Gift and Estate Tax Primer

April 20, 2026
No items found.

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 3

Heading 4

Heading 5
Heading 6

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur.

Block quote

Ordered list

  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3

Unordered list

  • Item A
  • Item B
  • Item C

Text link

Bold text

Emphasis

Superscript

Subscript

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Categories

No items found.

Article Highlights:Exclusions from Gift and Estate TaxesAnnual Gift Tax ExclusionGifts for Medical Expenses and TuitionLifetime Exclusion from Gift and Estate TaxesSpousal Exclusion PortabilityQualified Tuition ProgramsBasis of GiftsThe tax code places limits on the amounts that individuals can gift to others (as money or property) without paying taxes. This is meant to keep an individual from using gifts to avoid the estate tax that is imposed upon the assets owned by the individual at their death. This can be a significant issue for family-operated businesses when the business owner dies; such businesses often must be sold to pay the resulting estate taxes. This is, in large part, why high-net-worth individuals invest in estate planning.Exclusions – Current tax law provides both an annual gift tax exclusion and a lifetime exclusion from the gift and estate taxes. Because the two taxes are linked, gifts that exceed the annual gift tax exclusion reduce the amount that the giver can later exclude for estate tax purposes. The term exclusion means that the amount specified by law is exempt from the gift or estate tax.Annual Gift Tax Exclusion – This inflation-adjusted exclusion is $18,000 for 2024 (up from $17,000 for 2023). Thus, an individual can give $18,000 each to an unlimited number of other individuals (not necessarily relatives) without any tax ramifications. When a gift exceeds the $18,000 limit, the individual must file a Form 709 Gift Tax Return. However, unlimited amounts may be transferred between spouses without the need to file such a return – unless the spouse is not a U.S. citizen. Gifts to noncitizen spouses are eligible for an annual gift tax exclusion of up to $185,000 in 2024 (up from $175,000 in 2023).Example: Jack has four adult children. In 2024, he can give each child $18,000 ($72,000 total) without reducing his lifetime exclusion or having to file a gift tax return. Jack’s spouse can also give $18,000 to each child without reducing either spouse’s lifetime exclusion. If each child is married, then Jack and his wife can each also give $18,000 to each of the children’s spouses (raising the total to $72,000 given to each couple) without reducing their lifetime gift and estate tax exclusions. The gift recipients (termed “donees”) are not required to report the gifts as taxable income and do not even have to declare that they received the gifts on their income tax returns.If any individual gift exceeds the annual gift tax exclusion, the giver must file a Form 709 Gift Tax Return. However, the giver pays no tax until the total amount of gifts more than the annual exclusion exceeds the amount of the lifetime exclusion. The government uses Form 709 to keep track of how much of the lifetime exclusion an individual has used prior to that person’s death. If the individual exceeds the lifetime exclusion, then the excess is taxed; the current rate is 40%.All gifts to the same person during a calendar year count toward the annual exclusion. Thus, in the example above, if Jack gave one of his children a check for $18,000 on January 1, any other gifts that Jack makes to that child during the year, including birthday or Christmas gifts, would mean that Jack would have to file a Form 709.Gifts for Medical Expenses and Tuition – An often-overlooked provision of the tax code allows for nontaxable gifts in addition to the annual gift tax exclusion; these gifts must pay for medical or education expenses. Such gifts can be significant; they include.tuition payments made directly to an educational institution (whether a college or a private primary or secondary school) on the donee’s behalf – but not payments for books or room and board – andpayments made directly to any person or entity who provides medical care for the donee.In both cases, it is critical that the payments be made directly to the educational institution or health care provider. Reimbursements to the donee do not qualify.Lifetime Exclusion from Gift and Estate Taxes – The gift and estate taxes have been the subject of considerable political bickering over the past few years. Some want to abolish this tax, but there has not been sufficient support in Congress to do that; instead, the lifetime exclusion amount was nearly doubled as of 2018 and has been increased annually due to an inflation-adjustment requirement in the law. In 2024, the lifetime exclusion is $13.61 million per person. By comparison, in 2017 (prior to the tax reform that increased the exemption), the lifetime exclusion was $5.49 million. The lifetime estate tax exclusion and the gift tax exclusion have not always been linked; for example, in 2006, the estate tax exclusion was $2 million, and the gift tax exclusion was $1 million. The tax rates for amounts beyond the exclusion limit have varied from a high of 46% in 2006 to a low of 0% in 2010. The 0% rate only lasted for one year before jumping to 35% for a couple of years and then settling at the current rate of 40%.

