State guide

Texas CPA: Business and Tax Help

Last updated June 2026

Texas has no individual income tax, which simplifies personal filings but does not eliminate state tax work. A Texas CPA handles franchise tax (no-tax-due threshold around $2.47 million in 2026), sales and use tax for businesses, property tax appeals, and federal compliance for residents and entities.

Texas residents file federal returns only, which is the headline benefit and the reason many people move there from high-tax states. The real work for a Texas CPA is on the business side: franchise tax (a gross margin tax with a no-tax-due threshold near $2.47 million), sales and use tax compliance, property tax appeals, and structuring for federal optimization in the absence of a state credit to claim. New Texas residents often need a partial-year filing in their old state plus a residency-establishment plan to defend against audit by states like California or New York that pursue former residents.

What's typically involved

We're expanding this page with the full playbook for texas: elections to make, common mistakes generalists miss, fee expectations, and the specific credentials to look for. In the meantime, the matching form below routes your situation to a CPA whose practice fits.

What CPA work looks like at the fee level

ServiceTypical 2026 range
CPA hourly rate$150 to $450 / hour
Schedule C (sole proprietor)$190 to $800
Single-member LLC return$300 to $1,500
S-corporation return (1120-S)$1,200 to $3,500
Partnership return (1065)$1,000 to $5,000+
C-corporation return (1120)$1,500 to $4,000+
  • Disorganized records ("shoebox" engagements) typically increase fees by 1.5x to 2.0x.
  • Each additional K-1 partner usually adds roughly $300 to $500.
  • Ranges reflect entity type, bookkeeping state, and complexity. Quotes vary by region and CPA experience.

Full table with methodology lives in the 2026 CPA Compass Fee Benchmark.

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Frequently asked questions

Related: how to find the right CPA · 2026 fee benchmark · CPA cost guide