Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have finance degree and am considering pursuing accounting. My question is do you need 30 undergraduate accounting classes to sit for CPA or can one just go straight for Masters in accounting? The cpa exam website was a bit confusing about the requirements.
I had a bachelors in economics, and I pursued the 24 accounting credits I needed at a community college.
Am now a CPA in DC and applying for reciprocity in MD
I'm pp. assuming you are in public if you are applying for reciprocity? Personally, not worth it for me to pay $300 or so to the state.where I now live.
I was looking that this too and it is extremely confusing. I have a master's degree in another field and thought I should just get a master's in accounting. However, it seems I would need to take specific undergraduate courses. I already have 150 credits--what I need is the specific accounting courses which seem to be undergraduate courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have finance degree and am considering pursuing accounting. My question is do you need 30 undergraduate accounting classes to sit for CPA or can one just go straight for Masters in accounting? The cpa exam website was a bit confusing about the requirements.
I had a bachelors in economics, and I pursued the 24 accounting credits I needed at a community college.
Am now a CPA in DC and applying for reciprocity in MD
I'm pp. assuming you are in public if you are applying for reciprocity? Personally, not worth it for me to pay $300 or so to the state.where I now live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have finance degree and am considering pursuing accounting. My question is do you need 30 undergraduate accounting classes to sit for CPA or can one just go straight for Masters in accounting? The cpa exam website was a bit confusing about the requirements.
I had a bachelors in economics, and I pursued the 24 accounting credits I needed at a community college.
Am now a CPA in DC and applying for reciprocity in MD
I'm pp. assuming you are in public if you are applying for reciprocity? Personally, not worth it for me to pay $300 or so to the state.where I now live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have finance degree and am considering pursuing accounting. My question is do you need 30 undergraduate accounting classes to sit for CPA or can one just go straight for Masters in accounting? The cpa exam website was a bit confusing about the requirements.
I had a bachelors in economics, and I pursued the 24 accounting credits I needed at a community college.
Am now a CPA in DC and applying for reciprocity in MD
Anonymous wrote:I have finance degree and am considering pursuing accounting. My question is do you need 30 undergraduate accounting classes to sit for CPA or can one just go straight for Masters in accounting? The cpa exam website was a bit confusing about the requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can also be an enrolled agent to do tax work. Why do you want the CPA?
Are there needs for enrolled agents? My DC has an unrelated bachelor's degree but is very knowledgeable in tax issues and is considering that line of work as a part-time (weekend) side hustle during tax seasons. Is it worth it for him to take the exams? Would small accounting firms be interested in someone like him? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:You can also be an enrolled agent to do tax work. Why do you want the CPA?