NFIB is the voice of small business. NFIB is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and member-driven. All Facebook Terms continue to apply.
We’re a member-driven organization advocating for America’s small and independent business owners in Washington, D.C., and all 50 state capitals. Founded in 1943, and headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, the National Federation of Independent Business is America’s leading small-business advocacy association. NFIB is the voice of small business, advocating on behalf of America’s small and indepen
dent business owners, both in Washington, D.C., and in all 50 state capitals. Since our founding, NFIB has been exclusively dedicated to small and independent businesses, and remains so today. NFIB research and polls, such as its monthly Small Business Economic Trends, have been used and cited by Federal Reserve officials, Congress, state legislatures and top gubernatorial and presidential administration officials as one of the more valuable barometers of the American economy. NFIB also works with trusted providers to offer its members quality products and services that can save their businesses time and money. DISCLAIMER:
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05/31/2026
Make sure to join the upcoming webinar featuring a conversation about workplace safety and law changes. Attorney Felicia Watson joins experts to explain how OSHA inspections work and what owners need to know to avoid costly penalties. Click here to register: https://www.nfib.com/news/webinar/osha-basics-for-small-business/
05/30/2026
The Daily Economy highlights NFIB's Small Business Optimism Index in their latest economic report. "Small business optimism remained subdued in April, with the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index edging up only marginally to 95.9 as elevated uncertainty and weakening sales expectations offset modest improvements in profitability and hiring plans."
"AI adoption was higher among larger businesses last year, according to a 2025 survey from the National Federation of Independent Businesses. Further, current AI systems are generally more capable in digital tasks than in navigating with the physical world – where many small businesses operate and do somewhat niche tasks," reports Palo Alto Online & Palo Alto Weekly.
joined several business groups in filing an amicus brief arguing against broadened exemptions to arbitration agreements. announced their disappointing decision in Flowers Foods v. Brock today.
NEW EPISODE: The latest features a conversation with workplace safety and health law expert Felicia Watson to explain how OSHA inspections work and what owners need to know to avoid costly penalties.
Forbes highlights NFIB's Small Business Energy Survey in an article on energy and technology: "'Just 8% of small [business] owners reported that their [energy] costs had not increased in the last three years,’ according to a 2026 National Federation of Independent Business survey, and 80% noted that rising costs had significantly affected their companies.”
Rising energy costs continue to affect our nation’s small businesses. Congress can provide immediate relief by temporarily suspending the federal fuel tax to help small businesses adjust to price increases, writes NFIB’s Louis Bertolotti in an opinion piece in the The Washington DC Examiner.