Tax advisory services typically start at $3,000 annually. For some business owners, that feels expensive—especially when you’re already paying for tax preparation.
The question isn’t whether advisory costs money. It’s whether the strategies you implement deliver more value than you’re paying.
For business owners with sufficient complexity (S-corps, partnerships, C-corps, or Schedule C with $200K+ revenue), tax advisory typically delivers 3-10x ROI when appropriate strategies are implemented. But “typically” isn’t a guarantee, and results depend entirely on your specific situation.
Here’s how to evaluate whether tax advisory makes financial sense for your business.
Is Tax Advisory Worth the Cost?
Tax advisory typically delivers 3-10x ROI when appropriate strategies are implemented. Services start at $3,000 annually and make financial sense for business owners with $200K+ revenue who have optimization opportunities available. For example, an S-corp owner paying $4,500 annually for advisory might save $23,000 through reasonable compensation optimization, retirement contribution timing, and QBI maximization—a 5.1x return. Advisory is worth it for S-corps, partnerships, and complex situations with sufficient revenue to justify strategic planning. It’s not worth it for simple W-2 returns, businesses under $100K revenue, or highly optimized situations with existing advisors.
Key Takeaways
- Typical ROI: 3-10x when strategies are implemented – Advisory fees of $3,000-$12,000 typically save $10,000-$120,000+ through proactive planning
- Best for businesses with $200K+ revenue – Optimization opportunities justify advisory cost at this revenue level
- First-year ROI is highest – Implementing missed strategies (reasonable comp, retirement, QBI) delivers immediate value
- Not for everyone – Skip advisory if you have simple W-2 income, revenue under $100K, or are already highly optimized
- Cumulative value compounds – $23K annual savings = $115K over 5 years vs $22,500 in advisor fees paid
- Calculate your ROI – Identify 2-3 applicable strategies, estimate savings, divide by advisory cost = ROI multiple
Table of Contents
How Much Does Tax Advisory Cost?
Tax advisory pricing varies widely depending on firm size, service model, and complexity. Understanding industry ranges helps you evaluate whether a proposal is reasonable.
Industry Pricing Ranges by Firm Type
Big Four and large regional firms:
- Hourly rates: $300-$800+ per hour
- Often billed without caps or estimates
- Annual spend for small business advisory: $15,000-$50,000+
Mid-size firms:
- Monthly retainers: $1,500-$3,500 per month ($18,000-$42,000 annually)
- Typically include tax prep, planning, and advisory in one package
- Some firms use hourly billing with estimates
Boutique and specialized firms:
- Annual advisory fees: $3,000-$12,000 depending on complexity
- Often provide upfront estimates with defined scope
- Some bundle tax preparation, others price separately
Solo practitioners:
- Wide range: $2,000-$10,000 annually
- Pricing depends heavily on practitioner experience and client complexity
- May or may not include tax preparation
What Affects Your Specific Pricing
Your cost for tax advisory depends on:
- Service frequency
- Annual planning session: Lower cost
- Quarterly touchpoints: Moderate cost
- Monthly advisory access: Higher cost
- Entity complexity
- Single S-corp or partnership: Lower complexity
- Multiple entities: Moderate complexity
- Multi-state operations, international holdings, complex allocations: Higher complexity
- Implementation needs
- Standard strategies (reasonable comp, QBI optimization): Included in advisory
- Advanced strategies (cost segregation, defined benefit plans): Often priced separately as one-time projects
- Firm overhead
- Large firms have higher overhead, resulting in higher fees
- Smaller specialized practices often offer better value for small businesses
At SDO CPA, tax advisory services start at $3,000 annually for straightforward S-corp and partnership situations and vary based on complexity, service frequency, and implementation needs. We provide upfront estimates after understanding your specific situation during an initial consultation.
For a detailed look at what tax advisory includes, see: Tax Advisory Services
What You Get for That Investment
Tax advisory isn’t just about getting tax planning recommendations. The value comes from four areas that go beyond what you’d get from basic tax preparation.
1. Proactive Tax Savings Through Strategy Implementation
Advisory relationships focus on implementing strategies before opportunities expire—not discovering them after the fact.
Examples of proactive strategies:
- Reasonable compensation optimization for S-corps (adjusting W-2 salary to maximize QBI deduction while staying defensible)
- Augusta Rule implementation (renting your home to your business for up to 14 days, generating up to $14,000 in tax-free income)
- Retirement contribution timing (maximizing contributions while managing cash flow)
- Year-end equipment purchases (Section 179 and bonus depreciation timing)
- Entity restructuring (adding holding companies, changing entity elections)
These strategies don’t just happen. They require analysis, documentation, and coordination—which advisory relationships provide.
2. Audit Protection Through Documentation
CPAs who provide advisory services typically maintain better documentation throughout the year, which becomes critical if you’re ever audited.
What proper documentation includes:
- Reasonable compensation studies showing how you determined your S-corp salary
- Board resolutions for major elections or distributions
- Contemporaneous mileage logs and expense documentation
- Basis tracking for partnerships
- Evidence supporting deductions (home office, Augusta Rule, etc.)
