
By Vincent Howard, CPA | Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges | SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
Last updated: July 13, 2026 | 29-minute read
- What an accounting skills assessment test is
- Why the test must begin with job analysis
- Eight capabilities CPA firms should measure
- What to test by accounting role
- A practical 60-minute assessment design
- Copy-and-use 100-point scoring rubric
- Accounting assessment template
- Completed candidate example
- How to interpret assessment results
- Legal, accessibility, and fairness safeguards
- How to handle AI during the assessment
- How to implement the test in your firm
A résumé can tell you where someone worked.
It cannot prove what that person can do.
An interview can tell you how confidently a candidate describes their experience.
It cannot prove the candidate can reconcile an account, investigate an unusual transaction, document a conclusion, or submit work another professional can review.
A transcript can show which accounting classes someone completed.
It cannot show whether the person can apply that knowledge to a messy, incomplete, real-world file.
That gap matters because an accounting hire affects more than payroll.
A weak hiring decision can create:
- Manager rework
- Repeated review notes
- Missed deadlines
- Unreliable workpapers
- Client frustration
- Training time spent on skills the firm expected the employee to possess already
- Delayed capacity
CPA firms need a better way to answer a practical question before making an offer:
Can this candidate perform the work we need at the level we expect—or have we mistaken presentation, credentials, and experience for capability?
Who I Am and Why This Matters to Me
I have practiced public accounting since 1990. I founded my own firm in 1993 and merged it in 2001 to form Howard, Howard and Hodges. I helped grow the organization from three people to approximately 50 staff across four locations and multiple states.
Our firm was named PASBA Firm of the Year in 2015.
Over more than three decades in public accounting, I have hired people who interviewed extremely well but struggled to perform basic accounting work independently.
I have also seen less polished candidates become excellent accountants because they could follow a process, think through a problem, accept feedback, and improve quickly.
One of the experiences that shaped SkillAbility happened when a new employee entered one of our accounting modules.
Other employees typically completed the module in approximately four hours.
After approximately 16 hours, this employee was only 77% complete. The employee resigned on the sixth day.
That experience did not prove that every slower candidate will fail.
It did prove something more important:
Performance data can reveal capability gaps that interviews and résumés often miss.
The goal of a pre-employment assessment is not to create an obstacle course.
It is to make the hiring decision more informed, consistent, and connected to the work the person will actually perform.
Why Accounting Skills Assessments Matter Now
CPA firms are hiring in a difficult labor market while accounting work itself is changing.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects approximately 124,200 openings for accountants and auditors each year from 2024 through 2034. Many of those openings are expected to result from people changing occupations or leaving the labor force, including retirement.
BLS also expects automation to make accountants’ analytical, advisory, and higher-level responsibilities more prominent.
Demand Remains Strong While the Work Becomes More Analytical
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Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook.
The assessment therefore cannot be limited to whether someone remembers a journal-entry rule.
Firms increasingly need people who can:
- Use accounting knowledge in context
- Evaluate automated output
- Identify exceptions
- Document reasoning
- Communicate findings
- Learn new systems
- Recognize when human judgment is required
The AICPA PCPS CPA Firm Competency Model reinforces this broader view of capability. It identifies six firm competencies:
- Productivity
- Technical knowledge
- Client service
- People development and teamwork
- Business development
- Culture and inclusion
Not every pre-employment assessment should test all six areas equally.
But the model makes one point clear:
Accounting performance is broader than technical recall.
What Is an Accounting Skills Assessment Test?
An accounting skills assessment test is a standardized selection exercise used to measure whether a job candidate can perform defined, job-related accounting tasks and demonstrate the technical, analytical, documentation, communication, and workflow capabilities required for a specific position.
The assessment may include:
- A realistic work sample
- A simulated client file
- A bank reconciliation
- A transaction-classification exercise
- A workpaper review
- An exception-identification task
- A written client or manager communication
- A structured follow-up interview
The assessment should not become a miniature CPA Exam.
It should answer a narrower question:
Can this person perform the essential entry-level requirements of this job?