This history is important because the exclusions can change significantly at Congress’s whim – particularly based on the party that holds the majority. In fact, absent Congressional action, the exclusion amount is scheduled to return to the 2017 amount, adjusted for inflation, in 2026, estimated to be just over $6 million per person.Spousal Exclusion Portability – When one member of a married couple passes away, the surviving member receives an unlimited estate tax deduction; thus, no estate tax is levied in this case. However, as a result, the value of the surviving spouse’s estate doubles, and there is no benefit from the deceased spouse’s lifetime unified tax exclusion. For this reason, the tax code permits the executor of the deceased spouse’s estate (often, the surviving spouse) to transfer any of the deceased person’s unused exclusion to the surviving spouse. Unfortunately, this requires filing a Form 706 Estate Tax Return for the deceased spouse, even if such a return would not otherwise be required. This form is complicated and expensive to prepare, as it requires an inventory with valuations of all the decedent’s assets. As a result, many executors of relatively small estates skip this step. As discussed earlier, the lifetime exclusion can change at the whim of Congress, so failing to take advantage of this exclusion’s portability could have significant tax ramifications.Qualified Tuition Programs – Any discussion of the gift and estate taxes needs to include a mention of qualified tuition programs (commonly referred to as Sec 529 plans, after the tax code section that authorizes them). These plans are funded with nondeductible contributions, but they provide tax-free accumulation if the funds are used for a child’s postsecondary education (as well as, in many states, up to $10,000 of primary or secondary tuition per year). Contributions to these plans, like any other gift, are subject to the annual gift tax exclusion. Of course, these plans offer tax-free accumulation when distributions are made for eligible education expenses, so it is best to contribute funds as soon as possible.Under a special provision of the tax code, in a given year, an individual can contribute up to 5 times the annual gift tax exclusion amount to a qualified tuition account and can then treat the contribution as having been made ratably over a five-year period that starts in the calendar year of the contribution. However, the donor then cannot make any further contributions during that five-year period.Basis of Gifts – Basis is the term for the value (usually cost) of an asset; it is used to determine the profit when an asset is sold. The basis of a gift is the same for the donee as it was for the donor, but this amount is not used for gift tax purposes; instead, the fair market value as of the date the gift is made is used.Example: In 2024, Pete gifts shares of stock to his daughter. Pete purchased the shares for $6,000 (his basis), and they were worth $25,000 in fair market value when he gifted them to his daughter. Their value at the time of the gift is used to determine whether the gift exceeds the annual gift tax exclusion. Because the gift’s value ($25,000) is greater than the $18,000 exclusion, Pete will have to file a Form709 Gift Tax Return to report the gift; he also must reduce his lifetime exclusion by $7,000 ($25,000–$18,000). His daughter’s basis is equal to the asset’s original value ($6,000); when she sells the shares, her taxable gain will be the difference between the sale price and $6,000. Thus, Pete has effectively transferred the tax on the stock’s appreciated value to his daughter.If Pete’s daughter instead inherited the shares upon Pete’s death, her basis would be the fair market value of the stock at that time (let’s say it is $28,000) and if she sold the shares for $28,000, she would have no taxable gain.This is only an overview of the tax law regarding gifts and estates; please call this office for further details or to get advice for your specific situation.

Tax and Financial Insights
by NR CPAs & Business Advisors

Explore practical articles that explain tax strategies, financial considerations, and important topics that may affect your business decisions.

What Is a Virtual CFO?

A virtual CFO is a financial professional who provides CFO-level expertise, including cash flow management, financial planning, and strategic guidance, on a part-time or remote basis, without a full-time salary or benefits package. This article covers what a virtual CFO does, how it compares to hiring in-house, who needs one, what services are included, and when it makes sense to get started.

