Accounting firms in New Jersey can improve remote access without weakening security by using a 6-part framework: review how staff work remotely, strengthen identity and access controls, improve remote access reliability and performance, secure endpoints and home-office conditions, align backup and continuity planning with remote work, and document and monitor remote access as part of the firm’s broader security program.
For CPA firms, remote access is not just a convenience feature. It is part of how the firm maintains productivity, protects client data, and keeps work moving during tax season, audit deadlines, after-hours work, hybrid schedules, and disruption events.
Key Takeaways for Accounting Firms
- Remote access should be treated as part of the firm’s operating environment and security posture, not as a background IT setting.
- Improving remote access should focus on usability, reliability, and control rather than weakening security protections.
- Platforms such as Citrix Workspace and Remote Desktop/Windows App can improve performance, but they should be paired with a VPN or another appropriate security solution and multi-factor authentication.
- Remote access should be documented, monitored, and built into backup, recovery, and continuity planning.
Why Remote Access Matters More in a CPA Firm
Many firms think about remote access in simple terms: can staff log in from home, from a client site, while traveling, or after hours if needed. That matters, but it is not the full issue.
For an accounting firm, the more important question is whether remote access supports the way the firm operates under deadline pressure. CPA firms depend on tax software, audit platforms, practice management and time and billing systems, document systems, workflow tools, other essential accounting software, email, portals, and scanning. If remote access to those systems is unstable, slow, inconsistently secured, or difficult to use, the impact spreads quickly across client work, productivity, and partner confidence.
That is why remote access should not be treated as a background IT setting. It should be treated as part of the firm’s operating environment and security posture.
The 6 Ways Accounting Firms Can Improve Remote Access Without Weakening Security
The clearest way to improve remote access is through a 6-part framework focused on usability, reliability, and control.
1. Review How Staff Work Remotely
The first step is understanding how remote access is used.
For a CPA firm, that means looking at questions such as:
- Which users need remote access regularly?
- Which systems do they need to reach?
- When is remote access most heavily used?
- Which workflows depend on home or client-site access, or from other locations?
- Where do partners and staff lose time because remote access is slow, unstable, or overly complicated?
This matters because remote access problems often remain partially hidden until busy season or other high-pressure periods. A firm may think remote access is adequate because it works most of the time, while staff are quietly tolerating lag, repeated login issues, slow file access, or inconsistent application behavior that becomes much more costly under deadline pressure.
2. Strengthen Identity and Access Controls
Remote access should become easier to use because it is better designed and better governed, not because protections are removed.
For accounting firms, that means reviewing and strengthening:
- Where MFA is enforced
- How privileged access is controlled
- How user access is approved and reviewed
- How quickly access can be removed when staffing changes occur
- Whether remote access rights still match current roles and responsibilities
This is important because a remote access environment that feels convenient but is poorly governed can increase risk very quickly. In a CPA firm, secure remote access depends on discipline around access controls, administrative access, authentication, and user management. The goal is not to weaken security to reduce login problems. The goal is to make secure access more consistent and more reliable.
3. Improve Reliability and Performance for the Systems Staff Use
Remote access should be judged by how well it supports the firm’s applications and workflows, not by whether the connection is successful at a technical level.
In many accounting firms, remote access platforms such as Citrix Workspace and Remote Desktop/Windows App are commonly used because they can help optimize performance over lower-bandwidth connections. That can be especially helpful when staff need to work with tax software, audit platforms, document systems, workflow tools, and other essential accounting software from outside the office. But those platforms should not be treated as security tools by themselves. They should be used in conjunction with a VPN or another appropriate security solution, together with multi-factor authentication, so that remote access remains both efficient and properly protected.
That means a CPA firm should review:
- Performance of tax software and audit platforms over remote access
- Access speed for document systems and file storage
- Behavior of workflow tools and portals
- VPN or remote platform stability
- Latency, dropped sessions, and repeated reauthentication issues
- Whether the current setup performs well when many users are connected at the same time
This matters because many firms are tempted to accept performance problems as normal. But remote session lag, slow file retrieval, and unstable access are not minor technical annoyances in a deadline-driven accounting firm. They reduce billable productivity and make staff work harder just to maintain normal output. Improving remote access often means improving the architecture, capacity, or design behind it rather than asking users to tolerate more.
4. Secure Endpoints and Home-Office Conditions
Remote access security does not stop with the central system. It also depends on the devices and environments from which staff connect.
For accounting firms, that often means reviewing:
- Laptop and endpoint health
- Patch and update status
- Endpoint protection and monitoring
- Encryption
- Secure Wi-Fi use
- How home or field users access firm systems without bypassing controls
- Whether users can work efficiently without creating workarounds that increase risk
Accounting firms should also consider whether firm policy requires remote access to take place only from firm-owned and properly managed devices, such as firm-issued laptops. That helps reduce the risk of staff connecting from personal devices that may not meet the firm’s standards for encryption, patching, endpoint protection, monitoring, or administrative control. In a CPA firm, where remote access often involves tax software, financial data, and other sensitive client information, that distinction matters.