What the Assessment Should—and Should Not—Do
| The Assessment Should | The Assessment Should Not |
|---|---|
| Measure tasks connected to the actual job | Test obscure accounting trivia unrelated to the role |
| Use consistent instructions and scoring | Allow each manager to invent a different test |
| Distinguish current capability from trainable gaps | Assume every error makes the candidate unqualified |
| Test skills expected when the employee starts | Penalize candidates for firm-specific systems the firm plans to teach |
| Use synthetic or sanitized data | Expose real client or confidential information |
| Support the full hiring decision | Replace interviews, references, judgment, and legal review |
Begin With a Job Analysis—not a Generic Accounting Quiz
The U.S. Office of Personnel Management describes job analysis as the foundation for assessment and selection decisions.
A job analysis connects:
- The tasks the employee performs
- The competencies required to perform those tasks
- The level of proficiency required upon entry
Before writing test questions, answer these questions:
What will the employee do in the first 90 days?
List the actual work.
For a staff accountant, that might include:
- Categorizing transactions
- Reconciling bank and credit-card accounts
- Preparing basic journal entries
- Following a month-end checklist
- Documenting open items
- Preparing work for review
Which capabilities must exist on day one?
A candidate may need to arrive with:
- Basic debit-and-credit knowledge
- Spreadsheet navigation
- Attention to supporting documents
- Basic written communication
- Ability to follow multi-step instructions
Which capabilities will the firm teach?
The firm may plan to teach:
- Its preferred accounting software
- Its workpaper naming conventions
- Its review process
- Its client communication standards
- Its industry-specific workflows
Do not reject a promising entry-level candidate for failing a skill the firm has already decided to teach.
OPM specifically cautions that work samples are most appropriate when the measured competencies are expected upon entry. If the activity will be taught after hiring, a highly specific work sample may be less appropriate.
Test what the candidate should already know. Train what belongs to your firm.
Eight Capabilities CPA Firms Should Measure
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What a Realistic Assessment Should Reveal
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Can the candidate apply the accounting knowledge required for the role?
Does the candidate produce mathematically and logically reliable work?
Can another professional understand what was done and why?
Does the candidate recognize unusual, incomplete, or unsupported information?
Can the candidate navigate spreadsheets, reports, and digital source information efficiently?
Can the candidate understand, organize, and complete a multi-step assignment?
Can the candidate explain findings, open items, and questions clearly?
How does the candidate use clarification, feedback, or newly provided information?
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1. Technical accounting foundation
The technical section should match the role.
For an entry-level staff accountant, assess foundational application:
- Debits and credits
- Basic transaction classification
- Account reconciliation
- Financial statement relationships
- Basic adjusting entries
For an experienced hire, assess work closer to the claimed experience:
- Complex reconciliations
- Accruals and estimates
- Fixed assets
- Payroll liabilities
- Tax workpaper preparation
- Review-note identification
Do not ask questions merely because they are difficult.
Ask them because the answer matters in the job.
2. Accuracy and attention to evidence
Accuracy is not only whether the final number is correct.
Evaluate whether the candidate:
- Uses the correct source
- Checks formulas
- Reconciles differences
- Notices conflicting information
- Preserves an audit trail
- Avoids unsupported assumptions
A candidate who arrives at the correct answer through unsupported reasoning may create future risk.
3. Documentation and review readiness
Ask the candidate to leave work another accountant can review.
The file should show:
- Purpose
- Source information
- Procedure performed
- Result
- Conclusion
- Open items
For a full submission standard, see Workpaper Review Checklist: How CPA Firms Train Staff to Submit Review-Ready Work.
4. Problem recognition and judgment
Include at least one situation where the candidate should not proceed automatically.
Examples include:
- A transaction that lacks support
- A bank difference that does not reconcile
- A client explanation that conflicts with the documents
- An unusual revenue entry
- A payment that may be personal
- A payroll liability that has not cleared
The candidate does not need to solve every complex issue.
But the candidate should recognize that the issue exists.
5. Spreadsheet and software fluency
Measure transferable digital skills rather than memorized software menus.
