topics tailored to advance the state-of-art, increase knowledge or understanding, instead of focusing on a specific system or hardware solution.

A Commercial Solutions Opening (CSO) is a competitive procedure to acquire existing and potential innovative commercial items, technologies, capabilities, or services that fulfill requirements, close capability gaps, or provide potential technological advancements.

Here is the FY25 Schedule:

Currently, the DoD releases two topic types:

Conventional Topic

  • Narrowly focused topic areas.
  • Seeks innovative solution to a particular DoD-identified need or problem.
  • Detailed (defined) requirements.
  • Clear understanding of technical requirements, performance metrics, and expectations.
  • Known government customer or end user.
  • Competition is within a specific topic area.
  • Small business concern (SBC) can submit multiple proposals per topic (unless otherwise stated).

Innovation “Open” Topic

  • Innovative solutions to not yet identified Warfighter need.
  • Can either be broad topic areas or focused on a specific technology area/mission priority.
  • Has commercialization potential and defense impact.
  • By Phase III, an end-user or DoD customer must be identified.
  • Competition across all domains and technologies.
  • SBC can only submit one proposal per topic (unless otherwise stated).

For current SBIR/STTR BAA or CSO opportunities, visit: DSIP.

 

Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) and Commercial Solutions Opening

Click here for information regarding BAAs and CSOs.

Broad Agency Announcements and Commercial Solutions Opening

Click here for information regarding BAAs and CSOs.

 
 

Broad Agency Announcement and Commercial Solutions Opening

DoD uses the Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) funding mechanism to procure basic and applied research via announced scientific study and experimentation topics tailored to advance the state-of-art, increase knowledge or understanding, instead of focusing on a specific system or hardware solution.

A Commercial Solutions Opening (CSO) is a competitive procedure to acquire existing and potential innovative commercial items, technologies, capabilities, or services that fulfill requirements, close capability gaps, or provide potential technological advancements.

Here is the FY25 Schedule:

Currently, the DoD releases two topic types:

Conventional Topic

  • Narrowly focused topic areas.
  • Seeks innovative solution to a particular DoD-identified need or problem.
  • Detailed (defined) requirements.
  • Clear understanding of technical requirements, performance metrics, and expectations.
  • Known government customer or end user.
  • Competition is within a specific topic area.
  • Small business concern (SBC) can submit multiple proposals per topic (unless otherwise stated).

Innovation “Open” Topic

  • Innovative solutions to not yet identified Warfighter need.
  • Can either be broad topic areas or focused on a specific technology area/mission priority.
  • Has commercialization potential and defense impact.
  • By Phase III, an end-user or DoD customer must be identified.
  • Competition across all domains and technologies.
  • SBC can only submit one proposal per topic (unless otherwise stated).

For current SBIR/STTR BAA or CSO opportunities, visit: DSIP.

 

SBIR

SBIR is a competitive three-phased process to solicit proposals for research/research and development (R/R&D), production, services, or any combination to meet stated agency needs or missions; and to award funding agreements to qualifying SBCs.
 

Phase
SBIR
Phase I (optional)
$306,872 cap (typically 6-12 months)
Feasibility Study
Phase II, Direct-to-Phase II (D2P2),
and/or Sequential/Cross Agency Phase II
$2,045,816 cap (typically 24-36 months)
Adoptions/Co-funds
Continued Research and Prototype
Phase II Enhancement
Non-SBIR/STTR $ match with additional period of performance
Varies by Component
Phase III
No time limit
No SBIR/STTR funds

Only United States small businesses that meet the following criteria are eligible to participate in SBIR programs:

 

  1. Organized for profit with a place of business located in the United States;
  2. Be more than 50 percent owned and controlled by one or more individuals who are United States citizens or permanent resident aliens, or by other SBCs that are each more than 50 percent owned and controlled by one or more individuals who are United States citizens or permanent resident aliens; and
  3. No more than 500 employees, including affiliates.
 

Key Points to Note:

  • In Phase I, the proposing SBC must perform a two-thirds minimum of the research/work.
  • In Phase II, the proposing SBC must perform a one-half minimum of the research/work.
  • The SBC must be the principal investigator’s primary employer.


See the eligibility guide for more detailed information (under the "Eligibility" tab).
 
 

SBIR

Click here for information regarding our SBIR Program.

SBIR

Click here for information regarding our SBIR Program.

 
 

SBIR

SBIR is a competitive three-phased process to solicit proposals for research/research and development (R/R&D), production, services, or any combination to meet stated agency needs or missions; and to award funding agreements to qualifying SBCs.
 

