
By Vincent Howard, CPA | Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges | SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
Last updated: July 2026 | 14-minute read
Most CPA firm owners know turnover is painful.
But most do not calculate the full cost.
They think about the visible costs:
- Recruiter fees
- Job postings
- Interview time
- Salary replacement
- Lost hiring time
- Maybe a signing bonus
Those costs matter.
But they are not the whole cost.
The deeper cost of accountant turnover in public accounting is the capacity that leaks out of the firm every time a staff member leaves.
Manager time starts over.
Review notes start over.
Client familiarity disappears.
Institutional knowledge walks out.
Remaining staff absorb more pressure.
New hires repeat the same onboarding cycle.
The firm pays again for capability it already started building.
Turnover is not just the cost of losing people. It is the cost of rebuilding capability from scratch.
Who I Am and Why You Should Listen
I’ve been in public accounting since 1990. I founded my own firm in 1993, merged it in 2001 to form Howard, Howard and Hodges, and grew it from three people to 50 staff across four locations and multiple states. Our firm was named PASBA Firm of the Year.
I have lived the cost of turnover from the inside.
When someone leaves, you do not only lose their hours.
You lose everything the firm invested in getting them to the point where those hours were becoming useful.
You lose the manager explanations.
You lose the review history.
You lose the client context they had started to understand.
You lose the workflow habits they had started to build.
You lose the momentum toward independence.
Then you start over.
Since 2020, I’ve built and run a structured workforce development platform that more than a thousand accounting professionals across dozens of PASBA member firms have moved through. The lesson is clear: firms reduce avoidable turnover risk when staff can see progress, build confidence, receive useful feedback, and understand the path from new hire to future partner.
Why This Matters Now
The accounting talent market is not giving firms much room for waste.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects employment of accountants and auditors to grow 5% from 2024 to 2034, with about 124,200 openings projected each year on average over the decade.
That means replacing accountants is not getting easier.
And replacement is expensive.
Gallup estimated in 2026 that replacing professionals in technical roles costs around 80% of salary, while replacing leaders and managers costs around 200% of salary.
That should get every CPA firm owner’s attention.
Because in a CPA firm, a staff departure does not only create an HR problem.
It creates a capacity problem.
The work still exists.
The clients still need service.
The deadlines still arrive.
The managers still have to review.
The knowledge still has to be rebuilt.
Accountant turnover is not just a staffing problem. It is a capacity leak.
1. Turnover Costs More Than the Replacement Hire
The easiest turnover costs to see are the replacement costs.
Those are the costs most firms count.
Recruiting fees. Interview time. Background checks. Job ads. Offer negotiation. Salary adjustments. Maybe temporary help. Maybe overtime.
Those costs are real.
But they are only the surface.
The deeper costs are operational.
| Visible Turnover Cost | Hidden CPA Firm Cost | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Recruiting fee | Partner and manager time spent searching, interviewing, and evaluating fit | Leadership time shifts away from clients, advisory, and capacity building |
| Replacement salary | New hire productivity gap | The person is on payroll before they are creating full capacity |
| Onboarding time | Manager explanation and review cycle restarts | Managers re-teach what the firm already taught someone else |
| Temporary coverage | Remaining staff absorb more work and interruptions | Burnout risk spreads to the people who stayed |
| Lost employee | Lost client familiarity, workflow knowledge, and development momentum | The firm loses capability it was already building |
This is why turnover is so expensive in public accounting.
The replacement hire is only one part of the cost.
The lost capability is often the bigger issue.
2. The Manager Time Cost
When a staff member leaves, managers do not just lose a worker.
They restart a cycle.
The question cycle restarts.
The review cycle restarts.
The correction cycle restarts.
The coaching cycle restarts.
The explanation cycle restarts.
That is where turnover becomes a manager-capacity problem.
What Restarts Every Time a Staff Member Leaves
Starts over
Starts over
Starts over
Starts over
Rebuild required
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: turnover drains capacity by forcing managers to rebuild the same capability again and again.
This is why turnover hurts even when the firm fills the seat quickly.