You may assess whether the candidate can:
- Navigate a workbook
- Use basic formulas
- Sort and filter information
- Trace a value to a source
- Recognize a broken formula
- Work between reports
- Follow written software instructions
When the job requires proficiency in a specific application upon entry, a realistic software simulation may be appropriate.
When the firm intends to train the application, assess broader technology learning and accounting reasoning instead.
6. Ability to follow instructions and organize work
Accounting assignments often involve several connected requirements.
Observe whether the candidate:
- Reads the entire assignment
- Uses the provided source documents
- Completes all required sections
- Names and saves files correctly
- Manages time sensibly
- Separates completed work from open questions
7. Written communication
Ask the candidate to prepare a short handoff note.
For example:
Work completed: What did you prepare?
Result: What did the work show?
Open items: What information is still needed?
Reviewer attention: What requires judgment or approval?
This reveals whether the candidate can organize information for another professional.
8. Response to clarification or feedback
Consider giving every candidate one standardized clarification or additional fact during the exercise.
Then observe whether the person:
- Incorporates the new information
- Revises an earlier conclusion
- Asks an appropriate question
- Becomes defensive
- Continues using an assumption that is no longer valid
This is not a personality test.
It is an observation of how the candidate handles information during a job-related task.
What to Test by Accounting Role
| Role | Appropriate Assessment Focus | Avoid Overemphasizing |
|---|---|---|
| Intern or new graduate | Foundational accounting, spreadsheet use, instruction following, accuracy, communication, learning response | Firm-specific software, obscure tax rules, advanced review judgment |
| Staff accountant | Reconciliations, transaction analysis, adjusting entries, documentation, open-item identification | Partner-level client or business-development expectations |
| Experienced staff or senior | Complex workpapers, issue spotting, review readiness, variance analysis, escalation, junior-work review | Only testing routine data entry or memorized definitions |
| Tax preparer | Source-document tracing, workpaper organization, issue identification, carryforwards, written questions | Rules outside the returns or entities the person will prepare |
| Bookkeeper or CAS accountant | Coding, reconciliations, month-end workflow, unusual transactions, client questions, close documentation | Advanced audit or tax concepts not used in the role |
| Manager | Work review, risk recognition, client communication, delegation, coaching, economics, prioritization | A test focused only on individual preparation speed |
A Practical 60-Minute Accounting Skills Assessment
The assessment should be long enough to reveal work patterns without demanding hours of unpaid candidate labor.
The following structure is a practical starting point.
From Instructions to Structured Follow-Up
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Review the assignment
Read the instructions, source documents, and expected deliverables.
Complete the work sample
Perform the reconciliation, classification, workpaper, or review task.
Document the result
Prepare a conclusion, open-item list, and reviewer handoff.
Respond to an exception
Evaluate an inconsistency, missing document, or unusual transaction.
Structured follow-up
Explain the approach, assumptions, questions, and conclusion.
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Sample work-sample scenario
Provide the candidate with a synthetic file containing:
- A general-ledger cash balance
- A bank statement
- A list of outstanding checks
- A deposit in transit
- A bank fee not recorded in the ledger
- One unsupported reconciling item
- A short prior-period workpaper
Ask the candidate to:
- Prepare the reconciliation.
- Identify the necessary adjustment.
- Flag the unsupported item.
- Document a conclusion.
- Prepare one client question.
This single exercise can reveal:
- Accounting knowledge
- Accuracy
- Source-document use
- Spreadsheet fluency
- Issue recognition
- Documentation
- Communication
Copy-and-Use 100-Point Accounting Assessment Scorecard
The weighting below is an example starting point for a staff-accountant role.
