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Free Government Contracting Resources for Small Businesses

Joseph Kamara · · 10 min read
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One of the biggest myths in government contracting is that you need to pay someone to get started. You don’t. The federal government funds an entire network of free programs, databases, and training tools built specifically to help small businesses win contracts.

The problem is not a lack of resources. The problem is that most business owners don’t know these resources exist. This guide fixes that. Every resource listed here is free. No trial periods, no upsells, no catches.

Whether you are just exploring government contracting or actively pursuing your first contract, this is your reference page. Bookmark it.

What You’ll Learn

  • Where to get free one-on-one government contracting consulting
  • Six free federal databases for market research and opportunity hunting
  • Free training courses from the SBA
  • Free capability statement templates and builders
  • How to find your agency’s small business office
  • Free news sources to stay current on contracting trends

APEX Accelerators: Your Best Free Resource

If you read nothing else on this page, read this section. APEX Accelerators (formerly Procurement Technical Assistance Centers, or PTACs) are the single most valuable free resource for small businesses pursuing government contracts.

Congress authorized APEX Accelerators in 1985 through the Department of Defense (DoD) Office of Small Business Programs. Today the network includes over 90 centers with 300+ local offices and 600+ procurement counselors across the country. Every service they provide is free and confidential.

What APEX Accelerators Do (All Free)

  • One-on-one consulting on every aspect of government contracting
  • Bid and proposal review before you submit
  • SAM.gov registration help and troubleshooting
  • Certification guidance for 8(a), HUBZone, Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB), and Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) programs
  • Market research and opportunity identification
  • Capability statement development
  • Training classes and seminars on procurement topics

Your local APEX counselor will sit down with you, review your business, and create a plan for entering the government market. They will review your proposals before you submit them. They will help you register on SAM.gov. They will walk you through the certification process. All for free.

How to find yours: Visit apexaccelerators.us and search by state or ZIP code. You can also find APEX Accelerators through the SBA’s federal contracting assistance locator.

If you are serious about government contracting, call your local APEX Accelerator today. That single phone call can save you months of trial and error.

Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs)

Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) provide free or low-cost counseling and training to small businesses, including government contracting guidance. The Small Business Administration (SBA) partially funds SBDCs, which are hosted by universities, colleges, and state agencies across the country.

The network includes roughly 1,000 locations nationwide. One-on-one consulting is free.

SBDC Services Relevant to Government Contracting

  • Business planning and strategy
  • Financial management and accounting setup
  • Government contracting readiness assessments
  • Teaming partner identification
  • Certification assistance
  • Access to capital guidance

SBDCs cover broader business topics than APEX Accelerators. If you need help with your overall business strategy in addition to government contracting, an SBDC is the right fit.

How to find yours: Visit americassbdc.org or use the SBA SBDC locator.

SCORE Mentors

SCORE is a nonprofit funded by the SBA that provides free, confidential mentoring through a national network of volunteer business mentors. Many SCORE mentors have direct government contracting experience.

Both in-person and virtual mentoring are available. You get paired with a mentor who has experience in your industry or with the specific challenge you are facing. There is no time limit and no cost.

How to connect: Visit score.org and request a mentor online.

SBA District Offices

The SBA maintains district offices in every state. These offices provide direct assistance to small businesses, including government contracting counseling, certification help for 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, and SDVOSB programs, financing guidance, and connections to APEX Accelerators, SBDCs, and SCORE.

How to find yours: Visit sba.gov/local-assistance.

SBA Free Training Courses

The SBA offers free online training through several programs. You do not need to be enrolled in any SBA certification program to access them.

Key Programs

  • Empower to Grow: Free courses, tailored training, and one-on-one consulting covering eligibility requirements, compliance, procurement timelines, documentation, and positioning for federal opportunities
  • Ascent Digital Platform: E-learning journeys including a government contracting track. Originally designed for women business owners but open to all
  • Government Contracting Classroom: A series of free online courses covering contracting basics

How to access: Visit sba.gov/sba-learning-platform or go directly to learning.sba.gov.

Six Free Government Databases Every Contractor Needs

The federal government publishes enormous amounts of procurement data for free. These six databases give you the same market intelligence that paid tools charge thousands of dollars to provide. Learning to use them well is one of the highest-value skills in government contracting.

