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CRTP or CPA?
Which Designation
Is a Better Choice for Your Income Tax Services?
CRTP Professional Education
Requirements Compared to CPAs
Your tax returns will be prepared
by a California Registered Tax Preparer (CRTP), who has undergone a
rigorous course curriculum and an examination specifically geared to
federal and California income tax law, procedure and preparation.
CPAs take a 4 hour exam on federal taxation only, only once in their
career, and the examination does not include California tax law or procedure.
CPAs are not required to update their
income tax knowledge and stay current with continuing professional income
tax education to renew their CPA license. CPAs are required to complete
80 hours of education every two years, but none of it is required to
involve either federal or California income taxation.
By contrast, CRTPs are required to
renew their California state registration every year and are required
to complete a minimum of 20 hours of tax education, involving both federal
and California tax laws and procedure, to qualify for renewal.
Registration must be completed and renewed every year.
CRTP Professional Client Protection
Compared to CPAs
Your tax returns will be prepared
by a California Registered Tax Preparer (CRTP), covered by a $5,000
consumer protection bond, which CPAs do not offer.
In the event of an incompetent CPA,
no performance bond is available to compensate a client who has wrongfully
suffered damages.
CRTP Professional Service Choices
Compared to CPAs
Your tax returns will be prepared
by a California Registered Tax Preparer (CRTP), who is not prohibited
by restrictive CPA regulations to provide a wide variety of services
with flexible compensation options for your convenience. CRTPs
may engage in coordinated services such as insurance coverage, investment
advice through licensing, and financial planning without having arbitrary
licensing conflicts as do CPAs.
CRTP Income Tax Specialization
Compared to CPAs
Your tax returns will be prepared
by a California Registered Tax Preparer (CRTP), who is an income tax
specialist. By contrast, CPAs are not required to be income tax
specialists, usually have taken only only course in federal taxation
in college, have only one section of the CPA examination relating to
federal taxation, and may engage in a broad variety of accounting matters
not related to income taxation. Many CPAs are not tax accountants
and are not income tax specialists. By contrast, CRTPs are specifically
trained and registered annually on income tax matters, both federal
and California, to qualify for re-registration.
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