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NAICS 334419 Quarterly Industry Report

Other Electronic Component Manufacturing

Comprehensive industry research for valuation professionals, business owners, buyers, and lenders

NAICS Code: 334419Sector: 33Updated: Q1 2026

About This Report

This Fair Market Value industry report for NAICS 334419 draws on verified data from the U.S. Census Bureau[6], Bureau of Labor Statistics[7], and the Small Business Administration[8]. Our research team compiles establishment counts, employment data, wage statistics, and SBA eligibility criteria specific to this diverse electronic component manufacturing sector. Reports are updated quarterly to reflect new Census releases and regulatory changes.

Industry Snapshot

Key metrics for the other electronic component manufacturing industry.

Establishments
1,938
2024 annual average[1]
5-Year Growth
+4.3%
Establishment count, 2017–2022[2]
Avg. SBA Loan
$383K
7(a) program, FY 2025[4]
Industry Revenue
$14M
2022 Economic Census[2]
Share of Sector
0.8%
By establishment count, 2022 Census[2]
NAICS Sector
33

Industry Definition & Overview

Other Electronic Component Manufacturing (NAICS 334419) encompasses establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing electronic components not classified under more specific semiconductor, passive component, connector, or printed circuit codes. Products include printed circuit laminates, crystals, crystal oscillators, filters, piezoelectric devices, LCD screens, microwave components, and various specialty electronic assemblies. The U.S. Census Bureau[5] positions this as a residual classification capturing diverse component types that share manufacturing processes but differ in end-use application. Census data[6] reports 977 businesses operating at 1,093 establishment locations nationwide, employing approximately 51,000 workers. The diversity of products within this code means establishments range from crystal growing operations requiring clean room environments to microwave component manufacturers needing specialized testing chambers. Raw material inputs vary widely by product type but commonly include silicon wafers, quartz blanks, specialty glass, ceramic substrates, and engineering plastics. This classification generates substantial employment relative to other electronic component codes. Average weekly wages reached $1,357 per BLS[7] reporting, reflecting the technical skill requirements for precision component fabrication. Many firms serve defense and aerospace customers requiring components meeting stringent military specification testing protocols and extended operating temperature ranges. Domestic production advantages include shorter lead times for custom frequency specifications and the ability to maintain ITAR-controlled manufacturing for classified electronic warfare applications.

What's Included in This Industry

  • Crystal oscillator and frequency control device manufacturing
  • Printed circuit laminate production
  • LCD screen and display component manufacturing
  • Piezoelectric device fabrication
  • Microwave component and subassembly production
  • Electronic filter manufacturing
  • Transducer production for electronic applications
  • Vacuum tube and cathode ray tube manufacturing
  • Magnetic recording head production
  • Specialty electronic assembly and module manufacturing

NAICS Classification Hierarchy

NAICS classification hierarchy for 334419
LevelDescriptionCode
SubsectorComputer and Electronic Product Manufacturing334
Industry GroupSemiconductor and Other Electronic Component Manufacturing3344
NAICS IndustrySemiconductor and Other Electronic Component Manufacturing33441
National IndustryOther Electronic Component Manufacturing334419

Related NAICS Codes

Related NAICS codes and their relationships
CodeDescriptionRelationship
334416Capacitor, Resistor, Coil, Transformer, and Other Inductor ManufacturingManufactures capacitors, resistors, and inductors classified as dedicated passive component categories rather than the miscellaneous components covered by this code
334413Semiconductor and Related Device ManufacturingProduces semiconductors and related devices under a specific industry code separate from the residual electronic component classification used here
334412Bare Printed Circuit Board ManufacturingManufactures bare printed circuit boards while this code covers printed circuit laminates and other substrate materials used in board fabrication
334418Printed Circuit Assembly (Electronic Assembly) ManufacturingAssembles loaded printed circuit boards using components manufactured under this and other electronic component classification codes as inputs
334417Electronic Connector ManufacturingProduces electronic connectors classified under a dedicated industry code rather than the residual miscellaneous component category covered here
334310Audio and Video Equipment ManufacturingManufactures audio and video equipment that incorporates display components, crystals, and filters produced by establishments in this classification

Geographic Concentration

Top states by share of national establishments.

