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Arlington
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Arlington
Showing 1 to 2 of 2 CPAs in Arlington, Vermont
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Mary Sallisky
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Arlington, Vermont 05250
Mary Sallisky, a certified public accountant, has been providing accounting services in Arlington, Vermont, since 2005. Her expertise lies in bookkeep...
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Roger Jones
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Arlington, Vermont 05250
Based in Arlington, Vermont, Roger Jones provides accounting services to entrepreneurs and family-owned enterprises in the region. With over 12 years...

Vermont's CPA community serves a small, rural state with focus on agriculture, tourism, and small businesses. The Vermont Board of Public Accountancy 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: Vermont has graduated individual income tax up to 8.75% and graduated corporate tax up to 8.5%, among the highest rates in the nation. CPAs commonly handle state income tax compliance, sales tax, and property tax issues for the significant seasonal tourism and vacation rental market. The small state means most practitioners are generalists serving diverse client needs. Cross-border issues with New Hampshire (no income tax) and New York create planning opportunities. Many residents and businesses operate regionally across state lines requiring multi-state expertise.

Industry Specializations: Tourism and hospitality (ski resorts, fall foliage, vacation rentals), agriculture (dairy farming, maple syrup, specialty foods), forest products, small manufacturing, craft brewing and food production, healthcare, higher education, and professional services are key practice areas. CPAs often develop expertise in seasonal business cash flow management, agricultural succession planning, or serving vacation rental and small lodging operations.

For CPA Professionals: The Vermont Society of CPAs serves a small professional community across a rural state. Burlington dominates what limited market exists, with smaller practices scattered throughout resort areas and rural communities. The state offers exceptional quality of life, outdoor recreation, and strong community connections that attract lifestyle-focused practitioners willing to accept smaller market and lower compensation than urban areas. Rural areas face CPA shortages, creating opportunities for practitioners comfortable with dispersed client base and technology-enabled service delivery. The state's progressive values and focus on local, sustainable business create unique practice culture.