Adjust it based on your documented job analysis.
| Assessment Area | Points | What the Evaluator Should Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Accuracy and completeness | 25 | Correct calculations, completed requirements, supported amounts, no material omissions |
| Technical accounting application | 20 | Correct treatment, account relationships, adjustment logic, appropriate use of accounting principles |
| Judgment and issue recognition | 15 | Recognizes unsupported, unusual, conflicting, or incomplete information |
| Documentation and conclusion | 15 | Clear purpose, sources, procedures, result, conclusion, and open items |
| Instruction following and organization | 10 | Uses the supplied information, completes deliverables, organizes work, follows naming and submission directions |
| Written communication | 10 | Concise, professional explanation of results, questions, and reviewer attention |
| Efficient tool use | 5 | Reasonable spreadsheet navigation, formula use, source tracing, and file management |
Suggested score interpretation
85–100: Strong evidence of readiness for the assessed work, subject to the remaining selection process.
70–84: Demonstrates useful capability with identifiable development needs.
55–69: Material gaps exist. Determine whether the gaps belong to entry requirements or trainable firm-specific skills.
Below 55: The candidate may not currently meet the tested day-one requirements. Review the test design and individual scoring evidence before deciding.
Do not treat the cutoff as automatic.
Review which competencies caused the score.
A candidate who loses points for a software feature the firm plans to teach presents a different risk from a candidate who invents support, ignores an unreconciled difference, or submits a conclusion that contradicts the work.
Noncompensable risk signals
Some behaviors may require separate review regardless of the overall score:
- Fabricating support or claiming work was completed when it was not
- Changing data to force a reconciliation
- Ignoring an obvious material exception
- Using unapproved external tools with assessment data
- Disclosing or mishandling confidential information
- Failing to follow a clearly stated escalation requirement
Accounting Skills Assessment Test Template
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Pre-Employment Accounting Skills Assessment
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| Position | |
| Candidate identifier | |
| Assessment version | |
| Time allowed | |
| Permitted resources |
Candidate instructions
Job-related competencies being assessed
☐ Accuracy and completeness
☐ Judgment and issue recognition
☐ Documentation and conclusion
☐ Instruction following
☐ Spreadsheet or software fluency
☐ Written communication
☐ Other: ______________________________
Assessment deliverables
☐ Adjusting-entry recommendation
☐ Open-item list
☐ Written conclusion
☐ Client or reviewer question
☐ Structured interview response
Evaluator scorecard
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| Competency | Available Points | Candidate Score | Evidence and Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy and completeness | |||
| Technical accounting | |||
| Judgment and issue recognition | |||
| Documentation and conclusion | |||
| Instruction following | |||
| Communication | |||
| Tool use |
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Final assessment classification
☐ Demonstrated capability with trainable gaps
☐ Additional evidence required
☐ Did not demonstrate a defined day-one requirement
☐ Assessment result requires HR or legal review
Completed Candidate Assessment Example
Entry-Level Staff Accountant Candidate
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| Assessment task | Prepare a bank reconciliation, identify one adjustment and one unsupported item, and submit a reviewer summary. |
| Technical result | Correctly reconciled the account and identified the bank-fee adjustment. |
| Judgment result | Recognized that an old reconciling item lacked support and flagged it instead of deleting it. |
| Documentation result | Work was understandable, but the conclusion did not state whether further adjustment was required. |
| Tool use | Used formulas correctly but did not label one source tab clearly. |
| Structured follow-up | Explained the reconciliation logically and revised the conclusion after receiving a standardized clarification. |
| Overall interpretation | Demonstrated the required accounting foundation and issue recognition. Documentation gaps appear trainable through the firm’s onboarding process. |
The candidate did not produce perfect work.
That is not the standard for an entry-level hire.
The assessment showed:
- The candidate understood the accounting objective.
- The candidate did not hide the unsupported item.
- The candidate could explain the work.
- The documentation weakness was visible and trainable.
That is more useful than a single pass-or-fail score.
How to Interpret Accounting Assessment Results
Separate findings into three categories.
1. Skills the candidate can demonstrate now
These are supported by observable work.
