Accounting firm solopreneurs — CPAs, bookkeepers, and tax professionals running solo practices — face a seasonal crunch that makes efficient operations critical year-round. Beyond the tax season rush, there is a constant stream of client communication, document collection, scheduling, and administrative work that pulls you away from the actual financial work clients pay for. A virtual assistant for accounting firm solopreneurs handles that non-technical workload, protecting your time for analysis, reconciliation, and advisory work.
Top Tasks to Delegate
| Task | Why It Matters at This Scale |
|---|---|
| Client document collection and follow-up | Keeps tax prep timelines on track without chasing clients yourself |
| Appointment scheduling and calendar management | Eliminates scheduling friction during high-demand periods |
| Invoice preparation and payment reminders | Ensures timely billing and reduces overdue accounts |
| Email inbox management and client communication | Keeps response times short without derailing your focus |
| Data entry into accounting software | Frees your expertise for review and analysis, not input |
| Social media and content posting | Builds your firm's visibility with minimal time investment |
Budget and Hiring Approach
Accounting solopreneurs should structure their VA budget around peak periods. During tax season, you may need 30+ hours per week of VA support. Off-peak, 10–15 hours is often sufficient. A flexible VA arrangement — hourly or retainer with surge capacity — works better than a fixed weekly commitment.
For data entry and document management, offshore VAs with QuickBooks, Xero, or FreshBooks experience cost $10–$18 per hour and can be highly productive with clear SOPs. For client-facing communication, consider a domestic VA at $20–$35 per hour who can represent your firm professionally. Always use a confidentiality agreement and limit access to only the systems and data each task requires.
Scaling Your VA Support
"The solo accountant who delegates admin doesn't just survive tax season — they build a firm that can take on more clients without working longer hours."
As your client base grows, your VA support structure evolves. During peak seasons, you can scale up hours quickly without the complexity of bringing on temporary employees. Over time, a trained VA becomes an asset who understands your firm's processes and client preferences, reducing the management burden season after season.
For accounting solopreneurs who also advise on business strategy, Virtual Assistant for Consulting Solopreneurs covers delegation ideas relevant to advisory-based work.
When your firm grows to include staff or contractors, Virtual Assistant for Accounting Firm Small Businesses outlines the next level of VA support.
Ready to Hire?
Ready to hire a virtual assistant? Virtual Assistant VA connects you with trained VAs for accounting firms at every stage of business growth.