The Small Business Administration (SBA) defines a small business
in the United States as a business that meets the following
criteria:
Number of employees: Has fewer than 500 employees
Annual receipts: Has average annual receipts under $7.5
million, with some exceptions by industry
Ownership: Is independently owned and operated
Location: Has a place of business in the US and operates primarily
within the US
Dominance: Is not dominant in its field on a national basis
The SBA also assigns size standards to each North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) code.
Small businesses can vary in size, revenues, and regulatory authorization. Some small businesses, like a home accounting business, may only need a business license. Others, like restaurants serving liquor, day cares, and retirement homes, may need inspection and certification from government authorities.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), about 1 in 4 small businesses in the United States fail within their first year of operation. Here are some other small business failure rate statistics for 2024:
Failure rates by industry The healthcare and social assistance industry has the highest survival rate, with 85% of businesses surviving their first year. The transportation industry has the lowest survival rate, with only 75% of businesses surviving their first year.
Failure rates by reason The most common reasons for small business
failure include:
Cash flow problems: 82% of small businesses fail due to
cash flow problems
Lack of market demand: 42% of small businesses fail due to a
lack of market demand
Mismatched team: 23% of small businesses fail due to
having a mismatched team
Competition: 19% of small businesses fail because of competition
winning
Survival rates by
year
BLS reports that 20% of
businesses fail in the first year, 30% by year two, and 50% by the five-year
mark
Treasury Department reports that 23.2% of businesses fail in the
first year, 48% fail by two years and 65.3% fail in 10 years.
Survival rates for businesses increase as they establish
themselves. For example, more than two-thirds of businesses that survive
five years also survive ten years.
The transportation and warehousing industry has the highest percentage of businesses fail in their first year, with 24.8% failing. The mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction industry is second with 24.4%, and the information industry is third with 24.1%.
The US Government defines “failure” when businesses close. The
reason that a business closes could be caused by the Owner Retiring or Selling
the Business.
Death and Retirement of Private Business Owners of Family-Owned Businesses is the major cause of what government calls “failure”. If the value of the Private Company exceeds the estate tax exemption.
In 2024, the first $13,610,000 of an estate is exempt from taxes, up from $12,920,000 in 2023. Estate taxes are based on the size of the estate. It's a progressive tax, just like our federal income tax. That means that the larger the estate, the higher the tax rate it is subject to.
Reasons why businesses fail Figuring out why small businesses fail is a bit trickier because “failure” as defined by these statistics is simply the business no longer existing—anything else will have to be self-reported by the founder, and that isn’t always reliable. CB Insights research based on over 100 startup post-mortems found these reasons listed most often for why the founder thought the business failed:
42% – no market need for their services or products
29% – ran out of cash
23% – didn’t have the right team running the business.
19% – bested by a competitor
18% – pricing and cost issues
17% – failed because of a poor product offering
17% – failed because they lacked a business model
14% – failed because of poor marketing
14% – failed because they ignored their customers
https://www.commerceinstitute.com/business-failure-rate/
Comments
The “BLM Riots“ in 2000, Shutdowns” in 2001 and “Smash and Grab
Looting” in 2002 have thinned out many retail locations. The inflation from
2021 to 2024
has had an equal affect on retail operations. Poor communities are now without neighborhood grocery stores, pharmacies, restaurants, fast food and retail stores. The Illegal Migrant Invasion and Homeless Invasion from 2021 to 2024 has made access to stores less attractive and less safe. Many employees continue to work from home. They eat at home. There are opportunities to reopen small businesses, but most are in poor neighborhoods. The large restaurant chains have closed locations.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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