Most agents talk to their CPA once a year. They drop off (or email) a shoebox of receipts in March, get a return back two weeks later, sign it, pay whatever's owed, and don't think about taxes again until next March.
The agents who actually keep their wealth do it differently. They treat their CPA like a year-round CFO function. Same CPA, same hourly rate, same person — just used dramatically more strategically.
Here's the rhythm that turns a $300 conversation into a $30K decision.
The Four-Meeting Year
Schedule four CPA touchpoints per year, locked in your calendar. These don't have to be hour-long sit-downs — often 30 minutes by Zoom or phone is enough. The point is consistency, not duration.
Meeting 1 — Q1 Planning (Mid-February to Mid-March)
This is right after the prior year's filing is done. Topic: what does this year look like?
- Review last year's actual numbers vs. expected
- Set income projection for current year
- Set up Q1 estimated tax payment
- Identify any tax law changes that affect you (OBBBA, state changes, etc.)
- Decide: are we doing anything new this year? (S-corp election? Solo 401k? New entity for a property?)
Meeting 2 — Q2 Mid-Year Check (Late June / Early July)
You're halfway through the year. Are projections holding?
- Year-to-date P&L vs. projection
- Adjust estimated tax payments if income is significantly off-pace
- Look at potential tax moves for the back half (equipment purchases, retirement contributions, property purchase timing)
- If you bought investment property this year, talk about cost seg timing
Meeting 3 — Q3 Tax Projection (Mid-September to Mid-October)
This is the most important meeting. You have 75% of the year's data and time to actually do something about it.
- Year-to-date P&L with Q4 projection added on
- Estimate full-year tax bill
- Decide on Q4 tax-reduction moves — retirement contributions, accelerated expenses, equipment, timing of bonuses, investment property closings
- Q3 estimated payment
Meeting 4 — Year-End Wrap (Mid-December)
Final tactical adjustments before the year closes.
- Anything still on the table for tax reduction (last chance for retirement contributions in some cases)
- Confirm Q4 estimate is properly funded
- Get on the books for January-March filing prep
- Receipt cleanup checklist for January
What to Bring to Every Meeting
Show up organized. Same checklist, every meeting. Your CPA can do strategy if they don't have to fish for basic info:
- Current year-to-date P&L (your bookkeeper or QuickBooks generates this in 30 seconds)
- Balance sheet (especially if you have investment property)
- List of major transactions since last meeting — large purchases, property closings, hire decisions, contracts signed
- Three questions you specifically want answered (we'll cover this below)
- Updates on family changes — marriage, kids, dependents, divorce, inheritance. All affect tax
That's it. 10 minutes of prep, 30 minutes of meeting, dramatically better outcome.
The Four Questions to Ask Before Year-End
The Q3/Q4 meetings are where the money is made. Most year-end tax moves have to happen by December 31 — after that, you're stuck. Four high-leverage questions:
1. "Where can I shift income into next year, or accelerate expenses into this year?"
If you expect lower income next year, defer commissions. If you expect higher, accelerate. Same with expenses — prepay marketing, conferences, software for next year if you can. Real-time tax bracket management.
2. "How much retirement contribution capacity do I have, and what's the optimal vehicle?"
SEP-IRA, Solo 401k, defined benefit plan — each has different limits. A high-earning agent can shelter $60K-$80K/year in retirement vehicles. That's $20K+ of federal tax saved annually. Most agents leave this on the table.
3. "Are there any property moves I should consider this year?"
If you're going to buy an investment property within 6-12 months anyway, timing it before December 31 captures a year of bonus depreciation. With 100% bonus depreciation back via OBBBA, this is huge.
4. "What's my projected total tax bill, and is the Taxes account fully funded?"
Don't get blindsided. Knowing in October that you'll owe $48K in April lets you make adjustments now.
How to Find a CPA Who'll Work This Way
Some CPAs are pure tax preparers — they do returns, they don't do strategy. They'll be frustrated by quarterly meetings and they're the wrong fit for this model. Others are strategic partners who already work this way with their best clients.
When interviewing a CPA, ask:
- "Do you offer quarterly strategy meetings, and what does that look like?"
- "How many other real estate agents/brokers do you work with?"
- "What's your typical engagement cost — is it hourly, retainer, or flat-fee?"
- "Are you comfortable with cost segregation, REPS, S-corp reasonable comp discussions?"
If they say "I'm a tax preparer, not a planner" — fine, but you need a different CPA. If they perk up at the quarterly model — you've got a partner.
The Cost
Quarterly engagement typically costs $300-$800/quarter on top of your annual return prep. So $1,200-$3,200/year extra.
For an agent grossing $150K+, this is the highest-ROI money you'll spend. A single year-end tax move (a properly-timed retirement contribution, a cost seg study, an S-corp election that should have happened years ago) often recovers the full annual CPA cost three times over. And it's recurring — every year for the rest of your career.
The Bigger Point
The CPA isn't a once-a-year necessary evil. They're the most underutilized asset most agents have. A great CPA, used four times a year on real strategy instead of once on filing, will quietly save you mid-five-figures every year of your career.
That's the relationship The Agent's CFO coaching helps you build — whether with your existing CPA or with one I'll introduce you to. The compliance line stays clean: I teach the frameworks and the rhythm; your CPA renders the licensed advice. The result is what good business owners in other industries have always had — and what almost no agents do.
About the author: Lance Hulsey is a California real estate broker (DRE# 01724888), former CFO of Room Real Estate (a ~$400M California team), and co-investor in the KW Thrive SC Keller Williams franchise in Capitola, CA. He coaches agents on the financial side of the business through The Agent's CFO.