A seat filled is not the same as capability restored.
The new person may be smart, willing, and qualified.
But the manager still has to rebuild trust in the person’s work.
That takes time.
For a deeper look at manager drag, read Your Managers Are Not Too Busy to Train. Your Training System Is Broken.
3. The Client Knowledge Cost
When accounting staff leave, they take more than their technical skills with them.
They take client familiarity.
They may know which client always sends information late.
They may know which business owner hates surprises.
They may know which payroll client has recurring setup issues.
They may know which bookkeeping client needs extra review around inventory, sales tax, or owner draws.
They may know which tax client had a painful issue last year and needs a different conversation this year.
That knowledge matters.
If it is not captured and transferred, the next person starts from behind.
| Client Knowledge That Leaves | What the Firm Loses | Client Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Client preferences | Communication rhythm and service expectations | Client may feel less known |
| Recurring issues | Prior-year lessons and recurring risk areas | Problems repeat unnecessarily |
| Workflow habits | How work actually gets done for that client | Turnaround may slow |
| Advisory context | Open opportunities and client goals | Growth opportunities can stall |
| Relationship history | Trust context and past service moments | Client confidence may weaken |
This is why turnover and knowledge transfer are connected.
If client knowledge lives mostly in people’s heads, turnover makes the firm fragile.
For the larger system, read How to Build a Knowledge Transfer System in a CPA Firm.
4. The Productivity Ramp Cost
A new hire may be employed on day one.
That does not mean they are useful on day one.
They still need to learn the firm’s software, workflow, documentation standards, review expectations, client communication norms, escalation rules, and workpaper habits.
They need to learn what good looks like.
They need to learn what a manager expects before review.
They need to learn which questions to ask and which questions to solve.
They need to learn how the firm thinks.
That takes time.
And during that time, the firm is paying for capacity it has not fully received yet.
Payroll starts on day one. Capacity does not.
This is not an argument against hiring.
It is an argument for structured ramp-up.
The faster a firm can move a new hire from confusion to contribution, the lower the effective cost of turnover.
The slower the ramp, the more expensive the departure becomes.
For a practical onboarding framework, read The First 90 Days Decide Whether a New Accountant Becomes Independent — or Dependent.
5. The Morale Cost on the People Who Stay
Turnover does not only affect the person who leaves and the person who replaces them.
It affects everyone who stays.
Remaining staff absorb extra work.
Managers answer more questions.
Seniors review more incomplete work.
Partners step back into client details.
Deadlines feel tighter.
People become less patient.
And the firm’s best people start wondering whether the same pressure will keep repeating.
That is how turnover can become contagious.
Not always because people are unhappy with the person who left.
Because the people who stayed are now carrying the cost.
Gallup’s 2026 State of the Global Workplace found that only 20% of employees worldwide were engaged in 2025, with low engagement costing the world economy an estimated $10 trillion in lost productivity.
Engagement may sound like a broad workplace issue, but inside a CPA firm it becomes very practical.
When the people who stay are constantly absorbing rework, interruptions, and repeated onboarding cycles, engagement weakens.
And when engagement weakens, retention risk rises.
6. Why 90-Day Turnover Is Especially Expensive
All turnover is costly.
But 90-day turnover is especially expensive.
Why?
Because the firm pays the onboarding cost but never gets the capacity return.
The firm has spent time recruiting, interviewing, hiring, setting up access, introducing systems, explaining workflows, reviewing early work, answering questions, and correcting mistakes.
Then the person leaves.
The firm does not just lose the employee.
It loses the investment before it matures.
The Firm Pays for Ramp-Up but Never Gets the Return
Paid
Paid
Paid
Never realized
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: early turnover is especially costly because the firm invests in onboarding before the person becomes independently useful.
That is why firms should pay close attention to early turnover.
If a new hire leaves quickly, it may be a hiring issue.
But it may also be an onboarding issue.
It may mean expectations were unclear.
It may mean the person did not see progress.
It may mean they felt lost, corrected, or unsupported.
It may mean the firm discovered misfit too slowly.
The first 90 days should not be a waiting period.
