The accounting profession is currently operating under a dual, often contradictory, mandate: aggressively expand high-margin advisory services while navigating one of the most perilous regulatory and liability environments in modern history. As firms race to acquire new capabilities and geographic footholds, they are simultaneously being forced to play defense against aggressive IRS enforcement, unresolved federal transparency mandates, and evolving fraud vectors.
This tension was perfectly encapsulated recently when Somerset, New Jersey-based RRBB announced it is joining forces with Maryland-based Offit & Roth. The strategic move is explicitly designed to expand RRBB’s advisory platform into the Mid-Atlantic region. It is a classic play in the modern CPA playbook: acquiring specialized talent and regional market share to pivot away from commoditized compliance and toward lucrative, relationship-driven advisory work. But as firms scale these advisory platforms, they are stepping into a liability minefield that requires unprecedented vigilance.
The Expanding Liability Matrix of Advisory Services
When a firm shifts its focus to wealth management, estate planning, and strategic corporate consulting, the nature of its professional liability fundamentally changes. A recent Journal of Accountancy podcast exploring CPA liability highlighted this exact phenomenon. The discussion mapped the evolving risk landscape, noting that liability claims are increasingly stemming not just from traditional audit failures or missed tax deadlines, but from sophisticated advisory engagements.
Whether a firm is advising a high-net-worth family on estate transitions or integrating artificial intelligence into its own tech stack to deliver predictive analytics, the margin for error is shrinking. Clients rely on CPAs as absolute authorities; when a complex strategy fails to deliver the promised tax benefits—or worse, triggers an audit—the firm is often the first target for litigation.
The IRS Narrows the Playing Field
The risks of high-level tax advisory are currently being amplified by an IRS that is flush with funding and eager to close perceived loopholes. For firms advising high-net-worth clients, the ground is shifting rapidly under popular wealth preservation strategies.
Case in point: The IRS recently issued final regulations designating certain Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (CRAT) arrangements as listed transactions. The agency is specifically targeting arrangements that improperly use CRATs to eliminate ordinary income and capital gains on the sale of property. For CPAs, a "listed transaction" designation is a massive red flag. It requires stringent disclosure requirements and carries severe penalties for both the taxpayer and the material advisor if those disclosures are missed. Firms that have historically recommended these structures must now pivot to damage control, ensuring past clients are compliant with the new disclosure rules while overhauling their current estate planning playbooks.
On the corporate advisory side, the stakes are even higher. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is currently weighing a monumental clash between Coca-Cola and the IRS over a transfer pricing methodology change. The IRS's decision to retroactively alter its accepted transfer pricing methodology for the beverage giant resulted in a multi-billion-dollar tax dispute. For mid-tier and large accounting firms advising multinational clients, the Coca-Cola case is a chilling reminder of the IRS's willingness to aggressively challenge established corporate tax structures.
| Advisory Niche | Current Regulatory Threat | Firm Mitigation Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Estate & Wealth Planning | IRS designation of CRATs as listed transactions. | Audit past client structures; enforce strict disclosure compliance; update advisory protocols. |
| Corporate Tax Strategy | Aggressive IRS transfer pricing challenges (e.g., Coca-Cola). | Increase documentation of intercompany pricing; stress-test historical methodologies against new IRS precedent. |
| Entity Structuring | Unresolved Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) mandates. | Issue clear engagement letters defining who is responsible for FinCEN BOI reporting. |
The Trust Deficit: Fraud on Both Sides of the Desk
As firms expand their advisory reach, they take on the role of financial guardians for their clients. This is especially true for firms serving older, high-net-worth individuals who are prime targets for bad actors. The profession is actively stepping up to this challenge. Recent industry guidance outlined five critical ways CPAs can help older clients fight financial fraud, emphasizing the need for CPAs to establish trusted contact protocols, monitor for unusual account activity, and educate clients on emerging phishing and AI-voice scams.
However, the profession's role as a trusted guardian is occasionally undermined from within, reminding firm leaders that internal risk management is just as critical as client-facing advice. The Department of Justice recently announced that a Massachusetts CPA and firm owner was sentenced to prison for a multi-year conspiracy to defraud the IRS and fraudulently obtain pandemic relief funds. The scheme involved under-the-table compensation and falsified documents.
"The true currency of the accounting profession is not the tax return, nor the audit report—it is unassailable trust. When a CPA breaches that trust, the blast radius damages the reputation of the entire profession."
For growing firms like RRBB absorbing new practices, the Sudbury case underscores the critical importance of rigorous due diligence and cultural alignment during M&A activities. When acquiring a firm to build out an advisory platform, acquiring partners must meticulously audit the target firm's internal controls, compensation structures, and ethical track record. A failure in cultural integration can introduce catastrophic liability.
The Looming Ambiguity of the Corporate Transparency Act
Perhaps nothing exemplifies the current friction between advisory opportunities and liability risks quite like the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA). CPAs are uniquely positioned to advise millions of small business clients on the new Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) reporting requirements. Yet, the legal foundation of the CTA remains in jeopardy.
As the U.S. Supreme Court recently wrapped up its term, challenges to the Corporate Transparency Act remain pending and unresolved. The lack of a definitive Supreme Court ruling leaves accounting and tax professionals in a precarious state of limbo. Do you aggressively advise clients to file, risking unauthorized practice of law (UPL) claims in certain jurisdictions? Or do you take a hands-off approach, risking client anger if they are hit with steep FinCEN penalties for non-compliance?
To navigate this ambiguity, firms must implement strict boundaries:
- Definitive Engagement Letters: Explicitly state whether the firm is or is not handling BOI reporting.
- Client Education: Proactively inform clients of the CTA requirements and the current legal uncertainties without offering explicit legal interpretations.
- Third-Party Partnerships: Consider partnering with specialized legal counsel or compliance software vendors to handle BOI filings, thereby transferring the primary liability off the firm's balance sheet.
Conclusion: Building Resilient Growth
The strategic combination of RRBB and Offit & Roth is a blueprint for the future of the profession: geographically diverse, advisory-focused, and built to handle complex client needs. However, as the regulatory walls close in—from the IRS targeting CRATs to unresolved CTA mandates—growth cannot outpace governance.
The modern accounting firm must view risk management not as a back-office compliance function, but as a core pillar of its growth strategy. Firms that successfully balance the advisory imperative with the realities of the liability minefield will not only protect their most valuable asset—their reputation—but will emerge as the undisputed leaders in a fiercely competitive market. In this new era, the most profitable advice a firm can give is the advice it has rigorously insulated against risk.
