Skip to content
Small Business Programs

WOSB Certification: How to Get Certified as a Women-Owned Small Business

Joseph Kamara Joseph Kamara · · 11 min read · Updated March 22, 2026
WOSB Certification: How to Get Certified as a Women-Owned Small Business - AmerifusionGovCon featured image

If you have searched for WOSB certification advice online, you have probably found articles that tell you to self-certify. That advice is wrong. Self-certification for the Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) Federal Contract Program ended in October 2020. The SBA (Small Business Administration) now runs the certification process directly.

The program is worth your attention. Women-owned small businesses won approximately $30 billion in federal prime contracts in FY2025 (per FPDS award data), exceeding the government’s 5% goal for only the third time since 1994. But you cannot access WOSB set-aside contracts without SBA certification.

This guide covers everything you need to get certified in 2026: eligibility requirements, the difference between WOSB and EDWOSB, which NAICS codes qualify, what documents to gather, and how to avoid the most common reasons applications get denied.

What You Will Learn

  • Determine if your business qualifies for WOSB or EDWOSB certification
  • Identify which NAICS codes are eligible for set-asides
  • Gather the required documents before you apply
  • Complete the application through MySBA Certifications
  • Recognize the sole source thresholds updated October 2025
  • Avoid the top reasons applications get denied

What Is the WOSB Federal Contract Program?

The WOSB Federal Contract Program reserves certain federal contracts for businesses that are at least 51% owned and controlled by women. Congress created the program because women-owned businesses were underrepresented in federal contracting. The statutory goal is 5% of all federal prime contracting dollars going to WOSBs.

The program has two tiers:

  • WOSB (Women-Owned Small Business): Eligible for set-asides in 626 NAICS codes classified as “substantially underrepresented” for women.
  • EDWOSB (Economically Disadvantaged Women-Owned Small Business): Eligible for set-asides in all 733 eligible NAICS codes, including 107 additional codes classified as “underrepresented.” EDWOSB also qualifies for sole source awards.

The distinction matters. If your industry falls in one of those 107 EDWOSB-only codes, standard WOSB certification alone will not give you access to set-aside contracts in that code. You need EDWOSB.

Important: WOSB certification is different from WBE (Women’s Business Enterprise) certification through WBENC. WBE certification is for private-sector supplier diversity programs. WOSB certification is specifically for federal government contracting. You may want both, but they serve different purposes.

WOSB vs. EDWOSB: Which Do You Need?

Every EDWOSB automatically qualifies as a WOSB, but not every WOSB qualifies as an EDWOSB. If you meet the economic disadvantage thresholds, always apply for EDWOSB. It gives you access to more NAICS codes and sole source opportunities.

Factor WOSB EDWOSB
Ownership 51%+ women-owned 51%+ women-owned
Economic disadvantage Not required Required (see thresholds below)
Eligible NAICS codes 626 (substantially underrepresented) 733 (substantially + underrepresented)
Competitive set-asides Yes, no dollar cap Yes, no dollar cap
Sole source awards Yes (626 codes only) Yes (all 733 codes)
Sole source limit (services) $5.5 million $5.5 million
Sole source limit (manufacturing) $8.5 million $8.5 million
Cost to certify (SBA direct) Free Free

EDWOSB Economic Disadvantage Thresholds

To qualify as economically disadvantaged under 13 CFR Part 127, each qualifying woman owner must meet all three limits:

Threshold Limit What Counts
Personal net worth Under $850,000 Excludes: equity in the business, equity in primary residence, and retirement accounts
Adjusted gross income Under $400,000 Three-year average from personal tax returns
Total assets (fair market value) Under $6.5 million Includes: primary residence, business assets. Excludes: retirement accounts

The net worth exclusions are generous. Your business equity, home equity, and retirement savings do not count against the $850,000 limit. Many business owners who assume they are “too wealthy” actually qualify.

Eligibility Requirements for WOSB Certification

Your business must meet all of the following requirements under 13 CFR Part 127, Subpart B. Missing any one of them will result in a denial.

Ownership:

  • At least 51% unconditionally and directly owned by one or more women who are U.S. citizens
  • Ownership must be real, not just on paper. Silent arrangements, trust structures, or nominal ownership designed to qualify will be investigated and denied.

Control:

  • One or more women must control both the long-term strategic direction and the day-to-day management of the business
  • The highest officer position (CEO, President, Managing Member) must be held by a woman
  • The qualifying woman must work full-time during normal business hours
  • No outside employment that conflicts with managing the business

Size:

  • Must be small per SBA size standards for the NAICS codes in your SAM.gov profile

Registration:

  • Active SAM.gov registration with a current UEI number
  • No active exclusions or unresolved federal tax liens

The NAICS Code Factor

This is where the WOSB program gets misunderstood. Not every industry qualifies for WOSB set-asides. The SBA studied federal contracting data and identified industries where women are underrepresented. Only those industries are eligible.

The SBA designates 733 eligible NAICS codes, split into two groups:

  • 626 codes: “Substantially underrepresented.” Both WOSB and EDWOSB firms can compete for set-asides in these industries.
  • 107 codes: “Underrepresented.” Only EDWOSB firms can compete for set-asides in these industries.

