Managed IT services for accounting firms should include 6–8 core service areas that go well beyond basic help desk support. For CPA firms, managed IT is not just about fixing technology problems—it is about preventing downtime, protecting client data, and ensuring systems remain reliable during tax season and other critical deadlines.
Many generic managed service providers offer “managed IT,” but their services are typically designed for general small businesses. Accounting firms operate under stricter security expectations, regulatory pressure, and deadline-driven workloads, which requires a more specialized technology management approach.
- Managed IT for CPA firms should go beyond basic help desk support.
- Security, backup, and tax-season reliability are essential service components.
- Generic MSPs often miss compliance awareness and accounting-specific operational needs.
- The right provider should support both day-to-day IT and long-term technology planning.
Core IT Support (Where Most MSPs Stop)
At a basic level, most managed IT services include:
- Help desk support for user issues
- Device management for desktops and laptops
- System monitoring and maintenance
- Software updates and patch management
These services are necessary, but they are only the starting point. For accounting firms handling sensitive financial data, IT support must go further to address security, compliance expectations, and operational reliability.
Security and Data Protection
Because accounting firms manage tax records, financial statements, and personally identifiable information, cybersecurity protections must be embedded into daily operations.
Managed IT services for accounting firms should include:
- Multi-factor authentication (MFA)
- Endpoint detection and response (EDR) protection
- Email security and phishing protection
- Encrypted backup and recovery systems
- Continuous monitoring and alerting
Without these protections, accounting firms face increased exposure to ransomware, phishing attacks, and data breaches that could compromise client information.
Tax-Season Reliability and Business Continuity
One of the biggest differences between accounting-focused MSPs and generic IT providers is tax-season readiness.
Accounting firms should expect IT providers to support:
- Proactive system health checks before busy periods
- Rapid response for urgent issues
- Backup and recovery planning for critical systems
- Infrastructure capacity planning to handle peak workloads
Downtime is never acceptable in an accounting firm, but the consequences become especially severe during tax deadlines when delays can affect client filings and firm reputation.
Compliance Awareness and Documentation
Accounting firms increasingly face security expectations from regulators, clients, and insurance providers.
Managed IT services should help firms address:
- FTC Safeguards Rule expectations
- IRS Publication 4557 guidance for tax professionals
- Written Information Security Plan (WISP) requirements
- Cyber insurance security documentation
Providers unfamiliar with accounting firms often overlook these requirements, leaving firms unprepared for client security questionnaires or compliance reviews.
Strategic Technology Planning
Beyond day-to-day support, managed IT services should also include long-term technology planning.
Accounting firms benefit from guidance on:
- Infrastructure upgrades and hardware lifecycle planning
- Cloud platform strategy and vendor selection
- Budget forecasting and risk management
- Technology roadmaps aligned with firm growth
Strategic planning helps ensure technology decisions support the firm’s long-term operational needs rather than reacting to problems after they occur.
Real-World Perspective from Inside a Regional Accounting Firm
Total Cover IT Founder David Quick spent 17 years as the internal IT Director for a mid-sized regional accounting firm in New Jersey, supporting the firm as it grew from approximately 50 employees to more than 80.
During that time, David was responsible for:
- Designing, implementing, and maintaining the firm’s entire IT infrastructure
- Supporting specialized practice management and time and billing systems, workflow management tools, and various accounting, audit, and tax-related applications
- Minimizing downtime, especially during peak tax seasons
- Leading a full headquarters office relocation, including the migration and reassembly of core IT infrastructure, with minimal disruption
This experience provides first-hand insight into what accounting firms actually need from managed IT services—beyond generic support packages.
How Accounting Firms Should Evaluate Managed IT Providers
When choosing a managed IT provider, accounting firms should ask:
- Does this provider specialize in accounting firms?
- What security controls are included in the service offering?
- How does the provider support reliability during tax season?
- Can they help address regulatory and client security expectations?
- Do they provide strategic technology guidance or only reactive support?
The right provider acts as an extension of the firm, helping leadership manage technology risk while supporting daily operations.
Related Resources for Accounting Firms
This article is part of our Resources for Accounting Firms series, where we answer common questions about IT costs, security, and operational risk for CPA firms.
IT solutions for accounting firms in New Jersey
FAQ
What should managed IT services include for an accounting firm?
Managed IT services for accounting firms should typically include help desk support, monitoring, patching, cybersecurity protections, backup and recovery, tax-season reliability planning, compliance support, and strategic technology guidance.
Why are generic MSP services often not enough for CPA firms?
Generic MSPs are usually built for broad small business needs, while accounting firms face stricter data security expectations, deadline-driven operations, and specialized application requirements that need a more tailored approach.
How important are backup and security services for accounting firms?
They are critical. Accounting firms handle sensitive tax and financial data, so backup, recovery, email protection, MFA, endpoint security, and monitoring are essential for reducing operational and reputational risk.
Should managed IT providers also help with long-term planning?
Yes. In addition to resolving daily issues, the right provider should help with infrastructure planning, cloud strategy, budgeting, lifecycle management, and technology decisions that support firm growth.