Last reviewed on May 12, 2026.
What HUBZone is
The Historically Underutilized Business Zone (HUBZone) program is an SBA set-aside that reserves a portion of federal contracts for small businesses located in designated economically distressed areas. The federal government has a 3% HUBZone contracting goal that applies government-wide. Set-asides under the program can be sole-source or competitive, and HUBZone bidders also receive a 10% price evaluation preference in full and open competitions.
HUBZone is the only major SBA set-aside built around where the company operates rather than who owns it. That single distinction drives most of what makes the program harder to qualify for and easier to lose than 8(a), SDVOSB, or WOSB.
The four eligibility requirements
A firm must meet all four conditions simultaneously to qualify:
- Small business. Small under the SBA size standard for its primary NAICS code. See NAICS codes and size standards.
- U.S. ownership. At least 51% owned and controlled by U.S. citizens, an Agricultural Cooperative, a Community Development Corporation, an Alaska Native Corporation, an Indian Tribe, or a Native Hawaiian Organization.
- Principal office in a HUBZone. The principal office — where the greatest number of employees perform their work — must be in a designated HUBZone. Field offices, warehouses, and project sites do not count.
- 35% employee residency. At least 35% of the firm's employees must reside in any HUBZone (not necessarily the same one as the principal office). Residency is verified by where the employee actually lives, supported by documents like a driver's license, voter registration, or utility bill.
All four must be true at the time of certification and continuously while the firm holds the status. SBA conducts site visits during initial certification and at re-examination.
How the principal office rule works
"Principal office" is a specific term of art. SBA looks at which physical location has the most employees performing their work over the prior 12 months — not the legal headquarters, not the address on tax filings, not where the founder lives. If a firm has a small administrative office in a HUBZone and a larger delivery team working from a non-HUBZone location, the principal office is the larger one.
For firms whose employees work primarily from customer sites or remotely, SBA looks at where they would otherwise report. Remote-first companies need to be careful: the place an employee is paid from is not necessarily their work location for HUBZone purposes.
How the 35% residency rule works in practice
The residency calculation is a continuous obligation, not a snapshot. Every time the firm hires, fires, or has an employee move, the percentage shifts. Common scenarios:
- Hiring outside the zone. Each non-resident hire pushes the percentage down. To hire one non-resident and stay at 35%, the firm generally needs to add a HUBZone-resident hire in proportion.
- Employee relocations. If a HUBZone-resident employee moves out of any HUBZone, the firm's percentage drops on the move date. There is no grace period — though the firm has some flexibility under "attempt to maintain" once it has won a HUBZone contract.
- Part-time and 1099 workers. "Employee" for HUBZone counts anyone who works 40+ hours per month, including some independent contractors. Misclassifying workers as 1099 does not remove them from the count.
- Mergers and acquisitions. Adding a non-HUBZone team through acquisition is the most common way firms unintentionally lose certification.
Documentation matters. SBA expects the firm to keep a current employee roster with residency documentation for each person — refreshed at hire, move, and at least annually. Site visits frequently include a request to see this roster on demand.
The HUBZone map and redesignation periods
SBA designates HUBZones based on Census tract data, including Qualified Census Tracts, Qualified Non-Metropolitan Counties, Qualified Disaster Areas, Qualified Base Closure Areas, and Indian Reservations. The map updates over time as Census data changes.
When an area loses its HUBZone designation, two protective periods come into play:
- Redesignated areas. A former HUBZone that no longer qualifies on a fresh data refresh is "redesignated" for a multi-year period. During redesignation, the area still counts for principal-office and employee-residency purposes. This window has historically been three to seven years depending on the basis for the original designation.
- Qualified Disaster Areas. Counties affected by a presidentially declared disaster may receive temporary HUBZone status. These designations are also time-limited.
Always verify the current status of a specific address using the SBA HUBZone Map at maps.certify.sba.gov/hubzone. Designation can change at the address level — neighboring buildings sometimes have different statuses.
Application process
- Confirm the address is in a HUBZone. Use the SBA HUBZone Map and save a dated screenshot for your records.
- Build the employee roster. Document residency for every employee with a current government-issued document. Recalculate the 35% figure and confirm it holds with margin.
- Gather corporate documents. Articles of incorporation, bylaws, ownership records, and a current SAM.gov registration in the legal name.
- Submit through certify.sba.gov. The HUBZone application goes through the same SBA portal used for other set-aside certifications.
- Respond to SBA requests. Expect document follow-ups on residency documentation and the principal office determination.
- Site visit. SBA may conduct an in-person or virtual site visit before certification.
- Decision. Once approved, certification appears in the SBA Dynamic Small Business Search and on the firm's SAM profile.
From clean submission to certification, plan on several months. Applications with weak residency documentation or principal-office ambiguity take longer.
"Attempt to maintain" after award
Once a firm wins a HUBZone contract, the standard for the 35% rule shifts modestly. During performance, the firm must "attempt to maintain" the 35% level rather than strictly hit it at all times. The standard floor is 20% — if employee residency drops below 20% during performance, the firm is generally treated as out of compliance even with documented good-faith efforts.
"Attempt to maintain" is a fact question. SBA looks at hiring practices, recruitment efforts in HUBZone areas, and whether the firm took reasonable steps when residency dipped. Document the recruitment efforts — job postings targeting HUBZone areas, partnerships with workforce development agencies, and any tracked hiring data.
Stacking with other certifications
HUBZone stacks with other set-aside categories. A firm can be both HUBZone and SDVOSB, both HUBZone and WOSB, or HUBZone and 8(a). Stacking widens the set-aside opportunities the firm is eligible for. The mechanics of multi-eligibility:
- Each certification has its own application and ongoing maintenance burden.
- A contract set aside for one category does not require eligibility under the others — but bidders often list every applicable certification in proposals.
- The 10% price evaluation preference for HUBZone bidders applies to full and open competitions; SDVOSB has a similar preference at the VA. The preferences do not stack against each other on a single bid.
Common mistakes
- Confirming map status only at application. The map changes. A firm that does not recheck periodically can lose its principal office's qualification without noticing.
- Using a virtual office or coworking space as the principal office. SBA scrutinizes shared-address arrangements carefully and frequently disqualifies them unless the firm shows real, dedicated, primary use.
- Misclassifying employees as 1099 to drop them from the residency count. SBA looks at hours and supervision, not the tax form, when deciding who counts.
- Letting the residency roster become stale. An employee who moves out of a HUBZone without updating the roster is a finding waiting to happen.
- Assuming acquisition of a non-HUBZone team is HUBZone-neutral. Post-merger residency math is the single most common reason certifications lapse during growth.