When SIN 562910RMI fits
SIN 562910RMI quick facts
A compact view of the official SIN record from the user's Refresh 32 MAS offerings workbook.
What SIN 562910RMI covers
562910RMI Environmental remediation services involving a range of services to restore a contaminated or environmentally degraded area to an acceptable condition, including but not limited to: preliminary assessment, site inspection, testing, remedial investigation, feasibility studies, remedial design, containment, remedial action, removal of contaminated materials, storage of contaminated materials, and security and site closeouts. The procurement must be composed of activities in three or more separate industries associated with separate NAICS codes. These activities may include but are not limited to, engineering services, management consulting services, hazardous and other waste collection, remediation services, testing laboratories, and research and development in the physical, engineering, and life sciences. At least 50% of the work must be for remediation services and not work under other industries. NOTE: Services offered under this SIN shall not include any remediation/transportation/disposal of radioactive waste, asbestos and/or paint abatement, radon mitigation, or construction as defined in FAR Parts 2 and 36 (GSA Class Deviation RFO-2025-36) and architect-engineering services as defined in the Brooks Act and FAR Part 2 (including construction, alteration or repair of buildings, structures, or other real property). This SIN does not include Construction Wage Rate Requirements as defined in FAR Subpart 22.4 (GSA Class Deviation RFO-2025-22). Ordering agencies must ensure the work being required is not covered by the Construction Wage Rate Requirements statute.
The official record maps this SIN to NAICS 562910 and PSC F108. Those codes are not the whole strategy, but they help explain how the offering is categorized for buyers and reviewers.
How to prepare the offer story
For service-oriented SINs, keep the service description, labor categories, pricing support, and past-performance examples aligned. A reviewer should be able to see what work is being sold, who performs it, and why the rate story is defensible.
If the SIN is being added through eMod, write down what changes operationally: new scope, new pricing, new files, catalog impact, and who owns maintenance after approval.
Buyer and SEO language to keep straight
Use the SIN number, title, category, and subcategory together: SIN 562910RMI - Environmental Remediation Services - Multiple Industries - Professional Services - Environmental Services. That combination helps a buyer understand the lane quickly and helps the page avoid becoming a vague keyword page.
When writing capability language, explain the actual deliverables and evidence. Do not make the SIN carry the whole message by itself.
What this looks like in practice
Real-world checkHow to test SIN 562910RMI before building files
Start with the official title and description: Environmental Remediation Services - Multiple Industries sits under Professional Services > Environmental Services. Then compare your actual commercial offering to that scope, not only to the NAICS code.
If the fit still looks strong, build the proof stack: offering description, pricing support, past performance or product support, and any SIN-specific files the current GSA instructions require.
- Confirm scope language.
- Check NAICS and PSC signals.
- Match the pricing file to the offering type.
- Keep the support package reviewer-friendly.
Frequently asked questions
Is SIN 562910RMI part of TDR?
The Refresh 32 workbook marks TDR as Y for this SIN. GSA states that TDR became mandatory across MAS SINs with Refresh 31, so contractors should still verify current contract reporting instructions in official GSA sources.
Can order-level materials be used with SIN 562910RMI?
The workbook marks OLM as Y. OLM treatment should always be verified against the current MAS solicitation, mass modifications, and contract-specific instructions.
Should I pick a SIN only because the NAICS matches?
No. NAICS helps, but SIN selection should be based on the actual offering, official SIN description, category/subcategory, pricing files, and buyer acquisition path.