SIC CODES

SIC Codes that contain offices

Enter here and view the list of SIC Codes that contain "offices" in their name or descrition

SIC activities for: offices

There are 10 Economic Activities in all levels that containg the word "OFFICES" in their name or detailed description. Have you that what you are searching for?

  • Class 3100
    Manufacture of furniture
    This class includes the manufacture of furniture of any kind, any material (except stone, concrete or ceramic) for any place and various purposes.

    This class includes:
    ~ manufacture of chairs and seats for OFFICES, workrooms, hotels, restaurants, public and domestic premises
    ~ manufacture of chairs and seats for theatres, cinemas and the like
    ~ manufacture of sofas, sofa beds and sofa sets
    ~ manufacture of garden chairs and seats
    ~ manufacture of special furniture for shops: counters, display cases, shelves etc.
    ~ manufacture of furniture for churches, schools, restaurants
    ~ manufacture of office furniture
    ~ manufacture of kitchen furniture
    ~ manufacture of furniture for bedrooms, living rooms, gardens etc.
    ~ manufacture of cabinets for sewing machines, televisions etc.
    ~ manufacture of laboratory benches, stools and other laboratory seating, laboratory furniture (e.g. cabinets and tables)

    This class also includes:
    ~ finishing such as upholstery of chairs and seats
    ~ finishing of furniture such as spraying, painting, French polishing and upholstering
    ~ manufacture of mattress supports
    ~ manufacture of mattresses:
    ~ mattresses fitted with springs or stuffed or internally fitted with a supporting material
    ~ uncovered cellular rubber or plastic mattresses
    ~ decorative restaurant carts, such as dessert carts, food wagons

  • Class 5629
    Other food service activities
    This class includes industrial catering, i.e. the provision of food services based on contractual arrangements with the customer, for a specific period of time.
    Also included is the operation of food concessions at sports and similar facilities. The food is often prepared in a central unit.

    This class includes:
    ~ activities of food service contractors (e.g. for transportation companies)
    ~ operation of food concessions at sports and similar facilities
    ~ operation of canteens or cafeterias (e.g. for factories, OFFICES, hospitals or schools) on a concession basis

  • Class 7010
    Activities of head offices
    This class includes the overseeing and managing of other units of the company or enterprise; undertaking the strategic or organizational planning and decision making role of the company or enterprise; exercising operational control and manage the day-to-day operations of their related units.

    This class includes activities of:
    ~ head offices
    ~ centralized administrative offices
    ~ corporate offices
    ~ district and regional offices
    ~ subsidiary management offices

  • Class 8121
    General cleaning of buildings
    This class includes:
    ~ general (non-specialized) cleaning of all types of buildings, such as:
    ~ OFFICES
    ~ houses or apartments
    ~ factories
    ~ shops
    ~ institutions
    ~ general (non-specialized) cleaning of other business and professional premises and multiunit residential buildings

    These activities cover mostly interior cleaning although they may include the cleaning of associated exterior areas such as windows or passageways.


  • Class 8129
    Other building and industrial cleaning activities
    This class includes:
    ~ exterior cleaning of buildings of all types, including OFFICES, factories, shops, institutions and other business and professional premises and multiunit residential buildings
    ~ specialized cleaning activities for buildings such as window cleaning, chimney cleaning and cleaning of fireplaces, stoves, furnaces, incinerators, boilers, ventilation ducts and exhaust units
    ~ swimming pool cleaning and maintenance services
    ~ cleaning of industrial machinery
    ~ bottle cleaning
    ~ cleaning of trains, buses, planes, etc.
    ~ cleaning of the inside of road and sea tankers
    ~ disinfecting and exterminating activities
    ~ street sweeping and snow and ice removal
    ~ other building and industrial cleaning activities, n.e.c.

