Buy American Act

Law requiring federal agencies to prefer domestic end products and construction materials in procurement.

Definition

The Buy American Act (BAA) of 1933 requires federal agencies to purchase domestic end products and use domestic construction materials in federal contracts, unless an exception applies. Under the BAA, products must be manufactured in the United States with more than 55% domestic component cost (increased from 50% in 2022 and scheduled to increase further). Exceptions include non-availability of domestic products, unreasonable cost (domestic products priced more than 20-30% higher), public interest waivers, and Trade Agreements Act coverage for qualifying countries. The BAA applies to direct federal purchases but not to purchases below the micro-purchase threshold or contracts performed entirely outside the United States. Contractors must certify compliance with domestic content requirements.

Also Known As

  • BAA
  • Buy American
  • Domestic Preference

Examples

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Confusing Buy American Act with Buy America Act (different laws with different requirements)
  • Not verifying component country of origin in supply chain
  • Assuming Trade Agreements Act coverage automatically exempts from Buy American

Who Should Know This Term

Federal supply contractors, construction contractors, import/export compliance officers

Official Source

41 U.S.C. 8301-8305
Buy American Act - Definition | Government Contracting Glossary