A good accountant should do more than lodge tax returns.
As your business grows, the advice and support you need changes dramatically.
What worked when your business was turning over $150,000 may no longer be enough when you are approaching $1 million.
Here are 7 signs your business may have outgrown its current accountant.
- You Only Hear From Them Once a Year
If the only time you speak to your accountant is at tax time, there may be a problem.
Growing businesses benefit from ongoing conversations around:
- Cash flow
- Tax planning
- Business structure
- Profitability
- Growth strategy
Good advice should happen before deadlines, not after.
- Everything Feels Reactive
Are you constantly surprised by:
- Tax bills?
- BAS obligations?
- Cash flow pressure?
- Super liabilities?
A proactive accountant helps business owners prepare early instead of constantly reacting to problems.
- They Do Not Explain Your Numbers Clearly
Many business owners receive reports they barely understand.
Your accountant should be able to explain:
- Profitability
- Cash flow
- Tax obligations
- Business performance
- Risks and opportunities
In plain English.
- You Rarely Discuss Strategy
As businesses grow, accounting becomes less about compliance and more about decision making.
You should be discussing:
- Growth plans
- Asset purchases
- Staffing
- Pricing
- Profit margins
- Business structure
- Wealth creation
Not just tax returns.
- Response Times Are Slow
One of the most common frustrations we hear from new clients is poor communication.
When business owners need advice, delays create stress.
Fast communication matters — especially when financial decisions are time sensitive.
- Your Systems Feel Disconnected
Modern businesses need efficient systems.
If your accountant is not helping improve:
- Xero processes
- Bookkeeping workflows
- Reporting systems
- Payroll setup
- Automation opportunities
You may be missing major efficiency gains.
- You Feel Like “Just Another Client”
Strong accounting relationships matter.
Business owners should feel comfortable asking questions, discussing goals and getting support throughout the year.
The best accountant relationships feel like partnerships — not transactions.
Final Thoughts
As businesses grow, financial decisions become more important and more expensive to get wrong.
A proactive accountant should help you:
- Understand your numbers
- Reduce stress
- Improve cash flow
- Plan ahead
- Build long-term wealth
If your current accountant is only focused on compliance, it may be time for a different conversation.