What Is a Virtual CFO and What Does a Virtual CFO Do?

A virtual CFO (also called a vCFO or fractional CFO) is an experienced finance professional or advisory firm that delivers executive-level financial leadership to a business remotely, typically on a part-time or retainer basis. The role covers the same responsibilities as a traditional CFO, including overseeing financial strategy, managing cash flow, guiding budgets and forecasts, preparing financial statements, and advising on major business decisions, without the overhead of a full-time executive hire.

Unlike a bookkeeper or accountant who handles records and filings, a virtual CFO operates at the strategic level. We are not just tracking what happened last month. A virtual CFO helps you understand what the numbers mean and what to do about them next.

According to Fortune magazine, the global virtual CFO market is projected to grow from roughly $4.7 billion in 2026 to over $10 billion by 2035, driven by small businesses increasingly turning to fractional financial leadership. That growth reflects one core reality: most growing businesses need CFO-level thinking long before they can afford a full-time CFO.

What Is the Difference Between a CFO and a Virtual CFO?

The difference between a CFO and a virtual CFO is primarily one of structure, not capability. A traditional CFO is a full-time, in-house executive who typically earns a base salary, benefits, bonuses, and often equity. According to Salary.com, the average base salary for a CFO in the United States sits around $437,000 per year, and total compensation at larger firms frequently exceeds seven figures.

A virtual CFO provides the same strategic input at a fraction of that cost. Industry data consistently shows that virtual CFO services run 30 to 50 percent of the cost of a full-time hire, depending on the engagement scope. For businesses in the $500,000 to $50 million annual revenue range, that difference is significant. A company does not need to pay for 40 hours a week of CFO time when it needs 10 to 15 high-impact hours of financial leadership each month.

A virtual CFO also works with multiple clients, which means broader market exposure and more diverse experience with growth challenges. That cross-industry depth often brings proven frameworks into your business that a single-company hire might never have encountered. For companies exploring strategic business planning, this level of broad financial perspective is especially valuable.

Is a CFO Higher Than a CPA?

Yes, a CFO is higher than a CPA in terms of organizational role and strategic scope. A CPA (Certified Public Accountant) is a licensed credential that qualifies someone to handle tax compliance, auditing, and financial reporting. A CFO is an executive title that involves leading the overall financial direction of a business. Many CFOs hold CPA credentials, but the CFO role goes far beyond compliance work into financial strategy, capital planning, investor relations, and risk management. At our practice, our team holds both CPA licensure and enrolled agent status, which means we bring both compliance depth and strategic advisory experience to virtual CFO engagements.

What Is Included in Virtual CFO Services?

Virtual CFO services are included across several core areas that most growing businesses struggle to manage without dedicated financial leadership. The scope varies by provider and engagement structure, but the most common services are:

Cash flow management and forecasting. This is the most immediate priority for most clients. A virtual CFO builds rolling cash flow forecasts, monitors receivables and payables, and identifies gaps before they become crises. According to a frequently cited U.S. Bank study reported by SCORE, 82 percent of small business failures trace back to poor cash flow management or a lack of cash flow understanding. Having someone dedicated to your cash position every month is not a luxury for growing companies. It is a form of insurance.

Financial planning and budgeting. A virtual CFO builds annual budgets, runs scenario planning, and creates financial models that support major decisions like hiring, expansion, or new service lines. This is where the real strategic value lives, because good budgeting prevents the overspending and under-capitalizing that derail otherwise healthy businesses. Businesses that want to connect financial planning to real growth outcomes often pair this work with business consulting to align financial decisions with broader operating strategy.

Financial statement preparation and analysis. A virtual CFO does not just prepare your statements. They read them actively and translate them into decisions. Gross margin trends, burn rate, EBITDA, accounts receivable aging, and working capital ratios all tell a story. Your virtual CFO makes that story readable. For businesses that need clean, investor-ready financials, we also provide dedicated financial statement preparation as a standalone service.

