Last reviewed on May 12, 2026.
Three different things often called "teaming"
In federal contracting, "teaming" gets used loosely to describe several different relationships. They behave differently under the FAR and SBA rules, and using the wrong structure for the wrong opportunity is a common source of compliance problems. The three structures:
- Teaming agreement (TA). A pre-award agreement between two companies — typically a planned prime and a planned subcontractor — describing how they will pursue a specific opportunity together. If the prime wins, the TA converts to a subcontract.
- Prime-subcontractor relationship. A post-award contractual relationship. The prime holds the contract with the government and the subcontractor performs a defined portion under a separate subcontract.
- Joint venture (JV). A separate legal entity formed by two or more companies that bids on and holds the contract itself. The JV signs the prime contract; both parent companies share profits, losses, and responsibility.
The two questions that decide which structure fits: does the opportunity need both firms' capabilities to be bid at all, and does the prime want to keep operational control, or share it?
Comparison at a glance
| Dimension |
Teaming agreement |
Prime-sub |
Joint venture |
| Contract holder |
Prime (the sub is invisible to government) |
Prime only |
The JV entity itself |
| Government privity |
Prime only |
Prime only |
JV (both parents indirectly) |
| Risk allocation |
Mostly on prime; sub liable through subcontract |
Per the subcontract terms |
Joint and several at the parent level |
| Best for |
Pre-award pursuit when prime can be defined |
Specialized scope under prime's broader contract |
Pursuits requiring shared scale, past performance, or set-aside status |
| SBA approval needed |
No (governed by FAR 9.6) |
No |
Yes for set-asides; mentor-protégé JVs need SBA approval |
Teaming agreements: what they actually do
A teaming agreement (FAR 9.6) is a pre-award arrangement. The companies agree on roles, workshare, exclusivity, and what happens if the prime wins. The TA itself is not a contract for performance — it's a contract about how to compete. If the team loses the bid, the TA expires with no performance obligations.
Effective teaming agreements cover:
- Opportunity identification. The specific solicitation number or program name. Broad "future opportunities" TAs are weaker and rarely hold up if disputed.
- Roles and workshare. Which team member does which task areas, with workshare expressed as a percentage range to allow flexibility.
- Exclusivity. Whether either party may join a competing team for the same opportunity.
- Proposal cost responsibility. Who pays for what during the bid effort. Usually each party bears its own costs.
- Intellectual property treatment. Background IP each party brings versus IP developed jointly during the pursuit.
- NDA provisions. Confidentiality of proposal content, customer information, and pricing data.
- Conversion mechanics. The conditions and timing for converting the TA into a subcontract on award.
- Termination. When either party may exit and what survives termination.
TAs are enforceable — courts have ordered parties to negotiate subcontracts in good faith when a prime wins and tries to renegotiate workshare. But enforceability depends on specificity. A vague TA promising "good faith negotiation of fair workshare upon award" is significantly weaker than one with named labor categories and percentage ranges.
Joint ventures: what changes when the structure goes from teaming to JV
A joint venture is a separate legal entity. The two (or more) parent companies form a new entity — typically an LLC — that bids on and holds the contract. The JV files its own SAM registration, gets its own UEI and CAGE code, and operates under its own EIN. From the government's perspective, the JV is the contractor.
This structure makes sense when:
- One parent is small and the other is large, and the JV is being formed under an SBA-approved mentor-protégé agreement so the JV can compete as small.
- The opportunity requires combined past performance to be qualified at all. A JV can present the past performance of either parent.
- The work spans capabilities where neither parent could credibly prime alone.
- Two parents want to share both profit and operational control more equally than a prime-sub structure allows.
The cost is real: forming the entity, registering it separately, allocating overhead and personnel between parent and JV, and dissolving it cleanly at the end. JVs are not appropriate for one-off opportunities; the administrative overhead only pays back across multiple awards or a single large multi-year contract.
SBA rules for joint ventures on set-aside work
SBA imposes specific requirements when a JV competes for set-aside contracts. The key rules:
- Written agreement. The JV must have a written joint venture agreement that addresses purpose, management, capital contributions, profit/loss allocation, performance responsibilities, and dissolution.
- Managing venturer. One member must be designated the managing venturer with primary responsibility for performance. For mentor-protégé JVs, the managing venturer must be the protégé.
- Project manager. A named project manager must be employed by the managing venturer.
- 40% performance rule. Under a mentor-protégé JV, the protégé must perform at least 40% of the work the JV does on each contract.
- Two-year rule. A given JV can be awarded contracts as small for two years from the first award. After that, the JV is generally treated as "other than small" for new awards, though it can finish existing work and the parent companies can form a new JV.
- Three-award limit (historical) versus performance-based limit (current). Older guidance limited a single JV to three contract awards; current SBA rules focus on the two-year window rather than a hard award count.
Get the JV agreement reviewed by counsel familiar with SBA regulations before submitting any proposal. Defective JV agreements are a routine basis for size protests after award.
Decision criteria: which structure fits
Choose a teaming agreement when:
- One firm is clearly the prime with broad capability and the other fills specific gaps
- The opportunity is one specific solicitation, not an ongoing program
- The relationship can be expressed cleanly as prime/sub on award
- No set-aside status depends on the structure itself
Choose a prime-subcontractor relationship (no formal TA) when:
- The prime already holds a multiple-award contract and is issuing task-order-specific subs
- The sub's scope is well-defined and limited
- No competitive pursuit work is required (no joint capture, no shared proposal effort)
Choose a joint venture when:
- Set-aside eligibility depends on combining a small protégé with a larger mentor
- Combined past performance is required for the firms to credibly bid at all
- The opportunity is multi-year, multi-task, and warrants the administrative overhead
- Both firms want shared operational control and profit allocation
Common mistakes
- Calling a JV a "teaming agreement" in the proposal. The government reads the words used. Misnaming the structure creates compliance ambiguity that surfaces during size protests.
- Mentor-protégé JV without SBA approval. Forming a JV between a small and large firm without an approved SBA mentor-protégé agreement does not give the JV small business status. The JV is "other than small" by default.
- Workshare drift. Agreeing to a workshare in the TA, then ignoring it in the subcontract negotiation after award. This is the most common source of disputes between team members.
- Non-exclusive teaming on a major pursuit. Going non-exclusive often means your "team member" is also on a competitor's team and yours is the backup. Get exclusivity on important opportunities.
- Letting the JV agreement go stale. JV agreements should be updated when scope, ownership, or named personnel change. Stale agreements often fail size protests not on substance but on the gap between the document and the operating reality.
- Treating the JV as a marketing wrapper. SBA looks at whether the JV is a real, separately operated entity or a paper construct. Shared bank accounts, blurred employee assignments, and no JV-specific records are red flags.
What changes after award
For teaming agreements, award triggers conversion to a subcontract. The subcontract takes over from the TA as the operational document. Workshare percentages, IP terms, and dispute resolution should flow from one to the other consistently.
For joint ventures, award means the JV begins performing. Reporting, invoicing, and CPARS (see CPARS ratings) attribute to the JV. Parent companies typically loan personnel to the JV under inter-company services agreements; getting the cost allocation right between JV and parent matters for both contract accounting and tax purposes.
For straight prime-sub structures, post-award is mostly subcontract administration: flow-down clauses, invoice processing, performance reporting, and small business subcontracting plan compliance under FAR 52.219-9 (see subcontracting plans).