# CPA Accountant Stoughton MA

## About

Our accounting firm provides small businesses with unparalleled accounting, tax, and financial services in Stoughton, MA. Call Brenda J. McGivern, P.C. today.

- Verified: Yes

## Services

### CPA Services
- [Tax Planning](https://bilarna.com/services/cpa-services/tax-planning)

## Pricing

- Model: custom

## Frequently Asked Questions

**Q: What is the difference between a CPA and an accountant?**
A: A CPA, or Certified Public Accountant, is a licensed professional who has passed a rigorous national exam and meets strict state education and ethics requirements, while an accountant may not hold this certification. CPAs have the legal authority to represent clients before the IRS, perform audits, and provide advanced tax planning and strategy. Accountants typically handle bookkeeping, payroll, and basic tax preparation but cannot perform these regulated activities. For businesses needing audit representation, financial statement attestation, or complex tax advice, hiring a CPA is essential. The distinction also affects credibility with lenders and investors, as CPA oversight adds a layer of assurance. Understanding this difference helps business owners choose the right level of financial expertise for their needs.

**Q: Why should a small business hire a CPA instead of using tax software?**
A: Tax software can only file returns based on the data you enter, whereas a CPA provides proactive tax planning, compliance oversight, and personalized financial advice throughout the year. A CPA analyzes your business structure to recommend the most tax-efficient entity type, identifies deductions and credits you might miss, handles multi-state filing requirements, and represents you if the IRS audits your return. For growing businesses, a CPA helps manage cash flow, advises on major purchases, and ensures payroll and estimated tax payments are correct. The cost of a CPA is often offset by tax savings, penalty avoidance, and strategic guidance that software cannot match. Additionally, CPAs stay current with changing tax laws and can adapt your strategy accordingly, offering a level of expertise and accountability that automated tools lack.

**Q: How do estimated tax payments work for self-employed individuals?**
A: Estimated tax payments are quarterly installments paid to the IRS by self-employed individuals and others with non-wage income, covering both income tax and self-employment tax. Payments are due in April, June, September, and January of the following year. To avoid penalties, you must pay at least 90% of your current year's tax liability or 100% of the prior year's tax liability (110% if your prior year income was over $150,000). The amount is calculated by projecting your annual net earnings, subtracting deductions and credits, and dividing the expected tax by four. Many self-employed individuals use Form 1040-ES to calculate and submit payments. Properly estimating these payments helps manage cash flow throughout the year and prevents a large tax bill at filing time. Missing a payment or underpaying can result in interest and penalties, so regular review of your income is recommended.

## Links

- Profile: https://bilarna.com/provider/bmcgiverncpa
- Structured data: https://bilarna.com/provider/bmcgiverncpa/agent.json
- API schema: https://bilarna.com/provider/bmcgiverncpa/openapi.yaml
