The former EA Exam discussion morphed into a thread about rates to charge clients. If you are an NATP member, there is a comprehensive (70-page) review of rates from all over the US, broken down by region of the country, urban/suburban/rural, by service performed, by tax form, by schedule, by designation(s), etc. etc., accessible through the Sept 17 issue of the Tax Pro Weekly email service. Rates tend to be highest in the NE and lowest in the Mid-West, and vary by other criteria as well. Very interesting. Most common method of pricing was by form and schedule.
Preparers' Rates
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Really?
The former EA Exam discussion morphed into a thread about rates to charge clients. If you are an NATP member, there is a comprehensive (70-page) review of rates from all over the US, broken down by region of the country, urban/suburban/rural, by service performed, by tax form, by schedule, by designation(s), etc. etc., accessible through the Sept 17 issue of the Tax Pro Weekly email service. Rates tend to be highest in the NE and lowest in the Mid-West, and vary by other criteria as well. Very interesting. Most common method of pricing was by form and schedule.ChEAr$,
Harlan Lunsford, EA n LA -
Yeah I would have thought the south would be lower also but not really surprised about the MidWest.
I am trying to up my charges. I could start my little "that is alot more than I thought" rant but I won'tComment
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Not sure why, but the region they designated "South" included all the eastern states south of the Mason-Dixon line including those you mentioned plus Texas and Oklahoma. I would have considered Arkansas and Oklahoma as mid-west.Comment
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And even though this included Marylandand Delaware, those states remained in the Union while Kentucky and Missouri were toss ups. Of course back then Oklahoma wasn't even a state.ChEAr$,
Harlan Lunsford, EA n LAComment
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