They should be an evidence period.
7. Why Better Development Reduces Turnover Risk
Better development does not eliminate turnover.
Some people will still leave.
Some will move. Some will change careers. Some will want different work. Some will not be the right fit.
But better development reduces avoidable turnover.
Staff are more likely to stay when they can see progress, build confidence, receive useful feedback, and understand where the path leads.
LinkedIn’s 2025 Workplace Learning Report states that career progress is people’s No. 1 motivation to learn and that employees leave with their skills when they do not move ahead.
That is exactly what CPA firms need to hear.
People are not only asking, “What will I be paid?”
They are also asking:
- Am I getting better?
- Do I know what success looks like?
- Is anyone helping me build capability?
- Can I see a future here?
- Will I become more valuable if I stay?
If the answer is no, turnover risk rises.
If the answer is yes, retention becomes more likely.
Staff retention improves when people can see how effort turns into capability, capability turns into trust, and trust turns into opportunity.
For a deeper development framework, read Accountant Development Plan: How CPA Firms Build Staff From New Hire to Advisor.
8. The Turnover Cost Calculator CPA Firms Should Use
You do not need a perfect financial model to start calculating turnover cost.
You need a more honest one.
Start by estimating the major cost categories.
| Cost Category | How to Estimate It | Why It Belongs in the Calculation |
|---|---|---|
| Recruiting cost | Recruiter fees, ads, screening tools, internal hiring time | Direct replacement expense |
| Interview cost | Partner and manager interview hours multiplied by billing or opportunity value | Leadership time has value |
| Onboarding cost | Training hours, setup time, manager explanations, first-month support | New hires require investment before output |
| Ramp cost | Difference between payroll cost and productive capacity during ramp-up | Employment is not the same as productivity |
| Manager rework cost | Extra review notes, corrections, explanations, and rescue time | Turnover restarts the review burden |
| Knowledge loss cost | Client familiarity, workflow knowledge, advisory context, and institutional memory lost | Hard to measure, but very real |
Even a rough calculation will usually show that turnover costs more than the firm thought.
And once the cost becomes visible, staff development becomes easier to justify.
9. What CPA Firms Should Measure to Reduce Turnover Cost
Do not only measure turnover after it happens.
Measure the signals that show whether your development system is creating retention or risk.
Track Whether Staff Are Moving Toward Capability or Toward Exit
- 90-day completion and retention
- Time to first independent assignment
- Repeated review-note patterns
- Manager interruption load
- Training milestone completion
- Confidence after onboarding milestones
- First-pass work quality
- Client familiarity by staff member
- Progress toward next role capability
- Exit reasons tied to development gaps
These measures help the firm see whether staff are becoming more capable, more confident, and less dependent.
That matters because retention is not only about keeping people happy.
It is about helping people become useful, trusted, and able to see a future inside the firm.
10. How SkillAbility Helps Reduce Avoidable Turnover Cost
SkillAbility was built around a simple reality: CPA firms cannot keep replacing people and rebuilding capability from scratch.
Turnover will happen.
But avoidable turnover should not become the firm’s recurring growth tax.
SkillAbility helps firms reduce avoidable turnover risk by giving new hires and developing staff a structured path to capability, independence, and advancement.
The SkillAbility Retention-Capability Pathway
New hires and early-career staff learn the work, software, workflows, documentation, and firm standards through structured practice.
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Staff move beyond task completion into communication, financial interpretation, advisory thinking, and professional judgment.
High-potential people learn ownership thinking, firm economics, team leverage, client transition, and succession responsibility.
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BASE: Reduce early confusion and 90-day risk
BASE helps new hires and early-career professionals learn accounting, tax, payroll, software workflows, and review standards through structured practice and assessment.
The retention value is simple:
New hires are more likely to stay when they can see themselves getting capable instead of feeling lost, corrected, and dependent.
MAPS: Give stronger staff a future beyond task work
MAPS helps staff develop client communication, financial interpretation, professional presence, advisory thinking, and judgment.
The retention value is stronger:
High-potential staff are more likely to stay when they see a path from task completion to client value.