Top 10 states by establishment share for Other Electronic Component Manufacturing
#State% Est.Total Est.
1California
21.2%
230
2Texas
7.1%
77
3New York
6.2%
67
4Illinois
6.0%
65
5Massachusetts
5.7%
62
6Pennsylvania
4.5%
49
7New Jersey
4.4%
48
8Florida
4.3%
47
9Michigan
3.2%
35
10Ohio
3.0%
32
Source: County Business Patterns, U.S. Census Bureau[3]

SBA Lending Summary

64
Total SBA Loans
$24.5M
Total Loan Volume
$383K
Average Loan Size
10 yrs
Average Loan Term
10.91%
Average Interest Rate
496
Jobs Supported
Source: SBA 7(a) Program Data, U.S. Small Business Administration — FY 2025[4]
Key Insight: The SBA[8] sets the size standard for NAICS 334419 at 750 employees, placing it among the mid-range thresholds for electronic component manufacturing. Firms below this employee count qualify for small business set-aside contracts and SBA-backed lending programs. Federal procurement opportunities span crystal oscillators for military communications, microwave components for radar systems, and specialty displays for government computing equipment. The SBA's contracting programs[9] provide access to defense supply chains for qualified manufacturers. Eligible businesses can access SBA 7(a) loans[10] for working capital, equipment, and acquisition financing, while 504 loans[11] support major fixed-asset purchases including real estate and heavy machinery.

Top SBA Lenders

Top SBA lenders by volume for this industry
#LenderLoansVolumeAvg Loan
1The Huntington National Bank16$14.0M$872K
2First Bank8$3.4M$425K
3Newtek Bank, National Association8$2.4M$300K
4JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association8$2.0M$250K
5PlainsCapital Bank16$1.6M$100K
View Full SBA Lending Details for NAICS 334419Includes top lenders, geographic distribution, annual trends, and loan-level analysis

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this industry.

What types of businesses are classified under NAICS 334419?
This residual code covers electronic component manufacturers not fitting specific semiconductor, passive component, connector, or printed circuit categories. Crystal growers, oscillator producers, LCD screen manufacturers, piezoelectric device makers, microwave component fabricators, and printed circuit laminate producers all classify here per the Census Bureau[5].
How large is the other electronic component manufacturing industry?
The industry includes 977 businesses operating at 1,093 locations nationwide with total employment of roughly 51,000 workers per Census data[6]. Industry workforce is concentrated in technical production roles requiring specialized skills in crystal fabrication, precision assembly, and quality testing.
What is the SBA size standard for NAICS 334419?
The SBA[8] sets the threshold at 750 employees. Firms with fewer than 750 average employees over the prior 24 months qualify as small businesses for federal contracting preferences and SBA lending programs.
What NAICS codes are related to other electronic component manufacturing?
Related codes include 334416 (Capacitor and Inductor Manufacturing), 334413 (Semiconductor Manufacturing), 334412 (Bare Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing), 334418 (Printed Circuit Assembly), and 334417 (Electronic Connector Manufacturing). Each covers a specific component type pulled from this broader residual classification.
What industries depend on other electronic component manufacturers?
Defense electronics contractors, telecommunications equipment producers, computer peripheral manufacturers, and medical device companies all purchase components from this industry. Crystal oscillators and frequency control devices serve as critical timing references across virtually all electronic systems requiring precise clock signals.
What activities are included in NAICS 334419?
Activities include growing and processing quartz crystals, manufacturing frequency control oscillators, producing printed circuit laminates, fabricating LCD screens and display components, building microwave subassemblies, manufacturing piezoelectric transducers, and producing electronic filters. Military specification testing and qualification programs represent common supplemental activities for defense-oriented firms.
Can other electronic component manufacturers qualify for SBA loans?
Yes, firms below the 750-employee threshold qualify for SBA lending programs[9] including 7(a) and 504 loans. Clean room construction, crystal growing furnaces, and precision testing equipment represent capital investments well suited to SBA 504 equipment financing.
Where are other electronic component manufacturers concentrated?
Establishments cluster in states with strong electronics manufacturing bases, particularly California, Texas, Massachusetts, and the Mid-Atlantic region. Defense-oriented component producers locate near military installations and prime contractor facilities where proximity supports collaborative engineering and rapid prototype delivery.

Sources & References

Government datasets and editorial sources used in this report.

  1. [1]U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages bls.gov
  2. [2]U.S. Census Bureau, Economic Census census.gov
  3. [3]U.S. Census Bureau, County Business Patterns census.gov
  4. [4]U.S. Small Business Administration, SBA 7(a) Loan Program Data data.sba.gov
  5. [5]U.S. Census Bureau census.gov
  6. [6]Census data data.census.gov
  7. [7]BLS bls.gov
  8. [8]Small Business Administration sba.gov
  9. [9]SBA's contracting programs sba.gov
  10. [10]SBA 7(a) loans sba.gov
  11. [11]504 loans sba.gov

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