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Fort Worth Small Business Hire a CPA
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When Should a Fort Worth Small Business Hire a CPA?

There’s a moment in most small businesses when the founder realizes the spreadsheet they’ve been using since day one is no longer keeping up. Usually, it happens at 11 PM the night before a meeting with a banker, or in March when the tax bill arrives, and it’s twice what they expected.

That moment is the signal. Here’s how to recognize it before it happens, and how to know whether you actually need a CPA or just better bookkeeping.

When Should a Fort Worth Small Business Hire a CPA?

A Fort Worth small business should hire a CPA when annual revenue crosses $250,000, when net profit exceeds $80,000, when the business hires its first employee, when the owner is considering an S-corp election, or when the tax situation involves multiple states or entities. Below those thresholds, a competent bookkeeper plus tax software is usually enough.

The pattern most Fort Worth owners follow is the wrong one: they wait until something goes wrong (an IRS letter, a missed deduction, a banker asking for “real” financials) and then scramble. The CPA you hire in the middle of an emergency is the most expensive CPA you’ll ever pay for.

The right move is to bring on a CPA when you’re profitable and stable, before you need one. The work they do in your first 90 days as a client (cleaning books, setting up entity structure, planning for the year) is where most of the long-term savings come from.

At What Revenue Level Does a Fort Worth Small Business Need a CPA?

Most Fort Worth small businesses cross the “need a CPA” line between $250,000 and $500,000 in annual revenue. Above $500,000, going without a CPA usually costs more in missed deductions, penalties, and lost strategy than the CPA fee itself.

The math behind it: at $300,000 in revenue, a CPA who saves you 5% in taxes through entity-structure work and proactive deduction strategy is putting $4,000-$8,000 back in your pocket annually. A typical Fort Worth small business CPA retainer runs $5,000-$15,000 a year. The savings show up almost immediately.

Below $250,000, the savings rarely cover the cost. A solo barber, a side-hustle Etsy shop, a part-time real estate agent under $100K can usually file with TurboTax or work with a non-CPA preparer and be fine. The complexity isn’t there yet.

The exception: even at low revenue, if you have multiple states, multiple entities, or unusual income (crypto, options, foreign), the complexity calls for a CPA regardless of revenue.

What Life Events Trigger Needing a CPA?

Specific life and business events that almost always trigger the need for a CPA include hiring your first W-2 employee, electing S-corp status, opening a second location, buying or selling commercial real estate, taking on outside investors, getting an IRS notice, or going through a divorce that involves the business.

Each of those events introduces tax decisions you’d otherwise be guessing at. Hiring your first employee triggers payroll tax filings, workers’ comp, unemployment insurance, and a whole new set of compliance steps. S-Corp election forces you to set a “reasonable salary” and run yourself on payroll, which means you need someone who can defend the salary to the IRS if it’s ever questioned.

Buying real estate (cost segregation, depreciation, 1031 exchanges) is one of the highest-leverage CPA conversations a small business owner can have. We see Fort Worth real estate investors leaving five and six-figure amounts on the table by not running the numbers with someone who knows how.

Let’s look at an example. A salon owner we worked with bought her building in 2024 for $480,000. Her old preparer set up straight-line depreciation over 39 years. We ran cost segregation and reclassified about 35% of the building into 5- and 15-year property, which generated an extra $42,000 in deductions in year one. That single move covered our retainer for the next three years.

How Do You Know if You’ve Outgrown Your Bookkeeper or Tax Preparer?

You’ve outgrown your bookkeeper or tax preparer when the questions you’re asking are bigger than the answers they can give. If you ask about S-corp election, multi-state filings, retirement plan structure, or year-end tax planning, and you get a shrug or a “we’ll deal with it in March,” it’s time.

A few specific signs:

  • Your tax bill jumps significantly year over year, and your preparer can’t tell you why
  • Your books at year-end need significant cleanup before your tax return can be filed
  • You only hear from your accountant during tax season
  • You’ve gotten an IRS notice, and your preparer can’t represent you
  • You’re bringing on employees, opening locations, or making strategic moves with no tax conversation in advance
  • Your bookkeeper says, “Ask your CPA,” and your CPA says, “Ask your bookkeeper.”
  • The last one is the killer. If you don’t have a single person who owns the financial picture, you’re in the gap, and the gap is where mistakes live.

When Does the S-Corp Election Make a CPA Worth the Cost?

