Payroll
Public Accounting Starting Salaries Expected to Increase Nearly 4% in 2024
In its latest salary guide, Robert Half provides projected 2024 starting pay for eight positions: four in tax and four in audit.
Oct. 03, 2023
Starting salaries for roles in tax services are projected to increase an average of 3.6% in 2024, while audit and assurance services will see starting salaries likely go up an average of 3.8% next year, according to a CPA Practice Advisor analysis of public accounting pay data provided by specialized staffing firm Robert Half.
Robert Half’s salary guide for 2024 was released on Monday, featuring starting salary projections for a plethora of roles in accounting and finance. In the public accounting category, Robert Half provides projected 2024 starting salaries for eight positions: four in tax services and four in audit and assurance services.
Firms that are upfront about a role’s salary range can improve their hiring prospects. According to Robert Half research, 42% of workers expect to see a salary range in the job posting, and 57% would take themselves out of consideration if the employer doesn’t provide it upon request. In addition, 83% of managers say they include salary ranges in job postings, with 63% saying doing so helps their firm attract the best job candidates and 60% noting that it gives their firm a competitive advantage.
While salaries are expected to rise in 2024, increases are likely to be more measured than in recent years, according to Robert Half.
“For some professionals, that might be a reason to look for other opportunities. This is not lost on hiring managers, many of whom continue to increase compensation to retain key staff and better compete for top talent in a tight hiring market,” Robert Half said in the salary guide.
CPA Practice Advisor analyzed starting salary projections from Robert Half’s 2023 and 2024 salary guides to determine how much average starting pay is expected to increase next year for each of the eight positions featured. The results were:
Tax services
- Senior manager/director: 7.8%
- Manager: 0%
- Senior tax associate: 4%
- Tax associate: 2.8%
Overall average increase: 3.6%
Audit and assurance services
- Senior manager/managing director: 4%
- Manager: 9.4%
- Senior associate: 0.9%
- Associate: 1.1%
Overall average increase: 3.8%
In its annual salary guide, Robert Half provides starting pay ranges by percentile, based on a candidate’s experience. For the 2024 salary guide, there are three salary percentiles with the following descriptions:
- 25th percentile: New to the role, with little to no experience; requires more than casual instruction or supervision to perform day-to-day duties.
- 50th percentile: Has the experience to consistently perform core responsibilities without direct supervision; very comfortable with processes and subject matter associated with the role.
- 75th percentile: Value to the organization goes far beyond the ability to perform normal job duties; has rare qualifications that enable consistent contribution in unique ways; ready for next career level when available.
Below are the projected starting salaries in public accounting for 2024, according to Robert Half (25th/50th/75th):
Senior Manager/Director Tax Services | $124,500 | $159,500 | $192,000 |
---|---|---|---|
Manager of Tax Services | $92,750 | $112,750 | $131,000 |
Senior Tax Associate | $67,250 | $83,250 | $93,250 |
Tax Associate | $52,750 | $64,750 | $74,750 |
Senior Manager/Managing Director, Audit/Assurance Services | $121,500 | $150,250 | $174,250 |
Manager, Audit/Assurance Services | $90,000 | $106,250 | $124,750 |
Senior Associate, Audit/Assurance Services | $57,750 | $72,750 | $82,750 |
Associate, Audit/Assurance Services | $49,000 | $60,500 | $69,500 |
Below are the starting salaries for each of the eight public accounting roles in the 2024 salary guide, listed by percentile, compared with 2023’s starting salary projections from Robert Half (2023 -> 2024) so we can see how big the starting pay increases are expected to be by position and by percentile (in parenthesis):
Senior manager/director tax services
- 25th percentile: $118,500 -> $124,500 (5.1%)
- 50th percentile: $146,250 -> $159,500 (9%)
- 75th percentile: $175,750 -> $192,000 (9.2%)
Manager of tax services
- 25th percentile: $92,750 -> $92,750 (0%)
- 50th percentile: $112,750 -> $112,750 (0%)
- 75th percentile: $131,000 -> $131,000 (0%)
Senior tax associate
- 25th percentile: $65,250 -> $67,250 (3.1%)
- 50th percentile: $78,500 -> $83,250 (6%)
- 75th percentile: $90,500 -> $93,250 (3%)
Tax associate
- 25th percentile: $51,250 -> $52,750 (3%)
- 50th percentile: $63,000 -> $64,750 (2.8%)
- 75th percentile: $72,750 -> $74,750 (2.7%)
Senior manager/managing director, audit and assurance services
- 25th percentile: $116,750 -> $121,500 (4.1%)
- 50th percentile: $144,500 -> $150,250 (4%)
- 75th percentile: $167,500 -> $174,250 (4%)
Manager, audit and assurance services
- 25th percentile: $80,000 -> $90,000 (12.5%)
- 50th percentile: $100,000 -> $106,250 (6.2%)
- 75th percentile: $114,000 -> $124,750 (9.4%)
Senior associate, audit and assurance services
- 25th percentile: $57,250 -> $57,750 (0.9%)
- 50th percentile: $72,000 -> $72,750 (1%)
- 75th percentile: $82,000 -> $82,750 (0.9%)
Associate, audit and assurance services
- 25th percentile: $48,500 -> $49,000 (1%)
- 50th percentile: $59,750 -> $60,500 (1.2%)
- 75th percentile: $68,750 -> $69,500 (1.1%)
“Fewer college students are graduating with accounting degrees, making it especially hard for public accounting firms to find entry-level candidates. Competition for experienced talent is also an issue, as many public accounting employees leave for corporate jobs with more manageable workloads. Audit and bookkeeping professionals at all levels are also in high demand,” Robert Half said in the salary guide. “Successful strategies for landing skilled accountants include offering competitive salaries and allowing staff to work from home at least a couple of days per week. Managers in public accounting are typically more open to remote and hybrid work options than those in other segments of finance and accounting. Firms that don’t allow staff to work off-site tend to struggle most with hiring.”