Definition of "public accounting firm"

  • Creator
    Topic
  • #184704
    marvin
    Member

    I was wondering which firms can call themselves “public accounting firms.” Do they have to be registered with the PCAOB to call themselves this? Would a firm that only audits non public and/or non-profit clients still be considered a public accounting firm if they have a CPA on staff? What if the only CPA in the firm is not a partner? Sorry about all the questions.

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
  • Author
    Replies
  • #541550
    Gatorbates
    Participant

    “Public accounting firm” has nothing to do with PCAOB or the type of industries they audit or do taxes for. Public accounting means they are doing accounting “for the public” … anyone can come to them for tax or audit work.

    Licensed Florida CPA:
    B: 71, 73, 79
    A: 83
    R: 78 (expired), 77
    F: 74, 74, 80

    It's finally freaking over.

    #541583
    Gatorbates
    Participant

    “Public accounting firm” has nothing to do with PCAOB or the type of industries they audit or do taxes for. Public accounting means they are doing accounting “for the public” … anyone can come to them for tax or audit work.

    Licensed Florida CPA:
    B: 71, 73, 79
    A: 83
    R: 78 (expired), 77
    F: 74, 74, 80

    It's finally freaking over.

    #541552
    marvin
    Member

    Excellent, thank you for clearing that up.

    #541585
    marvin
    Member

    Excellent, thank you for clearing that up.

    #541554
    Kimboroni
    Member

    As for the question “What if the only CPA in the firm is not a partner?” I'm not sure if there are any states that would issue a firm CPA license if there aren't any CPAs owning the firm. I've researched many of the states as part of my job, and those that I looked at all require at least 50% of the partners to be CPAs. (This was a recent move away from requiring all of the partners to be CPAs.) Also, non-CPA partners cannot be silent partners– they have to have an active role in the management of the firm.

    Just in case that is helpful.

    AUD 84 (1/9/14-Wiley books/TB + free materials)
    FAR 83 (5/21/14-the above + NINJA 10 Pt Combo Lite)
    REG 84 (7/9/14-Wiley books/TB + NINJA Audio/FC/Notes)
    BEC 76 (10/5/14-Wiley books/TB + NINJA Audio/FC)

    Disclaimer: My ninja avatar is not meant to imply that I have any affiliation with this site other than being a forum member. That's a pic of a T-shirt that my daughter gave me for my birthday. 🙂

    #541586
    Kimboroni
    Member

    As for the question “What if the only CPA in the firm is not a partner?” I'm not sure if there are any states that would issue a firm CPA license if there aren't any CPAs owning the firm. I've researched many of the states as part of my job, and those that I looked at all require at least 50% of the partners to be CPAs. (This was a recent move away from requiring all of the partners to be CPAs.) Also, non-CPA partners cannot be silent partners– they have to have an active role in the management of the firm.

    Just in case that is helpful.

    AUD 84 (1/9/14-Wiley books/TB + free materials)
    FAR 83 (5/21/14-the above + NINJA 10 Pt Combo Lite)
    REG 84 (7/9/14-Wiley books/TB + NINJA Audio/FC/Notes)
    BEC 76 (10/5/14-Wiley books/TB + NINJA Audio/FC)

    Disclaimer: My ninja avatar is not meant to imply that I have any affiliation with this site other than being a forum member. That's a pic of a T-shirt that my daughter gave me for my birthday. 🙂

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.