For Bay Area architecture and engineering practices — project-based revenue recognition, multi-state nexus, employee vs. contractor classification, and the partnership economics that hold the firm together.
Architecture and engineering firms operate on long project cycles with revenue that does not match cash, partner economics that evolve over years, and licensing obligations across multiple states.
Long-cycle projects, milestone billings, retainer arrangements, and unbilled time create real complexity around when revenue should be recognized — both for tax and for management reporting.
Architects and engineers often work on projects across state lines. Nexus, apportionment, and state-licensing implications need to be tracked deliberately.
Multi-partner design firms accumulate compensation complexity — guaranteed payments, draws, capital accounts, profit-sharing tiers — that needs revisiting as the firm changes.
Sub-contracted designers, consultants, and contract engineers — California rules (AB 5) are strict about classification, and misclassification has real consequences.
We work with Bay Area design and engineering firms on the financial side of running a project-driven practice.
Project-level revenue and cost tracking, unbilled vs. billed time analysis, WIP reporting, and project profitability monitoring.
Partner compensation modeling, capital account maintenance, buy-in / buy-out structuring, and profit-sharing tier design.
State filing requirements for projects across state lines, apportionment of income, and coordination with state-licensing obligations.
AB 5 analysis under California law, federal worker classification, and structuring of sub-contractor arrangements for compliance.
Federal IRC § 41 R&D credit qualification for engineering firms, including innovation-driven design work that qualifies under the credit.
PLLC, professional corporation, and partnership analysis with awareness of California licensing-board requirements for design professionals.
Revenue recognition for a five-year master plan project is different from a one-week consultation. Partner economics in a 12-partner architecture firm differ from a two-partner engineering practice. Multi-state nexus for a firm with projects in Nevada and Oregon needs to be managed deliberately. None of this is in a generalist CPA's toolkit.
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