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Gillette
Filter Results
Gillette
Showing 31 to 37 of 37 CPAs in Gillette, Wyoming
SK
Susan K. McKay
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82716
Susan K. McKay is a certified public accountant based in Gillette, Wyoming, with over 15 years of experience in accounting and taxation. She specializ...
MA
Mark A. Dorr
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82716
Mark A. Dorr, a certified public accountant with over 15 years of experience, is based in Gillette, Wyoming. He provides individual and business tax r...
LJ
Leland J. Rubesh
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82717
Leland J. Rubesh is a certified public accountant based in Gillette, Wyoming, with over a decade of experience in providing accounting services to cli...
D
Daniel Zadrozny
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82716
Based in Gillette, Wyoming, Daniel Zadrozny provides accounting services to individuals and families, as well as various business structures such as S...
WT
William T. Hoese
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82716
With over 20 years of experience in the field, William T. Hoese provides accounting services to clients in Gillette, Wyoming. His areas of specializat...
ML
Margaret L. Biggerstaff
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82716
Margaret L. Biggerstaff is a certified public accountant with expertise in providing financial guidance to entrepreneurs and family-owned enterprises...
KW
Kent W. Goates
Certified Public Accountant
Verified Licensed
Location Gillette, Wyoming 82718
Kent W. Goates is a certified public accountant based in Gillette, Wyoming, with over 15 years of experience providing accounting and advisory service...

Wyoming's CPA community serves a small, tax-friendly state with resource-based economy and growing trust services sector. The Wyoming Board of Certified Public Accountants requires 150 semester hours for licensure. CPAs must complete 120 hours of continuing professional education every three years, including 8 hours of ethics and minimum technical requirements.

Key Tax Considerations: Wyoming has no state income tax and no corporate income tax, making it extremely attractive for businesses and high-net-worth individuals. CPAs focus on federal tax compliance, sales tax, and increasingly on trust and estate planning as Wyoming has positioned itself as a trust-friendly jurisdiction competing with South Dakota and Delaware. The state's favorable LLC and business laws attract entity formations from across the nation. Mineral severance taxes on coal, oil, and gas create specialized needs, and many businesses operate in multiple states requiring multi-state taxation expertise.

Industry Specializations: Energy and mining (coal, oil, natural gas, uranium, trona), agriculture (cattle ranching, hay), tourism and hospitality (Yellowstone, Grand Tetons, Jackson Hole skiing), trust services and wealth management, real estate, and professional services supporting resource industries are key practice areas. CPAs often specialize in mineral taxation and royalty accounting, ranch accounting and succession planning, trust administration, or serving the unique needs of ultra-high-net-worth individuals establishing Wyoming residency or trusts.

For CPA Professionals: The Wyoming Society of CPAs serves the nation's smallest CPA community by population. Major markets include Cheyenne (state capital), Casper (energy hub), and Jackson (wealthy resort community with unique client base). The state offers no-income-tax advantage for practitioners, outstanding outdoor recreation access, low cost of living (except Jackson), and distinctive practice opportunities. The combination of tax advantages, trust-friendly laws, and natural resource wealth creates specialized opportunities unavailable in most states. The small, close-knit professional community emphasizes relationships, and Wyoming's wide-open spaces and Western culture appeal to practitioners seeking lifestyle over market size. Energy price volatility can impact the economy, but diversification into trusts and tourism provides stability.