People will spend $400 on dinner without flinching and then refuse to pay $600 for a CPA who could legitimately save them $5,000. It’s one of the strangest pricing mismatches in personal finance. Tax preparation has been so commoditized by software that the public’s mental model of accountants is stuck on data entry, when the real value of a good CPA is in planning, structure, and knowing which obscure rules apply to your specific situation.
Software finds deductions; CPAs find strategies
TurboTax and its competitors are excellent at running through a checklist. They will not, however, suggest that you elect S-corp status to cut self-employment tax, or that you set up a solo 401(k) before December 31, or that your spouse’s part-time consulting income should be funneled through a different entity. Those moves often save five-figure sums and require an actual conversation with someone who understands both your numbers and the tax code. The IRS Statistics of Income data consistently shows that taxpayers with professional preparers claim a wider range of deductions and credits, particularly above the $100,000 income threshold where the rules get complicated fast.
The hourly rate looks high until you do the math
A typical CPA bills $200 to $400 an hour, which sounds steep until you realize the engagement might run six to ten hours total. On a household with rental property, business income, or stock compensation, that’s a few thousand dollars to potentially save tens of thousands over the next several years through entity selection, retirement vehicle stacking, and basis tracking. Compare that to the hourly cost of a financial advisor charging 1 percent of assets annually, which on a million-dollar portfolio is $10,000 a year forever. CPAs are arguably the most underpriced professionals in the financial services stack, and competent ones are scarce enough that good firms now turn away small clients.
The audit insurance angle nobody talks about
If you ever get audited, having a CPA who prepared the return and can represent you is the difference between a stressful afternoon and a six-month nightmare. They know what triggered the notice, they have the workpapers, and they speak the language. Self-prepared returns flagged for examination tend to drag on longer and result in larger adjustments, simply because the taxpayer is negotiating from a position of confusion. Even if you never get audited, the documentation discipline a CPA imposes throughout the year is worth the fee on its own. Receipts, mileage logs, and basis records all become organized by default rather than reconstructed in panic.
The takeaway
If your tax situation is genuinely simple, a W-2 and a standard deduction, software is fine. The moment you add a business, rental, equity compensation, or significant investments, the calculus shifts hard. A CPA isn’t an expense; they’re a leveraged investment with one of the best returns available to ordinary households. The professionals who balk at their own fees know exactly how much value they leave on the table for clients who try to save $600 by going it alone.
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