Tax strategy and planning coordination. A virtual CFO does not replace your tax professional, but they work in close coordination with tax planning to ensure that financial decisions are structured to minimize tax liability. Many of our clients in Miami and across the country find that their accounting and CFO work aligns naturally, because tax strategy cannot be separated from financial decision-making.

KPI tracking and reporting. Virtual CFOs design and maintain dashboards that give business owners clear visibility into the metrics that actually matter: revenue per customer, gross margin by product line, monthly recurring revenue, customer acquisition cost, and payroll as a percentage of revenue. Without this visibility, owners make decisions from gut feel instead of data.

Fundraising and investor support. For startups and growth-stage companies raising capital, a virtual CFO helps build financial models, investor decks, due diligence packages, and term sheet analysis. A 2024 industry report highlighted that nearly 40 percent of funded startups globally have used outsourced finance leadership at some point during their funding journey. Having credible, well-structured financials is often the difference between closing a round and losing it.

IRS and compliance coordination. When IRS matters arise, a virtual CFO works alongside resolution specialists to provide financial context. Businesses dealing with back taxes, audits, or unfiled returns often need both the strategic financial picture and the compliance expertise working together. Our IRS tax resolution services cover this gap directly.

What Does a Virtual CFO Focus on for Startups?

For startups, a virtual CFO focuses on burn rate management, runway forecasting, fundraising preparation, and unit economics. Startups face a different set of financial pressures than established businesses. Revenue is unpredictable, expenses are front-loaded, and every major decision either extends or shortens the runway. A virtual CFO keeps a clear eye on those numbers so founders can focus on building the product and the team.

A 2024 report noted that nearly 40 percent of funded startups globally used outsourced finance leadership at some point in their growth. For early-stage companies that do not yet need a full-time finance team, a virtual CFO provides exactly the level of structure and oversight needed to attract investors and grow responsibly. Startups working through formation and early advisory needs often benefit from pairing virtual CFO support with startup advisory services to cover both the strategic and operational sides of early-stage finance.

Who Needs a Virtual CFO?

A business needs a virtual CFO when financial decisions are getting complicated enough to affect growth, but not so large that a full-time executive makes economic sense. In practical terms, we see this happen at several inflection points.

The first signal is that the business owner is making major financial decisions without reliable data. If you are guessing on hiring timelines, pricing changes, or expansion plans because you do not have a clear financial model in front of you, that is the gap a virtual CFO fills.

The second signal is rapid growth. According to PYMNTS, 45 percent of U.S. small business owners skip their own paycheck at some point due to cash flow shortages, and 22 percent struggle to cover basic operating bills. Growth that outruns financial infrastructure creates these exact problems. More revenue is coming in, but cash is not where it should be because receivables are lagging, payroll is growing, and nobody is watching the net position in real time.

The third signal is a major upcoming decision. Launching a new location, acquiring another business, bringing on a large client, or preparing for a funding round are all moments where financial leadership matters enormously. Getting those decisions wrong is expensive. Getting them right, with good data and a clear strategy, can be transformational. Companies preparing for structural changes often also explore business formation considerations that intersect directly with financial planning.

Companies in the $1 million to $50 million annual revenue range are the most common candidates for virtual CFO services. Below $1 million, most businesses can manage with strong bookkeeping and periodic CPA support. Above $50 million, the volume and complexity of financial decisions often justifies bringing a full-time CFO in-house. In the middle, a virtual CFO provides exactly the right level of oversight at the right cost structure.

Can a Virtual CFO Work Remotely?

Yes, a virtual CFO works remotely by design. The entire model is built around technology-enabled collaboration through video conferencing, cloud accounting platforms, shared dashboards, and secure document sharing. This remote structure is not a limitation. It is what makes the model cost-effective and scalable. Businesses can access CFO-level talent from anywhere without being restricted to local hiring pools, and the virtual CFO can serve multiple clients simultaneously, bringing broader experience to each engagement.

Cloud accounting platforms have made real-time financial visibility standard, so your virtual CFO sees the same data you see, at the same time, and can identify issues and opportunities the same week they arise. That speed of insight is often faster than what a traditional in-house team delivers, especially in smaller organizations where monthly close processes stretch to week three or four of the following month.

