1. The Attorney-CPA has an inactive CPA license. I can't find much info on that. Is it due to misconduct? Or are they cheap and don't want to pay the renewal fees?
2. I cannot find very many reviews on them. Makes it difficult to vet them.
3. They are based out of the state I live in. Should I need a face to face consultation, it would be much more difficult to get a hold of them. Is that a deal breaker?
What do you guys and gals think? How do you handle your business entity formations? How did you go about finding the team to help you in this journey of building wealth and FIRE?
1. Probably cheap and don't have time or inclination to complete the minimum continuing education requirements. The problem here is that we don't know if they're actually up to date on tax code changes and tax strategies - but they probably feel it's sufficiently covered by their attorney-related continuing education.
BUT - you can usually check with the State CPA Board to find out if they had any complaints against them. My state board actually allows you to do this online via their website.
2. Always is difficult. It's hard to tell if an attorney or CPA is a nitwit until you work with them. Sometimes CPAs with great reviews turn out to just be likable nitwits.
3. I have lots of remote clients. You can Skype, email, telephone. Not a big deal EXCEPT that there's always a risk with my out of state clients that I won't know the particulars of their state entity formation. For example, this one wasn't my oversight, but I was recently surprised to find out that a client in TN formed an LLC and it turned out that it turned his tax-free sole proprietorship into an entity that is subject to TN's totally insane taxation system. Ever since then, I've been careful about advising clients about entity formation in other states - I make sure to research it carefully - but it can be easy to overlook something when it's not your state of expertise.
4. The actual formation of the entity tends to be super easy. The forms are really simple. Getting an EIN from the IRS is free and takes 2 minutes. The next step of making entity elections with the IRS is the part where a lot of people get tripped up. Next - I tell people that with corporate minutes and bylaws they might want an attorney or, if they feel comfortable they can find templates online. In rare instances, I offer further assistance with corporate minutes because there are tax matters I'd like to see in the minutes that no lawyer ever puts in there. But entity formation and documentation is a whole dodgy area where there's debate over whether it constitutes the practice of law, which CPA's can't do unless they are also attorneys.
I do not believe that you'll get better tax advice from an Attorney-Lapsed-CPA on tax efficient entities than from a CPA-non-Attorney. But you might get better legal advice. All of the Attorney-Active-CPA's that I know are active tax attorneys (ie: they will take your case to tax court), or tax debt-resolution specialists.