Examples:
- Correctly prepares a reconciliation
- Uses formulas accurately
- Identifies missing support
- Writes a clear open-item note
2. Gaps the firm can reasonably train
Examples may include:
- Firm-specific workpaper formatting
- Software navigation unique to the firm
- Preferred review-note conventions
- Internal file organization
- Client-specific workflows
3. Gaps that conflict with a day-one requirement
Examples may include:
- An experienced bookkeeper cannot complete a basic reconciliation
- A senior candidate cannot identify an obvious unsupported balance
- A manager candidate cannot explain why a conclusion lacks support
- A candidate claims advanced spreadsheet proficiency but cannot use basic formulas required by the role
This distinction helps prevent two mistakes:
- Hiring someone who lacks a capability the firm does not have time to teach
- Rejecting someone for a gap the onboarding system was designed to address
Why Assessment Results Should Shape Onboarding
The assessment should not disappear into the recruiting file after the offer is accepted.
Use it to build the employee’s first development plan.
| Assessment Finding | Onboarding Response |
|---|---|
| Strong accounting foundation, weak documentation | Prioritize workpaper standards, completed examples, and reviewer summaries. |
| Accurate work, slow software navigation | Provide structured system practice and keyboard or workflow coaching. |
| Good execution, misses unusual items | Use planted-error exercises, variance analysis, and professional-skepticism scenarios. |
| Good technical work, unclear communication | Practice open-item lists, client questions, conclusions, and review handoffs. |
| Strong overall performance | Consider faster progression after capability is confirmed in the firm’s actual workflow. |
For the complete development pathway, read Accountant Development Plan: From New Hire to Advisor.
For a structured first-90-day process, read Staff Accountant Onboarding Checklist: The First 90 Days.
Common Accounting Assessment Mistakes
Testing trivia instead of work
A difficult question is not automatically a useful question.
Focus on essential tasks and competencies.
Using one generic test for every role
A new graduate, tax preparer, senior accountant, and manager should not receive the same assessment.
Testing firm-specific software without notice
Only make specific software proficiency a meaningful selection factor when it is genuinely required upon entry.
Rewarding speed over accuracy
Time matters, but an unrealistic time limit may measure test anxiety or familiarity with the format rather than job performance.
Scoring only the final number
Review sources, formulas, assumptions, documentation, open items, and conclusions.
Changing instructions between candidates
Standardize the assignment, permitted resources, time, clarifications, and scoring rubric.
Using live client data
Create synthetic or thoroughly sanitized files.
Letting managers score from instinct
Require evidence-based scoring and evaluator training.
Ignoring assessment outcomes after hiring
Use demonstrated gaps to shape onboarding and early development.
Legal, Accessibility, and Fairness Safeguards
Pre-employment testing can create legal and ethical risk when it is poorly designed or administered.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission advises employers to ensure that tests and selection procedures are job-related, appropriately validated, administered without prohibited discrimination, and updated as job requirements change.
Employers should work with qualified HR, employment-law, and assessment professionals when designing or implementing selection tests.
Connect every tested capability to the job
Document:
- The task performed in the role
- The competency being measured
- Why the competency is required upon entry
- How the assessment measures it
- How the result will be used
Use consistent administration
Candidates for the same role should generally receive:
- The same assessment version or an equivalent validated version
- The same instructions
- The same time rules
- The same permitted resources
- The same scoring standards
Provide reasonable accommodations
EEOC and Department of Justice guidance emphasize that assessment tools should measure the intended job skill rather than an unrelated disability.
Firms should:
- Tell candidates how the assessment will be administered
- Provide a clear accommodation-request process
- Ensure that requesting an accommodation does not harm the candidate
- Offer accessible alternatives when appropriate
Do not ask prohibited pre-offer medical questions
EEOC guidance states that employers generally may not ask disability-related questions or require medical examinations before making a conditional offer.
An accounting assessment should measure accounting capability—not health information.
Monitor outcomes
Review whether the assessment:
- Continues to reflect the job
- Produces consistent scoring
- Creates unexpected barriers for qualified groups
- Needs a less exclusionary alternative
- Requires updating after technology or workflow changes
This section provides general educational information and is not legal advice.
How CPA Firms Should Handle AI During the Assessment
AI creates two separate questions.
Should candidates be allowed to use AI?
The answer depends on what the job requires.