Virtual CFO vs. Traditional CFO: A Side-by-Side Comparison

The comparison between a virtual CFO and a traditional CFO comes down to cost, commitment, and fit for your current stage of growth. Here is how the two models stack up across the most important dimensions:

DimensionTraditional (Full-Time) CFOVirtual CFOAnnual Cost$200,000 to $560,000+ in base salary; total comp often $300,000+Typically a monthly retainer arrangement; significantly lower overall costHours Per Week40+ hours dedicated exclusively to one companyFlexible, part-time engagement scaled to actual needBest Fit ForCompanies with $50M+ revenue or complex investor structuresGrowing businesses from $500K to $50M annual revenueIndustry ExperienceTypically specialized in one company or sectorCross-industry exposure across multiple client engagementsScalabilityFixed, full-time commitment regardless of workloadEngagement scales up or down with business needsTime to Start90 to 180 days to recruit, hire, and onboardCan begin within days to weeksBenefits and OverheadYes, full benefits package, equity, bonusesNo benefits, no equity, no payroll taxesCore ServicesFinancial strategy, reporting, compliance, investor relationsSame strategic services on a fractional basis

Sources: Salary.com CFO Compensation Data (2025); Driven Insights CFO Salary Guide (2024); DNAGrowth Virtual CFO Report (December 2025); VCFO Solution Industry Analysis (2025).

The data makes the tradeoff clear. A traditional CFO is the right choice when your company needs dedicated, full-time financial leadership and has the revenue scale to justify it. A virtual CFO is the right choice when you need high-level financial strategy and oversight without the fixed overhead of a six-figure executive hire. For most growing businesses, the virtual model is the smarter fit until the math shifts.

Is There a Shortage of CFOs?

Yes, there is a growing shortage of qualified CFO talent in the United States. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that overall employment of top executives will grow 4 percent through 2034, but the demand for finance leadership in fast-growing small and mid-sized businesses is outpacing supply. Many qualified CFOs are concentrated in large public companies, leaving the SMB segment underserved. This talent gap is part of what has driven the rapid growth of the virtual CFO market, which provides SMBs access to financial leadership they could not otherwise attract or afford.

What Are the Benefits of a Virtual CFO?

The benefits of a virtual CFO are cost savings, flexibility, faster strategic insight, and access to senior-level financial expertise that most small businesses could not otherwise afford. Each of these deserves a clear explanation.

Cost savings. This is the most obvious benefit. A full-time CFO at a small private company typically earns between $150,000 and $250,000 in base salary alone, according to data from Business Initiative. Factoring in benefits, payroll taxes, and bonuses, the true cost climbs significantly higher. A virtual CFO delivers equivalent strategic value without those fixed costs. That savings often funds other parts of the business: additional team members, marketing, technology, or capital reserves.

Flexibility. A virtual CFO engagement scales with your business. Preparing for a fundraising round? Scale up the engagement. Coming out of a growth sprint and looking to maintain? Scale back. You pay for what you actually need, when you need it. That flexibility is impossible with a full-time hire.

Faster access to expertise. Finding and recruiting a full-time CFO takes three to six months, according to data cited by Driven Insights. A virtual CFO can typically be engaged and delivering value within weeks. For businesses facing an urgent financial challenge, that speed matters.

Cross-industry insight. Because a virtual CFO works across multiple client engagements simultaneously, they bring practices and frameworks from other industries and business models into your company. A restaurant operator learning from how a tech startup manages burn rate, or a professional services firm applying cash flow disciplines from a product business, can gain competitive insight that an isolated, in-house hire simply does not have. Our virtual CFO services are built exactly on this cross-industry experience, having worked with businesses across sectors from startups and technology to hospitality and cannabis.

Better financial decisions from the start. The virtual CFO market research firm Thefino Partners reported that 78 percent of SMEs that used virtual CFO services over a three-year period saw improvements in profitability and financial control. That figure reflects something we see in practice: most small businesses do not have a revenue problem. They have a visibility and decision-making problem. The right financial leadership changes that.