Before you apply, check that your primary NAICS codes appear on the SBA’s eligible NAICS code list. If your codes are not on the list, WOSB certification will not help you access set-aside contracts, though you can still bid on full and open competitions.

The top NAICS codes by WOSB contract dollars in FY2025 (approximate, based on FPDS award data):

NAICS Code Industry FY2025 WOSB Dollars
541512 Computer Systems Design Services $4.2 billion
541611 Administrative Management Consulting $3.8 billion
561210 Facilities Support Services $2.1 billion
541330 Engineering Services $1.9 billion
561320 Temporary Staffing Services $1.6 billion

How to Apply for WOSB Certification

The SBA offers three certification pathways. All three result in the same WOSB or EDWOSB certification.

Pathway 1: SBA Direct (Free). Apply through MySBA Certifications at certifications.sba.gov. This is the most common path and costs nothing. The SBA targets a 90-day determination, though actual processing times run closer to 6 to 8 months.

Pathway 2: Approved Third-Party Certifier. Four organizations are approved to certify WOSBs on behalf of the SBA: NWBOC, WBENC, USWCC, and El Paso Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (EPHCC). Third-party certifiers charge fees (typically $275 to $1,200, varying by certifier and business size) but may process faster. You still appear in the SBA’s certified WOSB database.

Pathway 3: Approved Government Entity. Some federal, state, and local government agencies are approved certifiers. Less common but available in certain regions.

Step-by-Step Application Process (SBA Direct)

Step 1: Confirm eligibility. Review the ownership, control, and size requirements above. If you are unsure, contact your local APEX Accelerator for a free eligibility review.

Step 2: Register on SAM.gov. You need an active SAM.gov registration before applying. If you have not registered yet, follow our SAM.gov registration guide.

Step 3: Gather your documents. Missing documents are the number one cause of application delays. Collect everything before you start. See the document checklist in the next section.

Step 4: Create your MySBA Certifications account. Go to certifications.sba.gov and create an account using the email address associated with your SAM.gov registration.

Step 5: Complete the online application. The application asks about your business structure, ownership percentages, management roles, and financial information. Answer every question. Incomplete applications are returned, which resets the clock.

Step 6: Upload supporting documents. Upload every document listed in the checklist. Name files clearly (e.g., “2023-Business-Tax-Return.pdf”). The SBA reviews what you upload, not what you describe.

Step 7: Submit and wait. The SBA targets 90 days for a determination. Actual processing times average 6 to 8 months based on practitioner reports. You can check your application status in the MySBA portal. If the SBA requests additional information, respond within the deadline or your application may be denied.

Documents You Will Need

Gather these before starting your application. Missing documents cause more delays and denials than any other issue.

Document Required For Where to Get It
Business tax returns (3 years, all schedules) All applicants Your CPA or IRS transcripts
Articles of incorporation or organization All applicants Your state’s Secretary of State
Operating agreement or bylaws All applicants Your business records
Certificate of good standing All applicants Your state’s Secretary of State
Proof of U.S. citizenship Each qualifying woman owner Birth certificate, passport, or naturalization certificate
Resume Each qualifying woman owner Your records
Personal tax returns (3 years) + W-2s/1099s Each qualifying woman owner Your CPA or IRS transcripts
Personal Financial Statement EDWOSB only SBA Form 413 template
Asset and liability documentation EDWOSB only Bank statements, property appraisals, loan statements

Pro tip: The SBA cross-checks your application against your SAM.gov registration, your business tax returns, and your state filings. Make sure your business name, EIN, address, and ownership percentages match across all documents. Inconsistencies trigger additional review and delays.

Sole Source and Set-Aside Thresholds (Updated October 2025)

The FAR Council increased WOSB sole source thresholds effective October 1, 2025, as part of inflation adjustments under FAR Subpart 19.15. These are the current limits:

Award Type Previous Threshold Current Threshold (Oct 2025)
Sole source (services) $4.5 million $5.5 million
Sole source (manufacturing) $7 million $8.5 million
Competitive set-aside No cap No cap

A sole source award means the contracting officer can award the contract directly to a certified WOSB or EDWOSB without full competition. The contracting officer must determine that only one certified firm can perform the work at a fair and reasonable price.

To find WOSB set-aside opportunities, search SAM.gov contract opportunities and filter by “WOSB” or “EDWOSB” set-aside type. You can also set up saved searches to receive email alerts when new WOSB opportunities are posted in your NAICS codes.

Why Applications Get Denied (and How to Avoid It)

The SBA denies WOSB applications for specific, preventable reasons. Here are the most common ones and how to avoid them.

1. Ownership not properly documented. This is the most common denial reason. Your articles of incorporation, operating agreement, and stock certificates must clearly show that women own at least 51%. If your operating agreement has not been updated since you added a partner, update it before you apply.

2. Control issues. The SBA looks at who actually makes decisions, not just who holds the title. If board meeting minutes show a non-qualifying member making strategic decisions, or if a male co-owner signs contracts and manages operations, the application will be denied. The qualifying woman must demonstrably run the business.

