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Glenville
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Glenville
Showing 1 to 3 of 3 CPAs in Glenville, Pennsylvania
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Renee L. Beil
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Glenville, Pennsylvania 17329
Renee L. Beil is a certified public accountant based in Glenville, Pennsylvania, with over 20 years of experience in providing accounting services to individuals and businesses. Her specialization in tax compliance and basic accounting services allows her to assist clients with their tax preparation needs, including individual and business tax returns. Ms. Beil also has extensive experience serving entrepreneurs and startups, helping them navigate the financial aspects of starting and growing a business.
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Karl A. Lehman
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Glenville, Pennsylvania 17329
Karl Lehman has been a certified public accountant in Glenville, Pennsylvania, since 2005. Specializing in basic accounting services, small business accounting, and tax compliance, he works with entrepreneurs and startups as well as various business structures, including S-Corps, partnerships, and LLCs. His expertise spans retirement account tax reporting and sales tax compliance, providing accurate and timely financial guidance to clients.
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Edwin S. Tharp
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Glenville, Pennsylvania 17329
Edwin S. Tharp is a certified public accountant based in Glenville, Pennsylvania, with over 10 years of experience in providing bookkeeping and financial statement compilation services to small businesses. Specializing in basic accounting services, small business accounting, and financial planning, Tharp's expertise encompasses general accounting and advisory services. In addition to his accounting services, Edwin Tharp also assists entrepreneurs and startups with financial planning and tax preparation.

Pennsylvania's large CPA market serves a populous state with diverse economy from finance and healthcare to manufacturing and agriculture. The Pennsylvania State Board of Accountancy requires 150 semester hours for licensure. CPAs must complete 80 hours of continuing professional education every two years, including 2 hours of ethics and minimum technical requirements.

Key Tax Considerations: Pennsylvania has a flat 3.07% individual income tax (no local deductions allowed) and 8.99% corporate net income tax, but extremely complex local taxation with thousands of jurisdictions imposing earned income tax, local services tax, and business privilege taxes. CPAs commonly handle state tax compliance, navigating the bewildering array of local taxes, sales and use tax, and multi-state issues. Philadelphia has its own city wage tax and Business Income and Receipts Tax adding complexity. The lack of state deductions for federal itemized deductions creates planning differences from most states.

Industry Specializations: Healthcare systems and life sciences, financial services and insurance, manufacturing (traditional and advanced), higher education, energy (Marcellus Shale natural gas), agriculture, technology, professional services, and tourism are primary focus areas. Philadelphia CPAs often specialize in life sciences and financial services, while Pittsburgh focuses on healthcare and technology transformation. Rural areas maintain strong agricultural and traditional manufacturing practices.

For CPA Professionals: The Pennsylvania Institute of CPAs serves one of the nation's largest CPA communities. Major markets include Philadelphia (life sciences, finance, professional services), Pittsburgh (healthcare, technology, traditional industries), and numerous secondary markets like Harrisburg, Allentown, and Erie. The state offers diverse opportunities from sophisticated urban practices to rural agricultural services. Local tax complexity creates specialization opportunities, and the large population base provides stable demand. Cost of living varies significantly from expensive Philadelphia suburbs to very affordable rural areas.