How Does a Virtual CFO Help with Cash Flow?

A virtual CFO helps with cash flow by building forward-looking forecasts, monitoring the timing of inflows and outflows, identifying gaps before they become crises, and designing policies that keep the business liquid. The most common cash flow problem is not insufficient revenue. It is a mismatch between when money is earned and when it arrives. A virtual CFO builds 13-week and rolling 12-month cash flow models, reviews aging receivables, adjusts payment terms with vendors where possible, and flags seasonal gaps early enough to respond strategically rather than reactively. Given that 82 percent of small business failures trace back to poor cash flow management, according to a U.S. Bank study cited by SCORE, having this function managed actively is one of the highest-value uses of a virtual CFO engagement.

How Is a Virtual CFO Different from an Accountant or Bookkeeper?

A virtual CFO is different from an accountant or bookkeeper in that they operate at the strategic level rather than the transactional or compliance level. Here is the clearest way to think about it:

A bookkeeper records what happened. They manage the day-to-day entries, reconcile accounts, and keep your books clean. An accountant interprets and reports. They prepare financial statements, handle tax compliance, and ensure your filings are accurate. A virtual CFO uses what the bookkeeper and accountant produce to tell you what to do next. They turn financial history into forward-looking strategy. All three roles matter, but they serve entirely different functions.

Many businesses run for years with strong bookkeeping and CPA support but still make poor strategic financial decisions because nobody is connecting the numbers to the operating plan. A virtual CFO closes that gap. For businesses that need clean, well-prepared financial statements as the foundation for that strategic work, we provide financial statement preparation as part of a fully integrated advisory approach.

Can I Do CFO Online?

Yes, CFO services can be done fully online through virtual or remote engagement models. Modern cloud-based accounting platforms, secure document sharing, video conferencing, and real-time financial dashboards make it entirely practical to receive high-quality CFO-level advisory services without any in-person meetings. This is the standard operating model for virtual CFO services, and for most businesses, it is indistinguishable in quality from an in-office arrangement. The key is working with a financial professional who communicates clearly, maintains real-time access to your data, and is genuinely available when you need strategic input.

What Keeps a CFO Up at Night?

The financial issues that keep a CFO focused, and often concerned, center on cash runway, cost structure, compliance, and the accuracy of financial data being used to make decisions. For virtual CFOs working with growing businesses, the most common pressure points are:

Cash flow visibility. When cash flow forecasts are weak or missing entirely, every major decision carries more risk than it should. A CFO's job is to give the business owner clarity on how much runway they have and what the constraints are.

Revenue concentration risk. A business that depends on one or two large clients for the majority of its revenue is fragile. A virtual CFO tracks this exposure and helps build the financial resilience to survive losing a major customer.

Tax compliance and IRS exposure. Unresolved tax obligations, unfiled returns, and missed estimated tax payments all create financial risk that can compound quickly. A good virtual CFO stays ahead of these issues in coordination with the business's tax team. Businesses that already have unresolved matters can explore IRS tax resolution as part of a broader financial cleanup strategy.

The accuracy of the numbers. CFOs rely on clean books to do their job. If the accounting data is unreliable, every forecast, budget, and financial model built on top of it is also unreliable. Getting books accurate and current is often the first task of a new virtual CFO engagement.

What Financial Metrics Does a Virtual CFO Track?

A virtual CFO typically tracks gross profit margin, net profit margin, operating cash flow, burn rate, accounts receivable aging, debt-to-equity ratio, customer acquisition cost, revenue growth rate, and payroll as a percentage of revenue. The specific mix depends on the business model and stage. For a service business, utilization rate and revenue per employee matter most. For a product company, inventory turnover and gross margin by SKU become central. A virtual CFO designs reporting around what actually drives your business, not generic financial statements that sit unread in a folder.

When Should a Business Hire a Virtual CFO?

