CPA Services for Small Business: What Your Business Actually Needs
Not all CPA services are created equal. Learn which accounting, tax, and advisory services your small business actually needs — and when to upgrade as you grow.
CPA services for small businesses, LLCs, S-corps, startups, and entrepreneurs.
Not all CPA services are created equal. Learn which accounting, tax, and advisory services your small business actually needs — and when to upgrade as you grow.
Learn how a CPA helps startups with entity selection, 83(b) elections, QSBS exclusions, R&D credits, and investor-ready financials from launch.
Understand what a financial audit involves, the difference between audits, reviews, and compilations, when your business needs one, and what to expect as a first-time audit client.
A CPA for S-corp taxes is essential for maximizing savings and staying compliant. Learn about reasonable compensation, distributions, payroll taxes, and the best S-corp tax strategies.
Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business. A CPA helps small businesses understand, project, and manage cash flow to prevent shortfalls, plan for growth, and make better financial decisions.
Running a restaurant? A specialized CPA helps restaurant owners with food cost analysis, tip reporting, sales tax, payroll, and the unique deductions that reduce your tax burden.
Real estate investors need a specialized CPA to maximize depreciation, manage passive losses, execute 1031 exchanges, and build long-term tax-efficient wealth. Complete guide here.
CPA-prepared financial statements — compilations, reviews, and audits — are required by banks, investors, and regulators. Learn the difference between each level and when your business needs them.
Sole proprietors face self-employment tax, quarterly payments, and complex deduction rules. A CPA for sole proprietors helps you pay less tax, stay compliant, and make better business decisions.
Bookkeepers record transactions; CPAs analyze, plan, and represent you before the IRS. Learn the key differences, costs, and when to use each—or both together.