This matters because remote access can become weaker over time if the firm focuses only on the login method and not on the endpoint itself. A secure remote access model should assume that partners and staff will work from multiple locations and that the endpoint remains part of the security boundary. Improving remote access often means improving endpoint readiness just as much as the connection method.
5. Align Backup, Recovery, and Continuity Planning With Remote Work
A firm should also review what happens if remote access is disrupted or if remote users cannot reach the systems they need.
That means looking at:
- Whether remote users can continue working during an outage
- Which systems must be restored first for remote staff
- Whether remote access dependencies are included in backup and recovery planning
- What alternate work methods exist if a remote platform fails
- How the firm would maintain continuity if disruption occurs during tax season
This is especially important because remote access is a part of continuity planning, not a separate convenience layer. A firm may have strong remote-work expectations and still be unprepared if a remote platform fails, an authentication breaks down, or another remote-related issue when pressure is highest. Remote access should be built into backup, recovery, and business continuity planning from the start.
6. Document and Monitor Remote Access as Part of the Security Program
Remote access should be documented, reviewed, and monitored as part of the firm’s broader security and risk-management discipline.
That often includes:
- Written remote access standards
- MFA expectations
- Access-control procedures
- Logging and monitoring practices
- User review processes
- Endpoint requirements
- Continuity and incident-response considerations
- Documentation that supports questionnaires, insurance reviews, and broader security oversight
This matters because many remote access weaknesses are not obvious until the firm is asked to explain how access is controlled, monitored, and governed. In accounting firms, remote access is often tested indirectly through client security questionnaires, cyber insurance underwriting, security documentation review, and broader risk assessments. A firm that documents and monitors remote access clearly will be in a much stronger position operationally and defensibly.
What Accounting Firm Leadership Should Ask About Remote Access
Before deciding that remote access is good enough, firm leadership should want clear answers to questions such as:
- Which systems are most important for remote partners and staff?
- Are remote access tools stable during peak periods?
- Is MFA enforced consistently?
- Are login or access issues creating avoidable delays?
- Are remote users relying on workarounds to stay productive?
- Are home and field endpoints secured and monitored appropriately?
- Could the firm continue operating if remote access were disrupted during tax season?
- Does the firm have written standards and oversight for remote access?
These are not just technical questions. They are business questions about how the firm protects client work, staff productivity, and deadline performance.
Why Generic Remote Access Setups Often Fall Short
A generic small-business remote access setup may technically allow users to connect. That is not the same as supporting a CPA firm well.
For an accounting firm, remote access should reflect specialized applications, sensitive client data, deadline-driven work, access patterns at different times of day, MFA expectations, endpoint security, and continuity requirements. If remote access is treated as a simple connection problem instead of an operational and security issue, the firm is more likely to live with recurring delays, inconsistent controls, and avoidable exposure.
This is also where generic MSP support can miss the mark. A provider may enable remote access and consider the job done, while still leaving the firm with unstable performance, weak documentation, incomplete MFA coverage, or little thought given to how remote work actually functions during busy season.
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
That experience matters because remote access in a CPA firm is not theoretical. It affects how staff work from multiple locations, how deadlines are met, how client data is protected, and how much recurring drag leadership is willing to tolerate before addressing the root causes.
FAQ
How can an accounting firm improve remote access without weakening security?
By improving design, performance, and governance rather than removing protections. For CPA firms, that means stronger MFA and access controls, better endpoint readiness, more reliable remote platforms, and clearer documentation and oversight.
Are Citrix Workspace and Remote Desktop/Windows App enough to secure remote access?
No. They can improve performance and usability, especially over lower-bandwidth connections, but they should not be treated as security tools by themselves. They should be used with a VPN or another appropriate security solution and multi-factor authentication.
Should accounting firms require remote access only from firm-owned devices?
In many cases, yes. Requiring firm-issued and properly managed devices can reduce the risk of users connecting from personal devices that do not meet the firm’s standards for encryption, patching, endpoint protection, monitoring, or administrative control.
Why should remote access be part of backup and continuity planning?
Because remote access is not a separate convenience layer. If a remote platform, authentication process, or related dependency fails during tax season, the firm still needs a way to keep staff productive and restore critical access quickly.
Related Resources for Accounting Firms
If you’re evaluating IT support for your accounting firm, these additional resources may help:
- How Should Accounting Firms Prepare Their IT Systems for Tax Season?
- How Should Accounting Firms Evaluate Cloud Providers and Private Cloud Options?
- What Should Accounting Firms Include in a Business Continuity Plan?
- How Should Accounting Firms in New Jersey Prepare for a Cybersecurity Risk Assessment?
View All Resources for Accounting Firms
This article is part of our Resources for Accounting Firms series covering IT costs, security requirements, compliance expectations, and operational risk. Go to Resources.
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