A business should hire a virtual CFO when it is growing beyond the capacity of basic bookkeeping and accounting support but is not yet large enough to justify a full-time executive. The most common timing signals are:

Revenue has grown past $1 million annually and financial complexity is increasing. The owner is regularly making decisions without reliable cash flow data. The business is preparing for a major event: a funding round, an acquisition, a new market entry, or a significant hiring push. Tax bills are larger than expected and the business is not sure why or how to manage them better. Profitability is unclear despite reasonable revenue, which usually means the cost structure is not well-understood.

Engaging a virtual CFO at these inflection points shifts the business from reactive financial management to proactive financial leadership. That shift is often worth significantly more than the engagement itself in avoided mistakes and captured opportunities. For businesses still in formation, pairing early financial strategy with the right legal and tax structure is where we often begin, using our business formation services as the foundation.

How Fast Can You Become a CFO?

Becoming a traditional full-time CFO typically requires 10 to 20 years of finance experience, often including a CPA credential, an MBA or advanced finance degree, and progressively senior roles in accounting, financial planning, and leadership. Most CFOs spend years as financial analysts, controllers, and VP of Finance before reaching the C-suite. For businesses, this is actually part of why the virtual CFO model is so compelling. You get access to a professional with that level of experience and track record without the long search, the high salary, or the long-term employment commitment.

Frequently Asked Questions

How Much Does a Virtual CFO Cost?

A virtual CFO typically costs significantly less than a full-time CFO, with engagements structured as monthly retainers scaled to the complexity and hours required by the business. According to industry data from DNAGrowth and Thefino Partners, virtual CFO services generally run 30 to 50 percent of the cost of a full-time hire, which according to Salary.com averages $437,000 per year in base salary alone. The right fit depends on your business's needs, revenue size, and the specific scope of financial leadership required.

What Is the Difference Between a Fractional CFO and a Virtual CFO?

The difference between a fractional CFO and a virtual CFO is minimal and often used interchangeably. Both describe a part-time, outsourced financial leadership arrangement. "Fractional" emphasizes the part-time nature of the engagement, meaning you are purchasing a fraction of a CFO's time. "Virtual" emphasizes the remote delivery model. In practice, most virtual CFOs are also fractional, working with several clients simultaneously rather than being dedicated to a single organization.

What Are the Signs That My Business Needs a Virtual CFO?

The signs that a business needs a virtual CFO include making major financial decisions without reliable data, experiencing cash flow problems despite healthy revenue, preparing for a significant event like fundraising or expansion, having unclear profitability, and feeling that basic bookkeeping and CPA services are no longer sufficient. According to PYMNTS, 22 percent of U.S. small businesses struggle to cover basic operating bills due to cash flow shortages. That figure is almost entirely preventable with active financial leadership.

What Is Included in Virtual CFO Services for a Small Business?

Virtual CFO services for a small business are included across cash flow forecasting, budget development, financial statement analysis, KPI reporting, tax planning coordination, and strategic advisory support for major decisions. Many engagements also include support for fundraising preparation, vendor negotiation strategy, and pricing model analysis. The scope is built around each business's specific needs and can expand or contract as the business evolves.

Can a Virtual CFO Help with Tax Planning?

Yes, a virtual CFO helps with tax planning by working in close coordination with the business's tax team to ensure that financial decisions are structured to minimize liability throughout the year. Year-end tax planning is too late for most optimization strategies. A virtual CFO integrates tax awareness into budgeting, entity structuring, compensation planning, and timing of major expenditures so the business captures every available advantage. Businesses looking for dedicated support can also explore our tax planning services as part of a fully coordinated financial strategy.

How Does a Virtual CFO Differ from a Virtual Family Office?

A virtual CFO focuses on a business's financial strategy and operations: cash flow, budgeting, forecasting, and financial reporting. A virtual family office extends that financial coordination to the personal wealth, estate, and multi-generational financial needs of business owners and high-net-worth families. Both provide high-level advisory support through remote, technology-enabled delivery, but they serve different domains. Businesses whose owners want coordinated personal and business financial guidance may find that both services work well together.

What Should I Look for When Choosing a Virtual CFO?