Summit: Build the people worth retaining
Summit prepares high-potential people to understand ownership thinking, firm economics, client transition, team leverage, capacity planning, and succession responsibility.
The retention value becomes long term:
Future leaders are more likely to stay when the firm develops them before they have to leave to grow.
That is how a development system becomes a retention strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cost of accountant turnover in public accounting?
The cost of accountant turnover in public accounting includes recruiting, interviewing, onboarding, productivity ramp-up, manager review time, lost client knowledge, repeated training, lower morale, and delayed capacity. The replacement hire is only one part of the total cost.
Why is accountant turnover so expensive for CPA firms?
Accountant turnover is expensive because CPA firms lose capability, not just headcount. When a staff member leaves, the firm often has to rebuild workflow knowledge, review habits, client familiarity, documentation standards, and manager trust from the beginning.
What are the hidden costs of accounting staff turnover?
The hidden costs include manager interruptions, repeated review notes, lost institutional knowledge, slower client work, reduced morale among remaining staff, weaker client continuity, and delayed growth capacity.
Why is 90-day turnover especially costly in CPA firms?
90-day turnover is especially costly because the firm pays for recruiting, onboarding, setup, training, and manager time but never receives the full capacity return. The person leaves before the investment matures.
How can CPA firms reduce new hire turnover?
CPA firms can reduce new hire turnover by creating structured onboarding, clear expectations, sample work, review-ready examples, feedback loops, milestone tracking, and a visible development path from execution to independence.
How does staff development reduce turnover?
Staff development reduces avoidable turnover by helping employees see progress, build confidence, receive useful feedback, and understand their future in the firm. People are more likely to stay when they can see how they are becoming more valuable.
What should firms measure to understand turnover cost?
Firms should measure recruiting costs, interview time, onboarding hours, ramp-up time, manager rework, review-note patterns, time to independence, 90-day retention, client knowledge loss, and exit reasons tied to development gaps.
External Research and Authority Sources
- Gallup: This Fixable Problem Costs U.S. Businesses $1 Trillion
- Gallup: 42% of Employee Turnover Is Preventable but Often Ignored
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Accountants and Auditors Occupational Outlook
- LinkedIn Learning: 2025 Workplace Learning Report
- Gallup: State of the Global Workplace 2026
- The CPA Journal: The Conflict Surrounding Work-Life Balance in Public Accounting Firms
The Bottom Line
Accountant turnover is not just the cost of replacing a person.
It is the cost of rebuilding capability from scratch.
Every departure resets training time, review time, client knowledge, workflow familiarity, manager confidence, and development momentum.
If a CPA firm keeps replacing staff without fixing how staff are developed, turnover becomes a recurring tax on growth.
The solution is not simply to hire faster.
The solution is to build people better.
Turnover is not just the cost of losing people. It is the cost of rebuilding capability from scratch.
Reduce confusion.
Build confidence.
Show progress.
Create independence.
Develop advisors.
Give future leaders a path.
Protect knowledge.
Develop people.
Scale the firm.
Want to stop rebuilding accountant capability from scratch every time someone leaves?
SkillAbility helps CPA and accounting firms replace shadowing, repeated explanations, and tribal knowledge with a structured development pathway that builds capability, confidence, independence, and advancement.
Book Your Free 10-Minute Structural Alignment Review →
Includes our 45-Day Out-of-Pocket Performance Guarantee for qualifying onboarding engagements.
To your firm’s capacity,
Vincent Howard, CPA
Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges
SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
About the Author
Vincent Howard, CPA has practiced public accounting since 1990. He holds a Master’s degree in Taxation from the University of Central Florida, leads a 50-person multi-state firm, and built the SkillAbility staff development platform used by accounting firms nationwide through the PASBA network. Howard, Howard and Hodges was named PASBA Firm of the Year and has offices in Lake Mary, Sarasota, and Winter Springs, Florida.
© 2026 SkillAbility for Accounting Firms. 45-Day Out-of-Pocket Performance Guarantee applies to qualifying onboarding engagements. Contact us for full terms.
