Small Business Innovation and Economic Security Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Small Business Innovation and Economic Security Act reauthorizes SBIR and STTR programs through September 30, 2031 and adds new research-security, commercialization, procurement, and data-reporting rules. It requires federal agencies to evaluate SBIR and STTR applicants for security risks using due diligence, disclosures, intelligence-community coordination, law-enforcement input, listed-entity checks, and foreign-relationship analysis.
Who Benefits and How
Small businesses developing national-security or critical-technology products can benefit from a new strategic breakthrough allocation: eligible agencies may use up to 0.50 percent of their extramural R&D budgets for awards of up to $30 million over no more than 48 months, with streamlined proposal and contracting processes. SBIR/STTR award recipients also benefit from expanded technical and business assistance, cybersecurity help, foreign-involvement screening support, I-Corps participation options, and clearer Phase III training, model contracts, and data-rights guidance.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Small businesses with ties to listed entities, foreign countries of concern, foreign financing, foreign ownership, technology-licensing relationships, or classified security concerns face higher denial risk and more disclosure scrutiny. Federal SBIR/STTR agencies, SBA, GSA, DoD, Commerce, DHS, Treasury, FCC, CBP, and agency acquisition workforces bear new duties to screen applications, provide notices, brief Congress, set proposal limits, justify waivers, train contracting staff, update policy directives, report award classifications, and update procurement-data systems.
Key Provisions
- Expands SBIR/STTR security-risk screening to include listed-entity ties, classified sources, foreign ownership, foreign affiliations, investment relationships, technology licenses, joint ventures, and business relationships with countries of concern.
- Requires agencies to notify small businesses, when appropriate and without compromising security, about denial or security-risk determinations while preserving future eligibility.
- Creates strategic breakthrough Phase II awards of up to $30 million for small businesses with prior Phase II awards, 100 percent matching funds, market-validated technology, and, for DoD, acquisition-program commitments and at least 20 percent DoD matching funds.
- Requires annual proposal limits beginning in fiscal year 2027, permits urgent topic waivers for no more than 5 percent of topics, and requires waiver/reporting notices to congressional committees.
- Requires Phase III education for contracting officers and acquisition workforces covering Phase III agreements, data rights, and sole-source awards.
- Requires SBA and agencies to advocate for Phase III transitions, simplify procedures, create model contracts, and issue standardized Phase III eligibility clauses.
- Expands technical and business assistance to include cybersecurity, foreign-involvement screening, staff hiring or training, $6,500 Phase I support, $50,000 Phase II support, targeted reviews, and I-Corps participation.
- Adds SBIR/STTR award and contract designations to SBA and federal procurement data systems.
- Extends SBIR/STTR authorizations and related pilot authorities to 2031, adds Energy and NASA to covered activities, and repeals an older NDAA provision codified at 15 U.S.C. 638a.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Reauthorizes and reshapes SBIR and STTR programs through 2031 by tightening research-security screening, creating strategic breakthrough Phase II awards up to $30 million, limiting proposal volume, improving Phase III transition training and procedures, expanding technical and business assistance, improving data collection, and extending related pilot authorities.
Key Policy Areas
Small Business, Technology, Defense, Research Security, Federal Procurement
Primary Purpose
Reauthorizes and reshapes SBIR and STTR programs through 2031 by tightening research-security screening, creating strategic breakthrough Phase II awards up to $30 million, limiting proposal volume, improving Phase III transition training and procedures, expanding technical and business assistance, improving data collection, and extending related pilot authorities.
Policy Domains
SBIR/STTR research security, commercialization, and reauthorization package
Identified Gains
- Small businesses developing national-security technologies
- Federal SBIR program offices
- Federal STTR program offices
- Department of Defense strategic technology customers
- Private capital investors
- Cybersecurity assistance providers
Identified Costs
- Small businesses with foreign country relationships
- Small businesses with listed-entity risks
- Federal research agencies
- SBA program administrators
- SBIR applicants subject to disclosure rules
- STTR applicants subject to disclosure rules
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
Signed into LawCommittee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. Hearings held.
Became Public Law No: 119-83.
Signed by President.
Presented to President.
Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H2545-2546)
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without …
On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill …
Passed/agreed to in House: On motion to suspend the rules …
Considered under suspension of the rules. (consideration: CR H2491-2497; text: …
Ms. Van Duyne moved to suspend the rules and pass …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Denied small business applicants receiving risk notices, High-volume SBIR/STTR small business applicants, SBIR/STTR award recipients using technical assistance
Positive-direction: Denied small business applicants receiving risk notices, SBIR/STTR award recipients using technical assistance, SBIR/STTR small businesses seeking Phase III contracts, SBIR/STTR small businesses transitioning to Phase III, Small businesses below proposal limits, Small businesses developing national security technologies, Small businesses lacking Phase II experience, Small businesses seeking SBIR/STTR awards through 2031, Small businesses tracking Phase III follow-on contracts, Small businesses using cybersecurity assistance
Negative-direction: High-volume SBIR/STTR small business applicants, Small businesses screening foreign commercialization involvement, Small businesses with foreign country of concern relationships, Small businesses with listed-entity security risks
Federal SBIR/STTR participating agencies, Federal SBIR/STTR participating agencies using carryover funds, Federal SBIR/STTR program offices
Positive-direction: Federal SBIR/STTR participating agencies, Federal SBIR/STTR participating agencies using carryover funds, Federal agencies with large SBIR/STTR budgets, Federal agency SBIR/STTR program offices, SBIR/STTR program oversight officials
Negative-direction: Federal SBIR/STTR program offices, Federal agencies with I-Corps programs, SBA SBIR training program
Federal agency acquisition workforce, Federal agency contracting officers evaluating Phase III eligibility, Federal agency contracting officers reporting SBIR designations
Positive-direction: Federal agency contracting officers evaluating Phase III eligibility
Negative-direction: Federal agency acquisition workforce, Federal agency contracting officers reporting SBIR designations, General Services Administration procurement data program
Department of Defense acquisition workforce, Department of Defense strategic technology customers, U.S. national security research programs
Positive-direction: Department of Defense strategic technology customers, U.S. national security research programs
Negative-direction: Department of Defense acquisition workforce
Private capital investors matching strategic awards
Congressional small business oversight committees
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "commission"
- → Federal Communications Commission
- "administrator"
- → Administrator of the Small Business Administration
- "administrator_gsa"
- → Administrator of General Services
- "secretary_of_defense"
- → Secretary of Defense
Key Definitions
Terms defined in this bill
Federal agency employees with procurement or acquisition responsibilities, including those under 41 U.S.C. 1703 and the title 10 acquisition workforce.
Up to 0.50 percent of an eligible agency extramural R&D budget beginning in fiscal year 2026 for strategic breakthrough awards.
Foreign ownership, affiliations, investments, technology licenses, joint ventures, and business relationships that agencies must assess during SBIR/STTR due diligence.
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology