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The Small Business Administration’s Growth Accelerator Fund Competition

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https://crsreports.congress.gov

Updated October 15, 2024

The Small Business Administration’The Small Business Administration's Growth Accelerator Fund Competition

Updated February 27, 2026 (IF12310)
Small businesses and startups sometimes benefit from assistance growing their companies, including opportunities to raise capital, mentorship, and commercialization helpsupport for commercialization, mentorship programs, and capital access. Accelerators—organizations often operated by experienced businesspeople—provide technical assistance and other services to new entrepreneurs in an effort to meet those needs and support the starting and scaling of businesses.

Since 2014, the Small Business Administration (SBA) has administered the Growth Accelerator Fund Competition (GAFC) to provide financial support for accelerators assisting science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) and research and development (R&D)-focused small businesses and startups. The GAFC also targetsHistorically, the GAFC has often targeted accelerators that supportsupported businesses and/or geographies that traditionally facefaced barriers in obtaining R&D funds and investment capital:, including businesses owned or led by women, minorities, and veterans, or businesses located in rural areas. Until FY2023, the GAFC provided $50,000 awards to accelerators for operating capital. The SBASince FY2023, the SBA has continued to fund accelerator operations, but now makes GAFC awards in two stages;: in FY2025, stage one awards, for $50 were worth $75,000, and stage two awards, for $50,000-$150,000.

Purpose

The SBA’ were worth $150,000. More information on the purpose and structure of these awards is available below.

Purpose

The SBA's intent for the GAFC is to help facilitate the success of startups by supporting accelerators that advise such businesses on growing revenue, sourcing outside funding, and avoiding common mistakes. The GAFC's goals include

increasing the pipeline and success of STEM/R&D-

focused entrepreneurs and small businesses;

• increasing the success of STEM/R&D-focused

entrepreneurs in accessing capital and resources to advance their businesses;

• incentivizing innovation-focused accelerators to provide

equitable access to resources for underserved communities and industries;

  • accelerating the growth and maturity of innovation-based entrepreneurship networks;
  • catalyzing partnerships and relationships between

    accelerators to strengthen the national innovation ecosystem; and

    connecting both new and established participants in the

    national innovation ecosystem.

    The SBA’s Some GAFC award announcements have noted SBA's desire for the GAFC to stimulate entrepreneurship outside of traditional coastal technology centersin "underserved" regions and industries. In discussing GAFC- related legislation, some Members of Congress have noted the GAFC's success in facilitating innovation in regions beyond those long-standing hubs.

    History

    traditional coastal technology hubs.

    History

    The SBA first operated the GAFC in FY2014, after a series of regional events in 2012 that convened over 100 universities and accelerators in discussions about how to work with high-growth entrepreneurs. These events helped lead to the development of the GAFC, which SBA has thus far held in FY2014, FY2015, FY2016, FY2017, FY2019, FY2021, FY2023, and FY2024.

    FY2024, and FY2025.

    Congress has not provided the GAFC with specific statutory authorization. Rather, the program operates as an SBA initiative under authority provided by Section 105 of the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-358), which authorizes federal agencies to administer innovation-related prize competitions. Several bills in recent years, discussed below, attempted to provide statutory authority for the GAFC.

    Table 1 presents the number of awards and the total dollar amount awarded since the GAFC's inception. From FY2014 to FY2024FY2025, the GAFC made 558634 awards totaling $32.2 million.

    37.9 million. In FY2026, Congress recommended the GAFC receive $9 million in appropriations.

    Table 1. GAFC Awards Given, Total Value of Awards, and Recommended Funding Levels, FY2014-FY2024

    Fiscal

    Year

    FY2025

    Fiscal Year

    Number of

    Awards

    Awards

    Total

    Awards

    Awards Amount ($ in millions)

    Recommended

    Congressionally Recommended Funding ($ in

    millions)

    2014

    50

    $2.50

    $2.50

    2015

    88

    $4.40

    $4.00

    2016

    85

    $4.25

    $1.00

    2017

    20

    $1.00

    $1.00

    2018

    0

    $0

    $1.00

    2019

    60

    $3.00

    $2.00

    2020

    0

    $0

    $2.00

    2021

    84

    $4.20

    $2.00

    2022

    0

    $0

    $3.00

    2023

    75

    $7.25

    $10.00

    2024

    96

    $5.60

    $9.00

    2025

    76

    $5.70

    $9.00

    Sources

    millions)

    2014 50 $2.50 $2.50

    2015 88 $4.40 $4.00

    2016 85 $4.25 $1.00

    2017 20 $1.00 $1.00

    2018 0 $0 $1.00

    2019 60 $3.00 $2.00

    2020 0 $0 $2.00

    2021 84 $4.20 $2.00

    2022 0 $0 $3.00

    2023 75 $7.25 $10.00

    2024 96 $5.60 $9.00

    Sources: SBA, Congressional Budget Justification and Annual Performance Report, (various years,) and explanatory statements from various appropriations bills.

    The Small Business Administration’s Growth Accelerator Fund Competition

    https://crsreports.congress.gov

    Program Implementation

    Program Implementation The GAFC is open to applicants that are

    private entities, both nonprofit and for-profit—including

    corporations—based in the Unites States;

    nonfederal government entities including state, county,

    tribal, and municipal governments;

    academic institutions based in the United States; or

    individuals or teams comprised of U.S. citizens or

    permanent residents 18 years and older.

    In FY2023, the SBA implemented a new award structure for the GAFC. The SBA now awards and began awarding prizes in two stages. StageIn FY2025, stage one awards, for $50,000, go to “catalysts” to form a “Growth Accelerator Partnership” with other catalysts. Catalysts may include entrepreneur-support organizations (such as accelerators), membership organizations, academic institutionswent to entrepreneur support organizations (ESOs) that have identified challenges in their local entrepreneurial and small business "ecosystems." ESOs included accelerators, membership organizations, institutions of higher education, and nonprofits supporting innovation-focused small businesses and startups that conduct outreach and facilitate collaborative partnerships to advance a region’s innovation ecosystem.

    Stage two awards, worth between $50,000 and $150,000, go to the resulting Growth Accelerator Partnerships. The SBA intends the Growth Accelerator Partnerships to help entrepreneurs commercialize their R&D efforts by using stage two awards for activities including training and mentorship, introducing entrepreneurs to customers and suppliers, and providing opportunities to pitch investors.

    In FY2024, the SBA requested that the Growth Accelerator Partnerships support small businesses and startups working in one of the following “themes”:

    • national and economic security, including artificial

    intelligence, quantum computing, and microelectronics;

    • domestic manufacturing and production, including

    supply chain resiliency, critical infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing; or

    • sustainability and biotechnology, including public

    health, electric vehicles, and renewable energy generation and storage.

    Recent Legislation

    through training and mentoring; facilitating access to resources; building connectivity within an innovation ecosystem; and other activities.

    Stage two awards—in FY2025 worth $150,000—are to go to ESOs to facilitate implementation of plans to address challenges identified in stage one. The SBA intends for ESOs to help entrepreneurs commercialize R&D efforts by using stage two awards to, among other activities, support collaboration between entrepreneurs and institutions of higher education; develop intellectual property strategies; and generate proposals for new debt and equity instruments to financial STEM and R&D small business capital.

    In FY2025, the SBA requested that ESOs support small businesses and startups working in one of two "themes":

    • lab to market, intended to bridge the gap between research and commercialization in fields including national and economic security, domestic manufacturing and production, biotechnology, and other critical and emerging technologies; or
    • capital formation, intended to increase capital access for entrepreneurs and small businesses during the business formation and growth phases.

    Recent Legislation

    The primary purpose of most GAFC-related bills in recent Congresses has been to provide the program with statutory authority. For example, in the 115th Congress, H.R. 2686 would have given the GAFC permanent statutory authority and required the SBA to develop metrics evaluating the program's effectiveness. In the 116th Congress, H.R. 4387 similarly would have provided the GAFC permanent statutory authority and required the SBA to develop efficacy metrics. The bill passed the House but was not taken up by the full Senate.

    In the 117th Congress, the House-passed version of the Build Back Better Act (BBA, H.R. 5376) would have appropriated a total of $400 million to the GAFC through FY2031, established a minimum award amount of $100,000, and provided the GAFC permanent statutory

    authority. H.R. 5376 evolved into P.L. 117-163 (commonly referred to as the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, IRA); the IRA, however, did not include any of the BBA's GAFC provisions. Also in the 117th Congress, H.R. 4945 would have amended the Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83- 163, as amended) to give the GAFC permanent statutory authority and increase minimum award size to $1 million. The bill was introduced in the House but did not advance.

    Considerations for Congress

    Congress may consider whether to give the GAFC statutory authorization. Some Members of Congress have previously argued that providing statutory authorization, rather than continuing the GAFC as an SBA initiative, would give Congress an opportunity to provide greater oversight. Codifying the GAFC could also provide an opportunity for Congress to determine and codify the competition's priorities and mission. For example, as noted, the GAFC has historically targeted small businesses and regions that have had difficulty attracting financing. Congress could codify this or other missions. Should Congress consider doing so, it could also want to assess how effective such efforts have been, for example in the geographic diversity of awards. Congress may also be interested in assessing the efficacy of the GAFC since it began its new, two-stage format in FY2023.

    The SBA is not required to collect specific performance metrics for the GAFC. H.R. 2686 and H.R. 4387 in the 115th and 116th Congresses, respectively, would have required the SBA to gather certain metrics. For example, H.R. 4387 would have stipulated that the SBA develop "science-based" metrics that measured the GAFC's economic impact. Additionally, a 2018 evaluation of the GAFC by the Library of Congress's Federal Research Division (FRD) recommended that the SBA develop "statistically sound" reporting metrics for the GAFC; improve the collection, monitoring, and maintenance of those metrics; and enforce mandatory reporting requirements. Congress may debate if and how to act on those recommendations.

    Congress may consider whether to require cost sharing. GAFC awardees are not required to provide matching funds. However, Congress and the SBA have considered a cost share requirement. In the explanatory statement to the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015 (P.L. 113-235), Congress instructed the SBA to require $4 in matching funds for every $1 the agency awarded through the GAFC; the SBA did not act on the directive. The 2018 FRD evaluation also suggested a required match could increase awardee engagement.

    Congress may consider the GAFC's award size. BillsAs noted, bills in previous Congresses sought to increaseset minimum award sizes. The 2018 FRD evaluation (conducted when all awards were $50,000) also noted feedback that the awards would benefit from being increased or scaled. However, Congress may note that the evaluation also found that the GAFC had been effective at its existing award sizes. In addition, the GAFC awards in FY2023 and FY2024 were the largest in program history.

    Additionally, as the GAFC targets businesses and regions that have had difficulty attracting financing, Congress may want to further assess how effective such efforts have been, for example in the geographic diversity of awards. Congress may also be interested in assessing the efficacy of the GAFC since it began its new, two-stage format in FY2023.

    Adam G. Levin, Analyst in Economic Development Policy

    IF12310

    The Small Business Administration’s Growth Accelerator Fund Competition

    https://crsreports.congress.gov | IF12310 · VERSION 3 · UPDATED

    Disclaimer

    This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.