Database URL What It Provides
SAM.gov (System for Award Management) sam.gov Active solicitations, Requests for Information (RFIs), Sources Sought notices, entity registration, contract award data, wage determinations, exclusion records
FPDS (Federal Procurement Data System) fpds.gov (now accessible through SAM.gov) Historical contract data with 50 million+ records. Shows who won contracts, at what price, and from which agency. Covers contract actions over $3,000 from FY2004 forward. Requires a free SAM account.
USAspending.gov usaspending.gov Official federal spending data across contracts, grants, and loans. 100+ agencies submit data monthly. Search by agency, contractor, location, or North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code.
Forecast of Contracting Opportunities acquisitiongateway.gov/forecast Upcoming procurement forecasts from agencies. Searchable by keyword, agency, NAICS code, and estimated award date. Each listing includes a point of contact. No login required.
Acquisition.gov acquisition.gov Full text of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) and Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS). Also includes FAR overhaul updates, class deviations, and agency procurement forecast links.
SBA Size Standards Table sba.gov/document/support-table-size-standards Complete table of small business size standards by NAICS code. Shows revenue thresholds and employee count limits. Updated periodically for inflation.

Source: SAM.gov, USAspending.gov, Acquisition Gateway, Acquisition.gov

How to Use These Databases Together

Start with the Forecast of Contracting Opportunities to see what agencies plan to buy. Use USAspending.gov and FPDS to research who won similar contracts in the past and at what price. Check SAM.gov for active solicitations that match your capabilities. Use the SBA Size Standards Table to confirm your small business status under the relevant NAICS code. Read the FAR on Acquisition.gov when you need to understand a specific rule or clause.

For a detailed walkthrough of how to find government contracts using these tools, see our step-by-step guide.

Free Capability Statement Resources

A capability statement is your one-page business resume for government buyers. You do not need to hire a designer or pay for a template. Several agencies publish free templates and guides.

Resource URL What You Get
SBA 8(a) Capabilities Statement Guide sba.gov/document/brand-guide-8a-capabilities-statement Official SBA template with formatting guidance
HHS Capability Statement Guide hhs.gov Step-by-step writing guide from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
DOI Capability Statement Worksheet doi.gov (PDF) Downloadable worksheet from the Department of the Interior (DOI)
APEX Accelerators Via your local office One-on-one help creating and refining your capability statement
RFPProAI Free Builder capabilitybuilder.rfpproai.com Free online builder with no signup required

Every capability statement should fit on one page and include five elements: core competencies, past performance, differentiators, company data (Unique Entity Identifier, Commercial and Government Entity code, NAICS codes, certifications), and contact information.

Agency OSDBU Pages: Your Direct Line to Federal Buyers

Every federal agency with procurement authority maintains an Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU). Congress established this requirement under Public Law 95-507 in 1979. These offices exist to help small businesses do business with their agency.

What OSDBU Offices Provide (Free)

  • Agency-specific small business goals and achievement data
  • Upcoming procurement forecasts
  • Small business events and matchmaking sessions
  • Vendor outreach sessions and industry days
  • Subcontracting opportunities
  • Agency-specific guidance for new vendors

Key Agency OSDBU Pages

Agency OSDBU URL
Department of Defense (DoD) business.defense.gov
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) va.gov/osdbu
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) dhs.gov/osdbu
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) hhs.gov OSDBU
Department of Justice (DOJ) justice.gov/osdbu
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) usda.gov OSDBU
Department of Transportation (DOT) transportation.gov/osdbu
Department of the Interior (DOI) doi.gov/pmb/osdbu
Social Security Administration (SSA) ssa.gov/osdbu

Source: Congressional Research Service Report on OSDBUs

Start with the OSDBU page for the agency that buys what you sell. Sign up for their email list, attend their events, and review their forecast. These offices want to connect with small businesses. That is their job.

Free News Sources and Industry Intelligence

Staying current on contracting trends, policy changes, and award announcements costs nothing. These publications cover government contracting and offer free access to daily news.