S-corp election usually justifies a CPA once net business income clears $80,000-$100,000, when the self-employment tax savings start exceeding the additional payroll, bookkeeping, and tax-prep costs of running an S-corp.

Below $80K net, the S-corp setup cost (payroll service, additional tax return, increased bookkeeping complexity) usually eats the savings. Above $100K, S-corp election typically saves $4,000-$10,000 a year in self-employment tax. Above $200K net, the savings often top $15,000.

The catch is that the S-corp election requires a CPA to set a “reasonable salary” defensibly. The IRS allows wide discretion on what counts as reasonable, but they expect you to have a justification. A salary set too low is the most common audit trigger for S-corp owners. A CPA who works with your industry knows what defensible looks like.

If you want to check whether the S-corp math works for your specific situation, our [S-corp tax calculator](https://adamtraywick.com/s-corporation-tax-calculator/) is a quick way to see the rough number before you book a call.

What Signs Indicate Your Current Accountant Is In Over Their Head?

Your current accountant is probably in over their head if they only respond during tax season, can’t explain your tax bill, miss deductions you find yourself, or push back on multi-state or multi-entity work. None of those are character flaws; they’re scope mismatches.

Other tells:

  • They prepare your return without ever looking at your books in detail
  • They don’t ask about strategic moves you made during the year (new hires, equipment purchases, real estate)
  • They don’t bring up retirement plans, owner pay structure, or entity questions
  • They don’t catch obvious errors (missed Section 179, wrong depreciation method, miscategorized 1099 income)
  • They get visibly uncomfortable when you ask, “are we doing this the most tax-efficient way?”

If two or more of those describe your current setup, you’ve already outgrown them. The longer you wait to make the move, the more compounding tax work piles up.

When is it Too Late to Hire a CPA for Tax Season?

For a Fort Worth business with reasonably clean books, hiring a CPA by mid-February is usually still fine for the April 15 filing. After mid-March, expect to file an extension because the CPA simply doesn’t have the bandwidth to onboard a new client and produce a return in 30 days.

Filing an extension isn’t bad. Extensions push the FILING deadline to October 15, but the PAYMENT deadline is still April 15. You still have to estimate and pay what you owe by April 15 to avoid penalties and interest, even if your CPA isn’t filing the return until summer.

If you’re calling a CPA in April: expect the answer to be “we’ll file an extension and tackle this in May or June.” That’s not a brush-off. It’s how the math actually works for any quality firm during tax season.

The right time to switch CPAs is between June and December, when the new firm has time to clean up your books, set up the right entity structure, and actually plan for the next tax year instead of just reacting to the previous one.

How Long Does it Take to Onboard with a New CPA?

Onboarding with a new CPA typically takes 30-60 days, including transferring records from the previous accountant, cleaning up the books, setting up access to your accounting software and bank feeds, and a kickoff conversation about goals and pain points.

What happens during those 30-60 days:

Week 1: Engagement letter signed, initial documents requested (last 2-3 years of returns, current QuickBooks file, bank/credit card statements, payroll records)

Week 2-3: CPA reviews everything, identifies issues (missed deductions, miscategorized accounts, missing filings)

Week 4: Kickoff meeting to discuss findings, set strategy, and align on cadence (monthly vs quarterly meetings, what’s included)

Week 5-8: Cleanup work (re-categorizing transactions, filing missed quarterly estimates, S-corp election filing if applicable, setting up new processes)

By the end of the onboarding window, you should have clean books, a clear tax strategy for the year, and a regular meeting cadence with your CPA. If two months in, you’re still wondering what you’re paying for, something is off.

The fastest onboarding happens when the business has clean records to hand over, knows what they’re trying to accomplish, and isn’t trying to switch CPAs in the middle of tax season.

The bottom line: hiring a CPA isn’t about hitting a perfect revenue number; it’s about recognizing the moment when the cost of NOT having one starts exceeding the fee.

For most Fort Worth small businesses, that moment shows up between $250K and $500K in revenue, and the longer you wait past it, the more you leave on the table.

If you want to talk through whether you’ve hit that point, reach out at adamtraywick.com/get-in-touch.

About the Author

Adam Traywick, CPA

Adam Traywick, CPA is the President and founding CPA of Adam Traywick, LLC, a Adam Traywick CPA small-business accounting firm. He has over 20 years of experience helping small business owners across home-services trades, hair salons, real estate, and insurance agencies optimize taxes, run cleaner books, and avoid the surprises that come from once-a-year accountants.

More about Adam  ·  Talk to Adam’s team

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