Phase
SBIR
Phase I (optional)
$306,872 cap (typically 6-12 months)
Feasibility Study
Phase II, Direct-to-Phase II (D2P2),
and/or Sequential/Cross Agency Phase II
$2,045,816 cap (typically 24-36 months)
Adoptions/Co-funds
Continued Research and Prototype
Phase II Enhancement
Non-SBIR/STTR $ match with additional period of performance
Varies by Component
Phase III
No time limit
No SBIR/STTR funds

Only United States small businesses that meet the following criteria are eligible to participate in SBIR programs:

 

  1. Organized for profit with a place of business located in the United States;
  2. Be more than 50 percent owned and controlled by one or more individuals who are United States citizens or permanent resident aliens, or by other SBCs that are each more than 50 percent owned and controlled by one or more individuals who are United States citizens or permanent resident aliens; and
  3. No more than 500 employees, including affiliates.
 

Key Points to Note:

  • In Phase I, the proposing SBC must perform a two-thirds minimum of the research/work.
  • In Phase II, the proposing SBC must perform a one-half minimum of the research/work.
  • The SBC must be the principal investigator’s primary employer.


See the eligibility guide for more detailed information (under the "Eligibility" tab).
 
 

STTR

STTR is a parallel program with the added requirement that SBCs partner with colleges/universities, federally funded R&D centers (FFRDCs) or qualified non-profit research institutions on cooperative R/R&D.

General Requirements

  • SBC MUST partner with a U.S. research institution.
  • Proposing SBC must perform at least 40 percent of the work.
  • Research institution must perform at least 30 percent of the work.
  • SBC must manage and control the STTR funding agreement.
  • Principal investigator may be employed at either the SBC or the research institution.

Partner Institution Requirements

  • Non-Profit Research Institution
  • Located in the United States
  • Meet one of the following 3 definitions:
    1. Nonprofit college or university
    2. Domestic nonprofit research organization
    3. Federally funded R&D Center (FFRDC)
How it differs from SBIR?
 
  1. The SBC awardee and its partnering institution are required to establish an intellectual property agreement detailing the allocation of intellectual property rights and rights to carry out follow-on research, development, or commercialization activities.
  2. STTR requires the SBC performs at least 40 percent of the R&D and a single partnering research institution performs at least 30 percent of the R&D.
  3. STTR allows the principal investigator to be primarily employed at the partnering research institution.
 
See the eligibility guide for more detailed information (under the "Eligibility" tab).
 

STTR

Click here for information regarding our STTR Program.

STTR

Click here for information regarding our STTR Program.

 
 

STTR

STTR is a parallel program with the added requirement that SBCs partner with colleges/universities, federally funded R&D centers (FFRDCs) or qualified non-profit research institutions on cooperative R/R&D.

General Requirements

  • SBC MUST partner with a U.S. research institution.
  • Proposing SBC must perform at least 40 percent of the work.
  • Research institution must perform at least 30 percent of the work.
  • SBC must manage and control the STTR funding agreement.
  • Principal investigator may be employed at either the SBC or the research institution.

Partner Institution Requirements

  • Non-Profit Research Institution
  • Located in the United States
  • Meet one of the following 3 definitions:
    1. Nonprofit college or university
    2. Domestic nonprofit research organization
    3. Federally funded R&D Center (FFRDC)
How it differs from SBIR?
 
  1. The SBC awardee and its partnering institution are required to establish an intellectual property agreement detailing the allocation of intellectual property rights and rights to carry out follow-on research, development, or commercialization activities.
  2. STTR requires the SBC performs at least 40 percent of the R&D and a single partnering research institution performs at least 30 percent of the R&D.
  3. STTR allows the principal investigator to be primarily employed at the partnering research institution.
 

See the eligibility guide for more detailed information (under the "Eligibility" tab).

 

Academic Research and Lab Resources

 
  • Lab Partnering Services:

    Lab Partnering Services (LPS) is US Department of Energy’s Office of Technology Transitions (OTT)’s flagship platform for discovering, connecting, and partnering with the DOE’s world class R&D portfolio. LPS provides multi-faceted search capabilities across numerous technology areas and the national laboratories to enable fast expertise discovery and serve as a conduit between the investor and the innovator.
  • Federally funded research and development centers:

    Not-for-profit, private-sector organizations established and funded to meet special long-term engineering, research, development, or other analytic needs that government or other private-sector resources cannot as effectively meet.
 

Academic Research & Lab Resources

Click here for information regarding Academic Research and Lab Resources.

Academic Research & Lab Resources

Click here for information regarding Academic Research and Lab Resources.

