Filter Results
Oklahoma City
Filter Results
Oklahoma City
Showing 931 to 940 of 1619 CPAs in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
CM
Carrie M. Mcentire
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73170
Carrie M. Mcentire is a certified public accountant based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with over a decade of experience in public accounting. Her exper...
JS
Jeffrey S. Vestring
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73118
Jeffrey S. Vestring is a certified public accountant based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with a specialization in providing financial planning and busin...
LL
Linda L. Ahlschwede
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73112
Linda L. Ahlschwede is a certified public accountant based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. With over 15 years of experience in providing accounting servic...
TM
Thomas M. Finnicum
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73122
Based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Thomas M. Finnicum brings over 15 years of experience providing expert accounting services to his clients. He specia...
GA
Gregory A. Schaefer
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73151
Based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Gregory A. Schaefer has over 20 years of experience providing expert accounting services to entrepreneurs and startu...
LA
Laurie A. Clodfelter
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73135
Laurie A. Clodfelter is a certified public accountant with 15 years of experience in providing tax and financial services. Based in Oklahoma City, Okl...
JW
James W. Hagemann
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73170
Located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, James W. Hagemann provides accounting services to family-owned enterprises and small to medium-sized businesses. W...
DK
Diana K. O'Neal
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73132
Diana K. O'Neal, a certified public accountant with over two decades of experience, serves clients in Oklahoma City and its surrounding areas. Her exp...
JL
Jacquelyn L. Dill
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73162
Based in Oklahoma City, Jacquelyn L. Dill is a certified public accountant (CPA) with extensive experience in accounting and financial services. With...
AB
Adam B. Kilbourne
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73131
Based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Adam B. Kilbourne provides professional accounting services to a range of clients. With over 15 years of experience...

Oklahoma's CPA market serves a state with strong energy, agriculture, and aerospace industries. The Oklahoma Accountancy Board requires 150 semester hours for licensure. CPAs must complete 120 hours of continuing professional education every three years, including 6 hours of ethics and minimum technical requirements.

Key Tax Considerations: Oklahoma has graduated individual income tax up to 4.75% and a flat 4% corporate rate. CPAs commonly handle oil and gas taxation including royalty income and production taxes, agricultural tax planning, state income tax compliance, and sales tax. The energy industry creates specialized needs for percentage depletion, intangible drilling costs, and working interest versus royalty interest taxation. Various business incentives for economic development require expertise to maximize benefits.

Industry Specializations: Energy (oil and gas, wind energy), aerospace and defense, agriculture (cattle, wheat), healthcare, banking and financial services, transportation, manufacturing, and higher education are primary focus areas. CPAs often specialize in upstream oil and gas accounting, agricultural cooperatives and commodity hedging, or aerospace and defense contracting compliance.

For CPA Professionals: The Oklahoma Society of CPAs serves practitioners statewide. Major markets include Oklahoma City (state government, energy, aerospace) and Tulsa (traditional energy hub, financial services). Smaller markets like Norman, Lawton, and Stillwater serve regional and university communities. The state offers low cost of living, Southern hospitality, and stable practice environment, though energy price volatility can impact the economy cyclically. The combination of traditional industries (energy, agriculture) and growing sectors (aerospace, technology) provides diverse practice opportunities.