If the IRS questions a position, having contemporaneous documentation—not retroactively created—makes the difference between defending your position successfully and owing back taxes plus penalties.
3. Time Savings from Expert Guidance
Business owners without advisory relationships spend significant time:
- Researching tax strategies (often finding incorrect or outdated information)
- Trying to implement complex strategies without guidance
- Coordinating with multiple professionals (attorney, payroll provider, financial advisor)
- Correcting mistakes that could have been avoided
An advisor who knows your situation can answer questions in minutes that might take you hours to research—and more importantly, can tell you which strategies are worth pursuing and which aren’t relevant for your situation.
4. Peace of Mind from Expert Oversight
There’s value in knowing someone is proactively watching for opportunities and risks throughout the year—not just when you file your return.
Advisory clients don’t wonder:
- “Am I paying too much in estimated taxes?”
- “Should I make this equipment purchase before year-end?”
- “Is my entity structure still optimal?”
- “Did I miss any planning opportunities?”
They know their advisor is tracking these items and will proactively reach out when action is needed.
Real ROI Examples from Tax Advisory
Results vary based on situation, but here are realistic examples of what business owners save through proactive advisory relationships. These are generic examples with representative numbers—not actual client results—used to illustrate common scenarios.
Example 1: Service Business S-Corp
Situation:
- Professional services business (consulting, marketing, legal, etc.)
- $450,000 annual revenue
- 1 owner
- Previously paid $65,000 W-2 salary (too low for reasonable compensation)
Strategies implemented through advisory:
- Reasonable compensation adjusted to $95,000 (defensible based on industry data)
- Solo 401(k) established with $30,000 contribution
- Augusta Rule implemented (rented home to business for 12 days at $1,200/day)
- QBI deduction optimized through proper W-2 vs. distribution balance
Annual tax savings: Approximately $23,000 through proper structure and timing
Advisory cost: $4,500 annually
Net benefit: $18,500 (5.1x ROI)
Example 2: Real Estate Partnership
Situation:
- Real estate partnership with 3 partners
- 5 rental properties purchased over 8 years
- No cost segregation on properties
- Basis tracking errors from prior CPA
Strategies implemented through advisory:
- Cost segregation studies on 2 properties (accelerated $180,000 in depreciation)
- Basis tracking cleanup (recovered $47,000 in previously unclaimed losses)
- Section 754 election filed for new partner admission
- Self-employment tax planning for general partner vs. limited partner status
First-year tax savings: Approximately $41,000 (primarily from cost segregation)
Ongoing annual savings: Approximately $12,000 from proper basis tracking and SE tax planning
Advisory cost: $6,000 annually + $8,500 for cost seg studies (one-time)
First-year net benefit: $26,500 (2.8x ROI including implementation costs)
Ongoing ROI: 2x annually after first year
Example 3: Multi-Entity Structure
Situation:
- Operating company (S-corp, $900,000 revenue)
- Real estate holdings (commercial property used by operating company)
- No entity separation between operating company and real estate
Strategies implemented through advisory:
- Created separate LLC for real estate holdings
- Established market-rate lease from property LLC to operating S-corp
- Implemented cost segregation on commercial property
- Established defined benefit plan ($85,000 annual contribution)
- Augusta Rule for owner’s home
Annual tax savings: Approximately $58,000 through entity restructuring and advanced strategies
Advisory cost: $9,000 annually + $14,500 implementation (entity formation, cost seg, DB plan setup)
First-year net benefit: $34,500 (2.4x ROI including implementation)
Ongoing ROI: 6.4x annually after first year
Want to see how these strategies apply to your entity type? Read our entity-specific guides:
When Tax Advisory Might Not Make Sense
Advisory isn’t valuable for everyone. Here are situations where the cost may not deliver sufficient ROI.
1. Simple W-2 Returns with Limited Deductions
If your tax situation consists primarily of W-2 income with standard deductions and no business entity, there aren’t many optimization opportunities.
Why advisory doesn’t deliver value here:
- Limited control over income timing
- Few deductions beyond standard options (retirement contributions, HSA)
- No entity structure to optimize
- Tax preparation alone is typically sufficient
Better approach: Annual tax preparation with optional consultation on specific questions (retirement contributions, major purchases).
2. Sole Proprietors Under $100K Revenue
Sole proprietors with under $100K revenue typically have limited complexity and fewer strategy opportunities.
Why advisory delivers limited value:
- QBI deduction is straightforward (no wage/property limitations)
- Entity restructuring (to S-corp) often isn’t cost-justified at this revenue level
- Limited retirement contribution room based on income
- Bookkeeping and estimated payments are primary needs
Better approach: Accurate bookkeeping + annual tax preparation + one planning session to confirm entity structure is still optimal.
3. Businesses That Prefer Self-Directed Research
Some business owners prefer to research tax strategies themselves and only want their CPA to implement what they’ve already decided.