3. Missing or incomplete documents. The SBA does not chase you for missing paperwork. If you upload two years of tax returns instead of three, your application may be denied rather than delayed. Submit everything the first time.

4. Ineligible NAICS code. If your primary NAICS code is not on the SBA’s eligible list, you cannot receive WOSB set-aside contracts in that code. Check the list before you invest time in the application.

5. Size standard exceeded. Your business must be small per the SBA size standard for your NAICS code. If you have grown past the threshold, you are not eligible regardless of ownership.

6. Inconsistent information. Your SAM.gov registration says one address, your tax returns show another, and your articles of incorporation list a third. The SBA flags inconsistencies as potential misrepresentation. Align everything before you apply.

7. Spousal or family influence concerns. If your spouse or a family member owns a similar business, holds a significant role in your company, or previously controlled the business, the SBA will scrutinize whether the qualifying woman truly controls the firm. Be prepared to explain and document the actual management structure.

8. SAM.gov exclusion or federal debt. Active exclusions or unresolved federal tax liens are automatic disqualifiers. Check your SAM.gov status and resolve any issues before applying.

After Certification: Maintaining Your WOSB Status

Getting certified is the first step. Keeping your certification requires ongoing attention.

Recertification every three years. The SBA repealed the annual attestation requirement in May 2023. You now recertify every three years. Start the recertification process 90 days before your anniversary date. Late recertification can result in a lapse in your certified status.

Material changes: notify within 30 days. If your ownership structure, management, or business size changes materially, you must notify the SBA within 30 calendar days. Examples: adding a new owner, changing your managing member, or exceeding your size standard.

Mergers and acquisitions (January 2026 rule). If your business merges with or is acquired by another company, you must recertify within 30 days of closing. This rule, effective January 2026 under 13 CFR Part 127, prevents firms from maintaining WOSB status after ownership changes that affect eligibility.

Certification extension (2024-2026). The SBA issued a one-year extension memo for firms with renewals due between June 2024 and May 2026. If your recertification falls in this window, your existing certification is extended by one year to reduce the backlog from the transition to centralized certification.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I self-certify as a WOSB?

No. You must apply through one of three pathways: SBA direct (free), an approved third-party certifier, or an approved government entity. The SBA eliminated self-certification on October 15, 2020, after an inspector general report found widespread documentation failures. Any article or website telling you to self-certify is using outdated information.

Is WOSB certification free?

It depends on your pathway. The SBA direct route at certifications.sba.gov costs nothing. Third-party certifiers (NWBOC, WBENC, USWCC, or EPHCC) charge fees ranging from $275 to $1,200, but may process your application faster. The certification itself is identical regardless of which pathway you use.

How long does WOSB certification take?

The SBA targets 90 days for a determination. In practice, processing times average 6 to 8 months through the SBA direct pathway. Third-party certifiers may process faster. The biggest factor in your timeline is document completeness. Incomplete applications are returned, which adds months to the process.

What is the difference between WOSB and WBE certification?

WOSB certification (through the SBA) is for federal government contracting. It gives you access to WOSB set-aside contracts on SAM.gov. WBE certification (through WBENC) is for private-sector supplier diversity programs with corporations like Walmart, Target, and Johnson and Johnson. They are separate certifications with separate applications. Many women-owned businesses hold both.

Can I have WOSB and 8(a) certification at the same time?

Yes. The 8(a) Business Development Program and WOSB are separate programs with separate eligibility criteria. If you qualify for both, having dual certification gives you access to both 8(a) sole source contracts and WOSB set-asides. The SBA even streamlined the process: if you are already 8(a) certified, your WOSB application can be expedited.

Can a husband and wife own a WOSB?

Yes, as long as the wife owns at least 51% unconditionally and controls the business. The husband can own up to 49%. The SBA will examine whether the wife genuinely manages the business or whether the husband makes the key decisions. Board meeting minutes, bank signature authority, and contract signing patterns are all reviewed.

What are the income limits for EDWOSB?

Each qualifying woman owner must have a personal net worth under $850,000 (excluding business equity, home equity, and retirement accounts), an adjusted gross income averaging under $400,000 over three years, and total assets under $6.5 million at fair market value. These thresholds are defined in 13 CFR Part 127.

Free Resources for WOSB Applicants

Resource What It Provides Where to Find It
MySBA Certifications Free WOSB/EDWOSB application portal. Check status, upload documents, manage certification. certifications.sba.gov
SBA WOSB Program Page Official program overview, eligible NAICS codes, regulatory references. sba.gov
APEX Accelerators Free one-on-one counseling, eligibility review, application assistance. 90+ locations. apexaccelerators.us
SBA Women’s Business Centers Business development training, mentoring, and certification guidance for women entrepreneurs. sba.gov/local-assistance
AmerifusionGovCon Resources Certification checklists, GovCon starter kit, and guides for every step of the process. Resources page

Next Steps

WOSB certification opens the door, but winning contracts requires the full foundation. If you have not completed these steps yet, start here:

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.

Get the free GovCon Starter Kit: five essential tools from SAM registration to your first proposal.

Get the Starter Kit