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Maryland Accountants

Browse top-rated maryland accountants. Compare pricing, specialties, and client reviews.

6vetted firms in Maryland·Independently reviewed — we never accept payment for placement

Popular cities in Maryland

6 professionals found

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Baltimore CPA for Contractors & Hospitality

Baltimore, MD
Withum
Accountant
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Forward-thinking CPA firm for modern business

Princeton, NJ
No reviews yet

Trusted CPAs serving the DC metro for 70+ years

Bethesda, MD
CohnReznick
Accountant
No reviews yet

Accounting and advisory for complex industries

New York, NY
No reviews yet

Strategic tax planning for DC-area businesses

Arlington, VA
No reviews yet

Trusted CPAs for federal contractors and DC professionals

Vienna, VA

Editorial review by the Coyote Wealth team · Updated May 25, 2026

Benefits of Hiring a Accountant

Hiring a vetted accountant can significantly reduce your annual tax liability through proactive planning, not just year-end preparation. A skilled CPA ensures your books stay clean and accurate, saving you from costly errors, IRS penalties, and audit risk — particularly important for businesses operating in Maryland. For businesses operating across multiple states, an accountant with multi-state tax expertise can navigate nexus rules and compliance requirements that vary by jurisdiction.

Beyond compliance, a great accountant acts as a strategic advisor — helping you structure your entity, time income recognition, and build a foundation for scalable growth. Whether you need monthly bookkeeping, tax planning, or help with an IRS notice, the right accountant becomes one of the most important financial relationships your business has.

How to Choose a Accountant: A Step-by-Step Guide

Follow these four steps before signing any engagement letter.

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Step 1: Verify their CPA license

Before signing an engagement letter, look up your accountant's CPA license on your state board of accountancy website. An active, unrestricted license is non-negotiable. Also ask about their EA (Enrolled Agent) designation if you expect IRS representation. Credentials signal ongoing education requirements and adherence to professional standards. A clean disciplinary record matters as much as the credential itself.

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Step 2: Ask about fee structure

Accounting fees vary widely: most CPAs charge $150–$400/hour, or a monthly retainer of $500–$2,000+ for bookkeeping and close work. Get a written engagement letter with a clear scope of work and hourly cap before work begins. Beware of firms that quote unusually low upfront prices — scope creep and surprise fees are common when expectations aren't set in writing from the start.

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Step 3: Know your interview questions

Ask any prospective accountant: How many clients like me do you currently serve? What accounting software do you use — QuickBooks, Xero, or NetSuite? Do you specialize in my industry? What's your process for proactive tax planning? How do you communicate during tax season? An accountant who answers these confidently and specifically is far more likely to be a reliable long-term partner.

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Step 4: Check regulatory databases

The IRS maintains a public database of tax practitioners with disciplinary history. Your state's Board of Accountancy publishes license status and any public sanctions. For CPAs, the AICPA's member directory can confirm active membership. Always run a quick search before engaging — especially for complex situations involving business taxes, multi-state filings, or significant assets.

Frequently Asked Questions

How We Vet Every Firm

Verified Credentials

We check active license status with state boards, the SEC's IAPD, and FINRA BrokerCheck before any firm is listed.

Real Client Reviews

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Transparent Fees

Listed firms disclose their fee structure. We flag any firm that refuses to share how they charge clients.

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Clean Regulatory Record

We screen every firm against SEC, FINRA, and state licensing databases for disciplinary history and sanctions.