The 5 Worst Ways People Find Their CPA

Kimberly Green | 2026-04-14

The 5 Worst Ways People Find Their CPA (And What to Do Instead) You wouldn't pick a surgeon based on a buddy's text message. You wouldn't hire a contractor without seeing their work. But that's basically how most people hire the person responsible for their taxes, their books, and their financial future. The process is broken. 1. Your Brother-in-Law's Accountant This is the path of least resistance. Someone you know uses them. You ask for a recommendation. Done. Problem: One accountant can't be good at everything. An accountant who's great for a W-2 employee might be mediocre for a business owner. An accountant who understands e-commerce might have no clue about SaaS tax dynamics or contractor misclassification risk. a vetted CPA for your situation is the one who specializes in businesses like yours -- not the one who's closest to your family tree. 2. The Tax Software Company's Referral Network You use TurboTax or TurboTax for Business. The software suggests CPAs. You pick one from the list. Problem: That referral network is a marketplace. The CPAs pay to be listed. It's not a quality filter -- it's a marketing funnel. You end up with someone whose main selling point is that they paid for the advertising slot, not that they're exceptional at their craft. 3. A Google Search (First Three Results) You search "CPA near me." You look at the first three results. You pick one because they have a nice website. Problem: A nice website doesn't mean a good accountant. It means they hired someone to build a nice website. A good accountant might have a terrible website. A bad accountant might have a great one. You're optimizing for the wrong signal. 4. The CPA Offering "Only $500/Year" You find someone advertising flat-rate tax prep for $500. Great deal, right? Problem: That price only works if they see you for 30 minutes, ask minimal questions, file the standard return. They have no time for strategy. No time to look for tax opportunities. No time to ask about your actual financial situation. A $500 CPA is optimized for volume, not for your outcomes. 5. The Guy at Your Networking Event (Without Vetting) You meet a CPA at a chamber mixer. You chat for five minutes. You exchange cards. You call him the next day. Problem: A good business card and a decent handshake tell you nothing about whether this person understands your business, understands tax law, or understands how to actually help you. A ten-minute networking conversation is not due diligence. What to Do Instead: The Real Process Find CPAs who specialize in your business type. Ask your peers in your industry...

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