Consider three possible assessment modes.
| Mode | Purpose | Example Rule |
|---|---|---|
| No-AI foundation test | Measures the candidate’s underlying accounting and reasoning capability. | Candidate may use only the documents and tools supplied. |
| AI-assisted work test | Measures whether the candidate can use AI while verifying output. | Candidate must disclose prompts, sources checked, corrections made, and final reasoning. |
| Two-stage test | Separates foundational capability from augmented performance. | Complete one task without AI and a second task using an approved tool. |
Whatever rule the firm chooses, communicate it clearly and apply it consistently.
Should the firm use AI to score candidates?
Automated tools may help organize responses, but they can introduce risk.
The U.S. Department of Justice warns that hiring technologies can screen out qualified people with disabilities when the technology measures an impairment rather than the relevant job skill.
Before using an AI assessment vendor, ask:
- What traits or competencies does the system claim to measure?
- How were those measures validated for this job?
- Can candidates request accommodations?
- Can a human review the result?
- Does the tool analyze voice, facial movement, typing patterns, or other factors unrelated to accounting performance?
- How is candidate data stored and protected?
- Can the firm audit scoring and outcomes?
Do not outsource judgment to a hiring algorithm you cannot explain, validate, audit, or accommodate.
How to Implement an Accounting Skills Test
Step 1: Choose one role
Start with a frequently hired position, such as staff accountant or bookkeeper.
Step 2: Conduct a job analysis
Interview people who currently perform and review the role.
List:
- Core tasks
- Common errors
- Required day-one competencies
- Trainable firm-specific skills
- Quality expectations
Step 3: Build a synthetic work sample
Create realistic but fictional:
- Source documents
- Workpapers
- Transactions
- Errors
- Client questions
Step 4: Create the scoring rubric before testing anyone
Define correct answers, acceptable alternatives, material errors, partial credit, and risk signals.
Step 5: Pilot the assessment
Ask several current employees at different performance levels to complete it.
Use the pilot to identify:
- Unclear instructions
- Unrealistic timing
- Scoring disagreements
- Tasks that do not reflect the job
Step 6: Train evaluators
Require evaluators to score sample responses and discuss differences before using the assessment in hiring.
Step 7: Use a structured follow-up interview
OPM describes structured interviews as job-related questions asked consistently and evaluated using the same rating standards.
Useful follow-up questions include:
- Walk me through the approach you used.
- Which item created the most uncertainty?
- What additional information would you request?
- What would you ask a reviewer before finalizing the work?
- What would you check if you had ten additional minutes?
Step 8: Review the assessment regularly
Update it when:
- The role changes
- Technology changes
- The firm changes its workflows
- The assessment no longer differentiates capability
- Scoring or fairness concerns emerge
How SkillAbility Helps Firms Assess and Develop Accounting Capability
A pre-employment assessment can tell the firm what a candidate can demonstrate today.
It cannot replace the development system required after hiring.
SkillAbility helps CPA firms connect assessment, onboarding, technical practice, judgment development, and leadership growth.
It is not a generic LMS or course library.
It is an accounting workforce development and knowledge-transfer platform.
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The SkillAbility Capability Pathway
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Develops accounting, tax, payroll, software workflow, documentation, and review-ready execution through structured practice.
Develops financial interpretation, communication, advisory thinking, professional presence, and client relationship skills.
Develops review leadership, coaching, delegation, firm economics, strategic execution, succession, and ownership thinking.
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The assessment identifies the starting point.
The development system should build what comes next.
For more on converting review problems into development, read How to Reduce Review Notes in Accounting.
Assess capability before the offer. Build capability after the hire. Measure both with evidence.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an accounting skills assessment test?
An accounting skills assessment test is a standardized hiring exercise used to measure whether a candidate can perform job-related accounting tasks such as reconciliations, transaction analysis, adjusting entries, workpaper documentation, issue identification, and written communication.
What should an accounting assessment test include?
It should include realistic work connected to the position, clear instructions, synthetic source documents, a defined scoring rubric, documentation requirements, at least one exception or open item, and a structured follow-up interview.
Should CPA firms give candidates a bookkeeping test?
