How to Invoice as a CPA / Accountant in Texas

How to invoice as a cpa / accountant in Texas: TX sales tax 6.25% (services usually exempt), late fees capped at 1.5%/mo under Tex. Bus. & Com. Code §2.207; Tex. Fin. Code §302.002. Step-by-step guide with a free template.

State sales tax
6.25%
Late fee cap
1.5%/mo
Net terms
30 days
Deposit
50%

1. Texas-specific invoice requirements

  • Sales tax line: 6.25% state rate. Most services rendered in Texas are exempt from sales tax — but materials, parts, and tangible goods are not. Most labor exempt; tangible goods and certain services taxable. Combined max 8.25%.
  • Late-fee cap: Texas statute Tex. Bus. & Com. Code §2.207; Tex. Fin. Code §302.002 caps interest on unpaid invoices at 1.5% per month. Spell out the rate in writing on every invoice and in your contract — courts won't enforce undisclosed fees.
  • Right-to-cancel notice: Customers in Texas get 72-hour cancellation rights on certain home-services contracts. Disclose this in your terms.

2. CPA / Accountant line items + standard terms

Every cpa / accountant invoice in Texas should itemize work clearly. Standard cpa / accountants use Net 30 terms with a 50% deposit required upfront.

  • Tax return — individual — billed by flat.
  • Tax return — business — billed by flat.
  • Bookkeeping monthly — billed by flat.
  • Hourly advisory — billed by hour (~$235 default).

3. CPA / Accountant licensing in Texas

CPA license required for attest services and the CPA designation. EAs licensed federally to represent before IRS.

4. Send and follow up

Send the invoice the same day work completes. Use software that records open events and offers a one-click online payment so you don't need to chase a check by mail. Texas customers expect digital payment options today — accepting card and ACH typically reduces days-to-paid by 30–50%.

Average invoice
$1,850
State
TX
Net terms
30 days
Deposit
50%

Texas metro guides

Metro-specific guides include the combined sales-tax rate and local pricing benchmarks.

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