 
 

Academic Research and Lab Resources

 
  • Lab Partnering Services:

    Lab Partnering Services (LPS) is US Department of Energy’s Office of Technology Transitions (OTT)’s flagship platform for discovering, connecting, and partnering with the DOE’s world class R&D portfolio. LPS provides multi-faceted search capabilities across numerous technology areas and the national laboratories to enable fast expertise discovery and serve as a conduit between the investor and the innovator.
  • Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Minority Institutions(HBCU/MI):

    Post-secondary institutions enrolling populations with significant percentages of undergraduate minority students or that serve certain populations of minority students under various programs. The SBIR/STTR program encourages HBCUs/MIs educational institutions’ innovation and participation.
  • Federally funded research and development centers:

    Not-for-profit, private-sector organizations established and funded to meet special long-term engineering, research, development, or other analytic needs that government or other private-sector resources cannot as effectively meet.
 

Additional Resources:

  • Mentor-Protégé Program:

    In the past five years, proteges participating in DoD’s Mentor-Protégé Program (MPP) were awarded more than $6.5 billion in contracts and subcontracts.
  • Indian Incentive Program:

    The Indian Incentive Program (IIP) helps Indian organizations and Indian-owned economic enterprises win subcontracts.
  • Rapid Integrated Scalable Enterprise (formerly the Rapid Innovation Fund):

    Rapid Integrated Scalable Enterprise (RISE) provides SBCs a collaborative vehicle with the Department for innovative technologies that can be rapidly inserted into acquisition programs meeting specific defense needs.
  • Innovation Pathways:

    The Innovation Pathways website serves as a gateway for industry, SBCs, students, universities, and DoD organizations to discover opportunities with the Department.
  • APEX Accelerators:

    The APEX Accelerators program supports the Department’s efforts to identify and help a wide range of businesses enter and participate in the defense supply-chain. The program provides the education and training to ensure that all businesses can capably participate in federal, state, and local government contracts.

    Other federal contracting programs you may be eligible for:

  • Woman-Owned Small Business Federal Contract Program:

    The Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) Federal Contract program authorizes contracting officers to award sole-source contracts to WOSBs.
  • Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business Program:

    The qualities developed during military service—discipline, tenacity, and adaptability—ensure Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Businesses (SDVOSB) are excellent entrepreneurs.
  • Historically Underutilized Business Zones:

    In full and open competition, a historically underutilized business zones (HUBZones)-certified company bid receives a 10 percent price-evaluation preference.
  • Small Disadvantaged Business:

    Each year, the Federal Government awards about 10 percent of all federal contract dollars, or roughly $50 billion in contracts, to small disadvantaged businesses.
  • 8a Business Development Program:

    To provide a level playing field for socially and economically disadvantaged people or owned-entities and SBCs, the government limits competition for certain contracts to businesses that participate in the 8(a) Business Development Program.

    Additional Resources on Technology Transition

  • OTST

  • APFIT

  • RDER

  • STRATFI/TACFI

  • ARMY CATALYST

  • NAVY STP/VTM

 

Additional Resources

Click here for information about additional resources.

Additional Resources

Click here for information about additional resources

 
 

Additional Resources:

  • Mentor-Protégé Program:

    In the past five years, proteges participating in DoD’s Mentor-Protégé Program (MPP) were awarded more than $6.5 billion in contracts and subcontracts.
  • Rapid Integrated Scalable Enterprise (formerly the Rapid Innovation Fund):

    Rapid Integrated Scalable Enterprise (RISE) provides SBCs a collaborative vehicle with the Department for innovative technologies that can be rapidly inserted into acquisition programs meeting specific defense needs.
  • Innovation Pathways:

    The Innovation Pathways website serves as a gateway for industry, SBCs, students, universities, and DoD organizations to discover opportunities with the Department.
  • APEX Accelerators:

    The APEX Accelerators program supports the Department’s efforts to identify and help a wide range of businesses enter and participate in the defense supply-chain. The program provides the education and training to ensure that all businesses can capably participate in federal, state, and local government contracts.

    Other federal contracting programs you may be eligible for:

  • Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business Program:

    The qualities developed during military service—discipline, tenacity, and adaptability—ensure Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Businesses (SDVOSB) are excellent entrepreneurs.
  •  

    Additional Resources on Technology Transition

  • OTST

  • APFIT

  • RDER

  • STRATFI/TACFI

  • ARMY CATALYST

  • NAVY STP/VTM

Defense SBIR/STTR Innovation Portal (DSIP)
SBIR.gov
Department of Defense (DoD)
USD (Research and Engineering)
DoD Inspector General (DoD OIG)
USA.gov
Small Business Act
Federal Register
Defense SBIR/STTR Program
The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301

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