All Other Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing
Manufacturing petroleum products (except asphalt paving, roofing, and saturated materials and lubricating oils and greases) from refined petroleum and coal products made in coke ovens not integrated with a steel mill.
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What is SBA Size Standard?
The maximum number of employees a business can have to qualify as a "small business" for federal contracting and SBA loan programs.
What's Included
- ✓Biodiesel fuels not made in petroleum refineries and
- ✓blended with purchased refined petroleum
- ✓Coke oven products (e.g., coke, gases, tars) made in
- ✓coke oven establishments
- ✓Petroleum briquettes made from refined petroleum
- ✓Petroleum jelly made from refined petroleum
- ✓Petroleum waxes made from refined petroleum
Example Companies
- ●Cabot Corporation- Carbon black
- ●Orion Engineered Carbons- Carbon black
- ●Asbury Carbons- Carbon materials
This Code is NOT For...
NAICS 324199 does not cover the following activities. Use the correct code instead:
Manufacturing petroleum products by refining crude petroleum
Manufacturing biofuels not blended with refined petroleum
Manufacturing asphalt paving and roofing materials from refined petroleum
Blending and compounding petroleum lubricating oils and greases and/or re-refining used petroleum lubrication oils and greases
Manufacturing coke oven products in steel mills
Manufacturing acyclic and cyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (i.e., petrochemicals) from refined petroleum or liquid hydrocarbons
+ 2 more exclusions for this code
Related NAICS Codes
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Most businesses operate under several NAICS codes. Your primary code should reflect your main source of revenue. You can list secondary codes for other business activities when registering with government agencies or applying for contracts.
Choose the NAICS code that represents your largest revenue source as your primary code. You can add secondary codes for other activities. For example, a restaurant that also offers catering would use Full-Service Restaurants as the primary code and Caterers as a secondary code.
NAICS codes do not directly determine your tax obligations. However, certain tax credits, deductions, and industry-specific regulations may reference NAICS codes to determine eligibility. Your actual tax liability depends on your business structure and activities, not your classification code.
No. The NAICS code on your EIN application is for statistical purposes only. You can update it if your business activities change. The IRS uses this information for economic analysis, not for determining your tax treatment.
You can update your NAICS code when filing your next business tax return or by contacting the IRS. For government contracts, update your code in SAM.gov. There is no penalty for changing codes as your business evolves or if you selected the wrong code initially.