Source URL Focus
GovConWire govconwire.com Contract awards, mergers and acquisitions, policy updates
FedScoop fedscoop.com Federal IT, technology modernization, cybersecurity
Federal News Network federalnewsnetwork.com Procurement, cybersecurity, IT, and broad federal news
ExecutiveGov executivegov.com Federal and government contracting news
SmallGovCon Blog smallgovcon.com Government contracts law. Strong regulatory analysis and small business program updates.
GovTribe Blog blog.govtribe.com Market analysis and contracting trends

Source: GovDash Top 10 GovCon News Sources

For the latest on federal contracting news and policy changes in 2026, including FAR threshold updates and new SBA rules, see our dedicated news article.

Your Free Resource Toolkit: Organized by Need

Here is everything in one place, organized by what you need to accomplish.

Getting Started

Need Free Resource URL
Register your business SAM.gov sam.gov
Get free one-on-one consulting APEX Accelerator apexaccelerators.us
Free business mentoring SCORE score.org
Free training courses SBA Learning Platform learning.sba.gov
Find local help SBA Local Assistance sba.gov/local-assistance

Market Research

Need Free Resource URL
Find active solicitations SAM.gov Contract Opportunities sam.gov
Research past contracts FPDS (via SAM.gov) fpds.gov
Analyze federal spending data USAspending.gov usaspending.gov
Find upcoming opportunities Forecast of Contracting Opportunities acquisitiongateway.gov/forecast
Read the FAR Acquisition.gov acquisition.gov
Check size standards SBA Size Standards Table sba.gov

Building Your Business

Need Free Resource URL
Capability statement template SBA, HHS, DOI, RFPProAI Links in Capability Statement section above
Agency small business events Agency OSDBU pages Links in OSDBU section above
Industry news GovConWire, FedScoop, Federal News Network Links in News Sources section above
Legal and regulatory updates SmallGovCon Blog smallgovcon.com

Frequently Asked Questions

Are APEX Accelerators really free?

Yes. APEX Accelerators are funded by the Department of Defense and do not charge for any services. One-on-one consulting, bid reviews, registration help, training classes, and capability statement assistance are all free and confidential. There are over 300 local offices nationwide.

What is the difference between SAM.gov and USAspending.gov?

SAM.gov is where you register your business and find active contract opportunities. It is the government’s official system for entity registration and solicitation postings. USAspending.gov is a research tool that shows how the federal government has already spent its money. Use SAM.gov to find and bid on contracts. Use USAspending.gov to research which agencies buy what you sell and how much they spend.

Where can I find free government contracting training?

The SBA offers free online courses through its Learning Platform at learning.sba.gov. Programs include Empower to Grow, Ascent, and the Government Contracting Classroom. APEX Accelerators also offer free in-person and virtual training seminars. No enrollment or certification is required to access these programs.

Do I need to pay someone to register on SAM.gov?

No. SAM.gov registration is 100% free. Any company or individual that contacts you offering to register your business for a fee is running a scam. The registration process takes about an hour. Your local APEX Accelerator will help you complete it at no charge. For a full walkthrough, see our SAM.gov registration guide.

What is an OSDBU and why should I contact one?

An OSDBU is an Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization. Every federal agency that buys from contractors is required by law to maintain one. OSDBU offices host events, publish procurement forecasts, run matchmaking sessions, and help small businesses connect with agency buyers. Contacting the OSDBU at your target agency is one of the most effective free steps you can take.

What to Do Next

You now have every free resource available to small businesses pursuing government contracts. Here is the order that matters most:

  1. Call your local APEX Accelerator. Schedule a free consultation. They will assess your readiness and build a plan tailored to your business. Find yours at apexaccelerators.us.
  2. Register on SAM.gov. It is free and required for every federal contractor. See our step-by-step registration guide.
  3. Build your capability statement. Use the free templates listed above. See our capability statement guide for a full walkthrough.
  4. Research your market. Use USAspending.gov and the Forecast of Contracting Opportunities to identify agencies that buy what you sell. See our guide on how to find government contracts.
  5. Learn the basics. If you are new to government contracting, start with our plain-language introduction and explore the small business programs available to you.

Every resource on this page is free. The only investment required is your time. Start today.

This article is for informational purposes only. It is not legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Consult with qualified professionals for guidance specific to your business.

Joseph Kamara

Written by

Joseph Kamara

CPA, CISSP, CISA. Former Big Four auditor (KPMG, BDO). Specializing in government contracting compliance, cybersecurity, and audit readiness.

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