When choosing a virtual CFO, look for relevant industry experience, CPA licensure or an enrolled agent credential, a clear process for cash flow reporting and regular communication, and references from businesses at a similar growth stage. The best virtual CFOs are direct communicators who give you clear answers and actionable guidance, not vague commentary on complex-sounding concepts. The fit between advisor and business owner matters as much as credentials.

The Bottom Line

A virtual CFO gives growing businesses access to executive-level financial leadership without the cost of a full-time hire. The model works because most businesses in the $1 million to $50 million revenue range genuinely need CFO-level oversight, including cash flow management, financial forecasting, strategic planning, and tax coordination, but they do not need 40 hours a week of it. A virtual CFO fills that gap at the right scope and cost.

The statistics tell a clear story. Eighty-two percent of small business failures trace back to cash flow problems. The global virtual CFO market is growing at nearly 8 percent annually because more business owners are recognizing that financial leadership is not a luxury reserved for large corporations. It is a decision that compounds over time, either for you or against you.

If you are at a point where financial decisions are getting more complex, cash flow visibility is unclear, or a major business event is on the horizon, now is a good time to explore what structured financial leadership could do for your business. NR CPAs & Business Advisors works with entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies to provide exactly this kind of guidance.

Ready to take the next step? Start a conversation through our contact page and we will be glad to help.

2026 IRS Mileage Rates: Key Updates and Insights

The IRS has rolled out the inflation-adjusted mileage rates for 2026, offering taxpayers an efficient way to claim deductions for vehicle-related expenses incurred for business, charity, medical, or moving purposes. These adjustments reflect the continued economic shifts impacting car operation costs.

Effective January 1, 2026, the new standard mileage rates are established as follows:

  • Business Travel: Increased to 72.5 cents per mile, inclusive of a 35-cent-per-mile depreciation allocation. This marks a rise from the 70 cents per mile rate set for 2025
  • Medical/Moving Purposes: Reduced slightly to 20.5 cents per mile, down from 21 cents in the previous year, reflecting the variable cost considerations.
  • Charitable Contributions: Consistent at 14 cents per mile, a fixed rate unchanged for over a quarter-century.

As is typical, the business mileage rate considers the integral fixed and variable costs of automobile operation. Meanwhile, the medical and moving rates remain contingent on variable expenses as determined by the IRS study.

Image 1

It is critical to note that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) held firm on disallowing moving expense deductions except for specific cases within the Armed Forces and intelligence community, marking a substantial shift since 2017.

When engaging in charitable work, taxpayers might opt for a direct expense deduction over the per-mile method, covering gas and oil costs. However, comprehensive upkeep and insurance costs are non-deductible expenses.

Business Vehicle Use Considerations: Taxpayers can alternatively compute vehicle expenses using actual costs, which might benefit from shifting depreciation rules, particularly through bonuses and first-year advantages. Keep in mind, however, reverting from actual cost calculations to standard rates in subsequent years is restricted, particularly per vehicle protocol and when exceeding four vehicles in concurrent use.

Image 2

Additionally, parking, tolls, and property taxes attributable to business can be deducted independently of the general rate, an often-overlooked advantage by many business owners.

Tax Strategies for Employers and Employees: Reimbursements based on the standard mileage framework, providing the right documentation is in place, remain tax-free for employees. Meanwhile, the elimination and continued prohibition of unreimbursed employee deductions continue, with particular exceptions offered to qualified personnel across specific occupations.

Opportunities for Self-employed Individuals: Entrepreneurs remain eligible for deductions on business-related vehicle use via Schedule C, with potential to account for business-use interest on auto loans.

Image 3

Heavy SUVs and Deduction Advantages: Heavier vehicles exceeding 6,000 pounds but under 14,000 pounds open opportunities for substantial tax deductions through Section 179 and bonus depreciation avenues. The lifecycle of such a vehicle bears implications on recapturing initially claimed deductions, urging cautious tax planning.

For professional guidance on optimizing your vehicle-related tax deductions and understanding their implications on tax strategies, contact our office in Coral Gables, Florida, where expert advice and strategic insights are just a call away.

Want tax & accounting tips & insights?Sign up for our newsletter.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.