How CPA Firms and Accounting Practices Are Valued
Accounting practice valuation is unique because the primary asset — client relationships — is intangible and potentially fragile. When the founding CPA retires, will clients stay with the firm? This single question drives every aspect of accounting practice valuation.
The Gross Revenue Multiple Method
The most common valuation approach for CPA firms is a percentage of gross revenue, typically ranging from 80-150%. A firm billing $1.5M per year would sell for $1.2M to $2.25M.
The wide range reflects critical differences: firms with 90%+ recurring tax and audit clients sell at the top of the range (120-150%), while firms dependent on one-time advisory work or a single client relationship sell at the bottom (80-100%).
What Pushes CPA Firm Multiples Higher
Recurring revenue composition is the biggest factor. Tax preparation and compliance work recurs annually, making it highly predictable. Audit and review engagements with multi-year contracts are similarly valuable. Advisory and consulting revenue, while higher-margin, is less predictable and valued at a discount.
Client concentration matters enormously. If one client represents 15%+ of revenue, buyers discount heavily because losing that client post-sale would be devastating. Firms with no client over 5% of revenue are ideal.
Staff retention likelihood— the departing CPA's team is a critical asset. If the senior manager, tax preparer, and bookkeeper will stay through the transition, client retention rates jump from 75% to 90%+.
The Baby Boomer Retirement Wave
The accounting profession is facing a massive succession crisis. Over 75% of CPAs are eligible for retirement within the next 10 years, and the pipeline of new CPAs has declined significantly. This supply/demand imbalance has created a seller's market, but it's also driving PE consolidation. Firms like CLA, CBIZ, and PE-backed platforms are acquiring practices at accelerating rates.
Deal Structure Matters
Most CPA firm sales include an earn-out or retention guarantee. Typically, 70-80% is paid at closing and 20-30% is tied to client retention at 12-24 months post-close. This protects the buyer against client attrition. The selling CPA usually stays for a 1-2 year transition period to introduce clients to the successor.