In this article
Welcome to the world of finance & consulting
Whether you're an experienced accountant who likes variety and advice, or you want a well-paid, flexible finance career, this guide covers what an accounting consultant actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An accounting consultant advises businesses on accounting, finance, and systems. In simple terms: they help businesses with accounting strategy, systems, and decisions. Think of them as the advisors on the numbers.
- Advise on accounting and finance
- Improve systems and processes
- Support reporting and controls
- Help businesses make better decisions
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Expertise โ you advise on accounting
- Analytical mind โ interpreting the numbers
- Communication โ explaining to clients
- Adaptability โ every client differs
- Problem-solving โ fixing financial issues
- Trust โ clients rely on your advice
Education & qualifications
Accounting consultants usually need an accounting degree and qualification, plus strong experience โ a senior, expertise-based advisory route.
Typical responsibilities
- Advice โ accounting strategy
- Systems โ finance software and process
- Reporting โ and controls
- Improvement โ better finance
- Decisions โ supporting them
- Expertise โ accounting knowledge
Responsibilities by seniority
Accountant / Junior Consultant
0โ5 years
- Builds accounting expertise
- Supports advisory
- Learns consulting
- Developing skills
- Toward advising
Accounting Consultant
5โ10 years
- Advises clients
- Improves systems
- Solves financial problems
- Trusted advisor
- Specialising
Senior / Partner
10+ years
- Leads consulting
- Manages clients and teams
- Shapes advisory
- Mentors consultants
- Toward leadership
Where accounting consultants work
๐ข Accountancy firms
Advisory services.
๐ผ Consulting firms
Finance consulting.
๐ญ Industry
In-house advisory.
๐ป Systems / software
Finance systems.
๐ Independent
Freelance consulting.
๐ Practices
Client advisory.
A day in the life
Meeting a client โ understanding their accounting challenges and what they need.
Advising on systems and processes, improving how their finance works.
Analysing reporting and controls, the expert eye that finds improvements.
Helping the client make a financial decision, backed by your expertise.
Advised, improved, decisions supported. The advisor on the numbers. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Well-paid advisory work
- Varied and flexible
- Senior accounting expertise
- Client variety
- Path to partner / independent
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Well-paid advisory work
- Varied and flexible
- Senior accounting expertise
- Client variety
- Path to partner / independent
- Remote and freelance options
- Intellectually engaging
โ Disadvantages
- Requires deep expertise
- Client and deadline pressure
- Travel in some roles
- Selling and winning work
- Variable income (freelance)
- Demanding qualification path
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Consultant โ complex advisory
- Consulting Manager โ lead consulting
- Partner / Director โ lead the practice
- Finance Director โ in-house leadership
- Independent consultant โ freelance advisory
- Systems specialist โ finance systems
Accounting Consultant vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accounting Consultant You are here | Advises on accounting and finance | Accounting, advisory | Baseline | Medium |
| Accountant | Manages company finances | Accounting, reporting | Lower | Medium |
| Financial Advisor | Advises on money | Finance, planning | Similar | Medium |
| CFO | Leads company finance | Finance leadership | Higher | Hard |
| Tax Advisor | Advises on tax | Tax, compliance | Similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Businesses always need expert accounting advice, especially as finance grows more complex, keeping accounting consultants in steady, well-paid demand.
- Businesses always need finance advice
- Finance grows more complex
- Systems and process need expertise
- Advisory is highly valued
- Steady, well-paid demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Accounting consultants bring expert finance advice to the businesses that need it.
It's a well-paid, senior advisory career.
It's varied โ every client and challenge is different.
Many consultants work independently, with flexibility and freelance options.
It's a route to partner or finance leadership.
Myths about this role
"It's just accounting."
โ It's advising, improving systems, and solving financial problems.
"Anyone with accounting can do it."
โ Advisory takes deep expertise and consulting skill.
"It's boring."
โ Varied clients and problems make it engaging.
"It's not well-paid."
โ Accounting consultancy is a well-paid, senior role.
"Software replaced it."
โ Software helps, but advice and judgement need experts.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Have strong accounting expertise
- Like variety and advising
- Are analytical and communicative
- Want well-paid advisory work
- Like flexible / independent work
- Enjoy solving problems
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You're early in accounting
- You dislike client work
- You want a single fixed role
- You dislike selling work
- You avoid pressure
- You want a non-advisory role
Well-paid & advisory
Accounting consultant is a well-paid, varied, advisory finance career, where deep accounting expertise turns into valued, flexible consultancy work, with a path to partner or independent practice.
โ Advantages
- Well-paid advisory work
- Varied and flexible
- Senior accounting expertise
- Client variety
- Path to partner / independent
โ Challenges
- Requires deep expertise
- Client and deadline pressure
- Travel in some roles
- Selling and winning work
- Variable income (freelance)
How to get started
- Build accounting expertise a degree, qualification, and experience.
- Develop advisory skills consulting and communication.
- Advise clients systems, process, and decisions.
- Specialise or build clients or go independent.
- Advance partner, finance director, or freelance.
What to know before you start
- It's advising and improving, not just accounting
- Advisory takes deep expertise and consulting skill
- Finance grows more complex, raising demand
- It's varied and intellectually engaging
- It's well-paid with flexible options
- It leads to partner or independent practice
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think it's just accounting. It's advisory โ I help businesses improve their finance systems, processes, reporting, and decisions, bringing expert knowledge to challenges they can't solve alone. Every client is different, so it's far more varied and strategic than routine accounting.
Accounting consultant ยท 8 years in
It's well-paid and flexible. Once you've built the expertise, businesses pay well for advice they can't get internally โ and many of us work independently, with remote and freelance options. The variety keeps it engaging; no two clients are the same.
Senior accounting consultant ยท 12 years in
People assume software replaced accountants. Software handles the routine, but the advice, judgement, and problem-solving โ how to structure finances, fix a reporting issue, choose a system โ need an expert. That advisory layer is exactly where consulting lives, and it's growing.
Consulting partner ยท 16 years in