  • Class 8421
    Foreign affairs
    This class includes:
    ~ administration and operation of the ministry of foreign affairs and diplomatic and consular missions stationed abroad or at OFFICES of international organizations
    ~ administration, operation and support for information and cultural services intended for distribution beyond national boundaries
    ~ aid to foreign countries, whether or not routed through international organizations
    ~ provision of military aid to foreign countries
    ~ management of foreign trade, international financial and foreign technical affairs

  • Group 701
    Activities of head offices
    See class 7010.
  • Division 70
    Activities of head offices; management consultancy activities
    This division includes the provision of advice and assistance to businesses and other organizations on management issues, such as strategic and organizational planning; financial planning and budgeting; marketing objectives and policies; human resource policies, practices, and planning; production scheduling; and control planning. It also includes the overseeing and managing of other units of the same company or enterprise, i.e. the activities of head OFFICES.
  • Division 46
    Wholesale trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles
    This division includes wholesale trade on own account or on a fee or contract basis (commission trade) related to domestic wholesale trade as well as international wholesale trade (import/export).

    Wholesale is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods to retailers, business-to-business trade, such as to industrial, commercial, institutional or professional users, or resale to other wholesalers, or involves acting as an agent or broker in buying goods for, or selling goods to, such persons or companies. The principal types of businesses included are merchant wholesalers, i.e. wholesalers who take title to the goods they sell, such as wholesale merchants or jobbers, industrial distributors, exporters, importers, and cooperative buying associations, sales branches and sales OFFICES (but not retail stores) that are maintained by manufacturing or mining units apart from their plants or mines for the purpose of marketing their products and that do not merely take orders to be filled by direct shipments from the plants or mines. Also included are merchandise brokers, commission merchants and agents and assemblers, buyers and cooperative associations engaged in the marketing of farm products.

    Wholesalers frequently physically assemble, sort and grade goods in large lots, break bulk, repack and redistribute in smaller lots, for example pharmaceuticals; store, refrigerate, deliver and install goods, engage in sales promotion for their customers and label design.

    This division excludes the wholesale of motor vehicles, caravans and motorcycles, as well as motor vehicle accessories (see division 45), the renting and leasing of goods (see division 77) and the packing of solid goods and bottling of liquid or gaseous goods, including blending and filtering, for third parties (see class 8292).

  • Section G
    Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles
    This section includes wholesale and retail sale (i.e. sale without transformation) of any type of goods and the rendering of services incidental to the sale of these goods. Wholesaling and retailing are the final steps in the distribution of goods. Goods bought and sold are also referred to as merchandise.

    Also included in this section are the repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles.

    Sale without transformation is considered to include the usual operations (or manipulations) associated with trade, for example sorting, grading and assembling of goods, mixing (blending) of goods (for example sand), bottling (with or without preceding bottle cleaning), packing, breaking bulk and repacking for distribution in smaller lots, storage (whether or not frozen or chilled), cleaning and drying of agricultural products, cutting out of wood fibreboards or metal sheets as secondary activities.

    Division 45 includes all activities related to the sale and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, while divisions 46 and 47 include all other sale activities. The distinction between division 46 (wholesale) and division 47 (retail sale) is based on the predominant type of customer.

    Wholesale is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods to retailers, to industrial, commercial, institutional or professional users, or to other wholesalers, or involves acting as an agent or broker in buying goods for, or selling goods to, such persons or companies. The principal types of businesses included are merchant wholesalers, i.e. wholesalers who take title to the goods they sell, such as wholesale merchants or jobbers, industrial distributors, exporters, importers, and cooperative buying associations, sales branches and sales OFFICES (but not retail stores) that are maintained by manufacturing or mining units apart from their plants or mines for the purpose of marketing their products and that do not merely take orders to be filled by direct shipments from the plants or mines. Also included are merchandise brokers, commission merchants and agents and assemblers, buyers and cooperative associations engaged in the marketing of farm products. Wholesalers frequently physically assemble, sort and grade goods in large lots, break bulk, repack and redistribute in smaller lots, for example pharmaceuticals; store, refrigerate, deliver and install goods, engage in sales promotion for their customers and label design.

    Retailing is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods mainly to the general public for personal or household consumption or utilization, by shops, department stores, stalls, mail-order houses, door-to-door sales persons, hawkers and peddlers, consumer cooperatives, auction houses etc. Most retailers take title to the goods they sell, but some act as agents for a principal and sell either on consignment or on a commission basis.