Why advisory doesn’t fit this preference:
- You’re paying for proactive guidance you don’t want
- Implementation-only services may be more cost-effective
- You’ll do the research anyway, making the advisory fee redundant
Better approach: Tax preparation with as-needed consultations for implementation support.
4. Businesses Without Cash Flow for Implementation
Some tax strategies require upfront investment:
- Retirement plan contributions
- Cost segregation studies
- Entity restructuring legal fees
- Equipment purchases for Section 179
If you don’t have cash flow to implement strategies, advisory recommendations become theoretical rather than actionable.
Better approach: Focus on cash flow improvement first, then add advisory when you’re in a position to implement recommendations.
How to Evaluate Your Potential ROI
Here’s a framework to assess whether tax advisory would likely deliver value for your situation.
Step 1: Assess Your Current Optimization Level
You’re likely under-optimized if:
- You’ve never had a comprehensive tax planning session
- Your S-corp reasonable compensation hasn’t been analyzed in detail
- You’re not maximizing retirement contributions
- You’ve never discussed entity structure optimization with your CPA
- You discover tax strategies from peers or articles after year-end
You may be well-optimized if:
- You’ve worked with a tax advisor before
- All standard strategies are implemented (reasonable comp, retirement, QBI optimization)
- You have regular planning conversations with your CPA
- Your entity structure has been recently reviewed
Step 2: Identify Available Strategies
Common strategies and their typical value ranges:
| Strategy | Typical Annual Savings | Who Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| S-corp reasonable comp optimization | $5,000-$15,000 | S-corps with suboptimal W-2 levels |
| QBI deduction maximization | $3,000-$12,000 | S-corps and partnerships near phase-out thresholds |
| Augusta Rule implementation | $3,000-$5,000 | Business owners who can legitimately rent home to business |
| Retirement contribution optimization | $5,000-$20,000 | High-income owners not maximizing contributions |
| Cost segregation (real estate) | $15,000-$50,000+ first year | Property owners who haven’t done cost seg |
| Entity restructuring | $10,000-$30,000+ annually | Multi-entity situations without proper structure |
Not all strategies apply to all businesses. The key is identifying which 2-3 strategies are most relevant for your situation.
Step 3: Calculate Your Expected ROI
Simple ROI formula:
(Potential annual savings - Advisory fee) = Net benefit
Net benefit ÷ Advisory fee = ROI multiple
Example calculation:
You’re an S-corp owner with $400K revenue. You identify three applicable strategies:
- Reasonable comp optimization: ~$8,000 annual savings
- Solo 401(k) maximization: ~$6,000 annual savings
- Augusta Rule: ~$4,000 annual savings
Total potential savings: $18,000
Advisory cost: $4,500 annually
Net benefit: $18,000 – $4,500 = $13,500
ROI: $13,500 ÷ $4,500 = 3x
If the ROI is 2x or better, advisory typically makes financial sense. Under 2x, evaluate whether the peace of mind and time savings justify the cost.
Step 4: Consider the Cumulative Value
Tax advisory isn’t just about first-year savings. It’s about compounding value over time:
- Year 1: High ROI from implementing strategies you haven’t used before
- Year 2-3: Moderate ongoing ROI from optimization and new opportunities as your business evolves
- Year 4+: Continued value from proactive planning, plus avoiding costly mistakes
The business owner in Example 1 above saves $23,000 annually. Over 5 years, that’s $115,000 in cumulative savings—significantly more than the $22,500 in advisory fees paid over the same period.
Making the Decision
Tax advisory makes sense when:
✅ You’re an S-corp or partnership owner with $200K+ revenue
✅ You have strategies available that could save more than the advisory cost
✅ You want proactive guidance, not just reactive compliance
✅ You have cash flow to implement recommendations
✅ You value expert oversight and time savings
Tax advisory may not be worth it when:
❌ Your situation is simple (W-2 income, standard deductions)
❌ You’re already highly optimized with an existing advisor
❌ You prefer to research strategies yourself
❌ You don’t have cash flow to implement recommendations
❌ Your revenue is under $100K and complexity is low
Want to understand what advisory includes? Read our overview: Tax Advisory Services
Ready to evaluate your specific situation? Schedule a consultation to discuss potential strategies and ROI for your business.
Related Resources
For more on tax advisory strategies and services:
- Tax Advisory vs. Tax Preparation – Understanding the difference between service levels
- How to Choose a Tax Advisor – What to look for when hiring a CPA for strategic guidance
- S-Corp Tax Planning Strategies – Specific strategies for S-corporation owners
- Partnership Tax Planning Strategies – Strategic approaches for partnership tax optimization
- Small Business Tax Deductions – Common deductions business owners should track
About SDO CPA: We provide tax advisory services for S-corporation and partnership owners, focusing on proactive planning and measurable results. Our approach combines Big Four technical expertise with transparent pricing and direct partner access.
Schedule a consultation to discuss whether advisory makes sense for your situation.