A bookkeeping test may be appropriate when bookkeeping tasks are essential to the role and the candidate is expected to possess those skills upon entry. The test should reflect the actual work rather than generic trivia.
How long should a pre-employment accounting test be?
The length should be sufficient to measure essential competencies without requiring excessive unpaid work. A focused work sample and structured follow-up can often provide useful evidence without becoming a multi-hour project.
Should entry-level accounting candidates be tested on specific software?
Only when software proficiency is genuinely required upon entry. When the firm plans to train its software, assess transferable spreadsheet, navigation, instruction-following, and accounting skills instead.
What is the best accounting test for hiring?
The best test is based on a documented job analysis and uses realistic tasks from the role. There is no single test that is appropriate for every accounting position or firm.
Can an accounting test predict whether a candidate will succeed?
A well-designed work sample provides useful evidence about defined job-related capabilities, but it should be considered with structured interviews, references, experience, and other appropriate selection information. No single assessment guarantees future performance.
Should candidates be allowed to use AI during an accounting test?
The firm should decide based on the capability being measured. A no-AI section can assess foundational knowledge, while an AI-assisted section can measure verification, source checking, correction, and professional judgment.
How should accounting tests be scored?
Use a written rubric connected to the job. Score accuracy, technical application, issue recognition, documentation, instruction following, communication, and tool use using the same standards for every candidate.
Are pre-employment accounting tests legal?
Employment tests may be used, but employers must comply with applicable employment and anti-discrimination laws. Tests should be job-related, appropriately validated, consistently administered, accessible, and reviewed for potential adverse impact. Obtain qualified legal and HR guidance.
What data should be used in an accounting hiring test?
Use fictional or thoroughly sanitized data. Do not give candidates access to confidential client, employee, tax, payroll, banking, or personally identifiable information.
What should happen to assessment results after hiring?
Use demonstrated strengths and gaps to shape the employee’s onboarding and development plan. Confirm performance again through actual or simulated work inside the firm’s controlled training process.
External Research and Authority Sources
- AICPA & CIMA: CPA Firm Competency Model
- U.S. Office of Personnel Management: Job Analysis
- U.S. Office of Personnel Management: Work Samples and Simulations
- U.S. Office of Personnel Management: Structured Interviews
- U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission: Employment Tests and Selection Procedures
- U.S. Department of Justice: Algorithms, Artificial Intelligence, and Disability Discrimination in Hiring
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Accountants and Auditors
The Bottom Line
An accounting skills assessment should not be designed to prove that the firm can create a difficult test.
It should help the firm make a better hiring decision.
Start with the job.
Identify the work the employee must perform.
Separate day-one requirements from trainable firm-specific skills.
Use a realistic, sanitized work sample.
Measure:
- Technical application
- Accuracy
- Documentation
- Judgment
- Software fluency
- Instruction following
- Communication
- Response to new information
Score every candidate against the same job-related rubric.
Provide accommodations.
Protect candidate and client data.
Use the results with—not instead of—the rest of the selection process.
Then carry the findings into onboarding.
Do not hire based only on how well someone describes accounting work. Give them a fair opportunity to show how they perform it.
Assess capability.
Identify trainable gaps.
Build a focused onboarding plan.
Measure development.
Protect knowledge.
Develop people.
Scale the firm.
Are you hiring accounting talent—or hoping the résumé accurately describes it?
SkillAbility helps CPA firms identify capability, structure onboarding, build technical execution, develop judgment, reduce manager rescue, and create a pathway from new hire to future partner.
Book Your Free 10-Minute Structural Alignment Review →
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To better hiring and stronger development,
Vincent Howard, CPA
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, founded his accounting firm in 1993, and helped grow Howard, Howard and Hodges from three people to approximately 50 staff across four locations and multiple states. He has participated in PASBA since 1997, and the firm was named PASBA Firm of the Year in 2015. Since 2020, he has built and run the SkillAbility platform used by more than 1,000 accounting professionals across dozens of PASBA firms.
© 2026 SkillAbility for Accounting Firms. This article provides general educational information and is not legal, employment, human-resources, accessibility, or assessment-validation advice.
