Posted: 17 Jan 2010 at 14:27 | IP Logged
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The work of a tax attorney is more along the lines of what I'm interested in, but of course, you need the law school which is out of the question for me financially. It will take more time, but there are ways you can eventually do more of the tax attorney type of work even as a tax accountant. There a Tax Court exam for non-attorneys that, if you pass, can allow you to represent clients in tax court. That's what I'm studying for these days.
Good summary, QuantJockMN, but you are talking about entry level. And note the age differences. By the time the 22 year old tax accountant is 25+, they will be at least a senior tax accountant who, although still stuck with a lot of tedious compliance work, also gets to do more of the research and planning.
But, if you have a mom or dad who is able and willing to pay for or help substantially with law school, I'd definitely recommend the law school to tax attorney route if you are at all interested in that kind of work.
__________________ KJ, CPA licensed in New York
AUD - May 2009 - 99
FAR - July 2009 - 99
REG - Aug 2009 - 99
BEC - Oct 2009 - 93
License applied for Nov 2009, received Jan 2010
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