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Onalaska
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Onalaska
Showing 1 to 3 of 3 CPAs in Onalaska, Texas
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David Polizzi
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Onalaska, Texas 77360
Based in Onalaska, Texas, David Polizzi is a seasoned accounting professional offering a range of services to meet the diverse needs of his clients. With over 15 years of experience, Polizzi specializes in providing expert guidance on tax planning and consulting, as well as IRS representation and negotiation. His expertise spans various business structures, including S-Corps, partnerships, and LLCs, as well as individual and family tax compliance services.
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Matthew Broyles
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Onalaska, Texas 77360
Matthew Broyles is a certified public accountant with over 15 years of experience based in Onalaska, Texas. He specializes in providing basic accounting services, financial planning, and small business accounting to family-owned enterprises and various business structures, including S-Corps, partnerships, and LLCs. Broyles prepares individual and business tax returns, as well as ensures compliance with sales tax regulations.
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Paul Laverty
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Onalaska, Texas 77360
Based in Onalaska, Texas, Paul Laverty brings over 10 years of experience in accounting and taxation to his clients. As a certified public accountant, he specializes in providing basic accounting services, tax compliance, and business tax guidance to family-owned enterprises and small to medium-sized businesses. With a focus on individual and business tax return preparation, as well as sales tax compliance, Mr. Laverty helps clients navigate complex tax regulations. His expertise spans a range of industries, including those with unique financial needs and reporting requirements.

Texas's massive CPA market serves the nation's second-largest state with no income tax and extraordinarily diverse economy. The Texas State Board of Public Accountancy requires 150 semester hours for licensure. CPAs must complete 120 hours of continuing professional education every three years, including 4 hours of ethics and minimum technical requirements.

Key Tax Considerations: Texas has no state income tax and no corporate income tax, creating significant advantages for businesses and individuals. CPAs focus on federal tax compliance, sales and use tax, franchise tax (margin tax on gross receipts), and property tax (higher than many states to offset lack of income tax). The favorable tax climate attracts businesses from across the nation, creating opportunities in entity formation, business relocation advisory, and preserving tax advantages through residency planning. Multi-state taxation expertise is valuable as major companies maintain operations both in Texas and other states.

Industry Specializations: Energy (oil, gas, renewables), technology and software (Austin, Dallas), healthcare systems, real estate and construction, manufacturing, financial services, agriculture, logistics and distribution, aerospace, and hospitality are primary focus areas. Houston CPAs often specialize in energy industry accounting, Austin focuses on technology startups and venture capital, Dallas serves corporate headquarters and financial services, and San Antonio emphasizes military contracting and healthcare. The state's size and economic diversity create virtually every type of accounting opportunity imaginable.

For CPA Professionals: The Texas Society of CPAs serves one of the nation's largest professional communities across a vast state. Major markets include Houston (energy, healthcare, international trade), Dallas-Fort Worth (corporate headquarters, finance, technology), Austin (technology, government, startups), San Antonio (military, healthcare, tourism), and numerous secondary markets. Competition is strong in major metros but the continued population and business influx creates expanding opportunities. No income tax benefits practitioners as well as clients, and the diverse economy provides stable demand across business cycles. Lower cost of living than many states (especially compared to coastal markets) offers quality of life advantages, though major cities are becoming more expensive with growth.