If there’s any small silver lining to rising costs, it’s inflation or higher fees can motivate change. It might take higher restaurant prices for someone to finally learn how to cook. A struggling client would look to their CPA to rework their budget in a way that can sustain long-term growth. And Quickbooks pricing increases are tipping many CPAs toward payroll process changes.
Intuit changed rates for a range of Quickbooks products in 2022 and 2023, making it more expensive for users to continue running payroll in-house. The recent Quickbooks pricing changes include higher rates for Desktop products and ProAdvisor bundles and an increase in the per-employee fee for lower-tier payroll plans, to $5 per month per employee. Many Quickbooks wholesale plans have moved to a new pricing structure/subscription model as of January 2023.
Realistically, the Quickbooks pricing increases might not be a huge burden for small CPA firms. Desktop and ProAdvisor bundles cost a few hundred dollars more this year. Paying an extra dollar per employee for monthly payroll processing could be manageable in a firm with few employees. But paying more for payroll services, on top of the risks and challenges of running payroll in-house, might be the tipping point that gets CPAs thinking about whether it’s time to make some necessary changes.
Maintaining control of the payroll process might feel like the most secure way to handle sensitive data related to employees, clients and the firm itself. CPAs by nature have to be diligent about protecting sensitive financial data and limiting access to it. Keeping all your payroll data within your own team’s control reduces the risk of an external security breach. (That said, outsourcing payroll could mean your data is even safer since payroll services use multiple layers of protection to encrypt and secure client payroll data.)
Even with Quickbooks pricing increases, the monthly out of pocket cost to process your own payroll might be cheaper than the monthly cost of outsourcing.
In-house payroll gives you a good deal of flexibility around timing and workflow. The payroll person can run the process however and whenever works for your firm, and can make last-minute updates or changes without having to rush to track down someone at their payroll provider for help.
The decision to keep payroll in-house or outsource to a payroll service requires weighing a lot of different factors. CPAs could potentially spare themselves a great deal of expenses, time, stress, and liability by leaning on payroll professionals to process payroll correctly and answer all the complicated questions that can come up around things like multi-state taxation and employee classification.
ConnectPay partners with CPAs to make payroll easier for their clients, but our payroll solutions make life easier for CPAs too. If higher Quickbooks pricing has you looking for more cost-efficient ways to manage payroll—or if you’re just ready to take payroll off your own plate - let’s connect!
by Paul Altavena
Paul Altavena is the co-founder and President of ConnectPay. He currently leads the Mergers and Acquisitions team as part of the company’s strategy to accelerate growth. Paul’s background in payroll started in the late 1970s and includes participation in building a recognized public payroll company based in Upstate New York. His entrepreneurial spirit continues to fuel a passion for the payroll business and he is a recognized leader in a quickly changing industry.