Top Banner
12 Frequently Asked Questions From International CPA Candidates With Full Answers From Stephanie Ng, CPA* 2011 By Stephanie Ng, CPA* IPassTheCPAExam.com 4/20/2011
10
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

12 Frequently Asked Questions From International CPA Candidates With Full Answers From Stephanie Ng, CPA*

2011

By Stephanie Ng, CPA* IPassTheCPAExam.com

4/20/2011

Page 2: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

Introduction

Thanks for downloading my mini-book for international CPA candidates. While this is not a full guide on how to apply and study for the CPA exam,

these questions are typical ones I got from thousands of candidates (in your same shoes) around the world.

I have also listed out the links relevant to international candidates at the end

of this book for your easy reference.

Please take a moment to read through them and should you have any

questions, please post them on this page dedicated to readers of this mini-book.

Best of luck to your journey towards the CPA.

Warm regards,

Stephanie

* About Stephanie:

Stephanie is the publisher of IPassTheCPAExam.com, a CPA exam preparation site that answers

candidates’ questions from CPA exam application, CPA review course comparison, CPA exam tactics,

licensing and life after becoming a CPA. Feel free to post your own questions at

http://IPassTheCPAExam.com.

Stephanie is a financial analyst by profession, specializing in strategic planning in a global financial

institution based in North America. She is a CPA but not in public practice.

Page 3: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

General Questions On Where To Apply

Stephanie’s notes: the USA is pretty funny in a way that lots of licenses are

generally granted by individual states instead of USA as a whole. The CPA

qualification is one example.

Instead of applying for the CPA exam at a federal government agency, candidates

go to the Board of Accountancy of each state for the application. To make things

more confusing the requirements are slightly different from one another and this

causes a lot of headache to international candidates.

I’ve got tons and tons of questions regarding which state to apply. Here are

a few classic examples:

“I wanted to ask you if you know whether is it obligatory to sit for the exam in

the same state that you reside in, or if any state will work?”

Answer: If you have solid plans to practice public accounting in your state,

then yes, it’s better to register in your own state. Otherwise, you might find that it is easier to get qualified in some other states because each state has

different requirements in terms of education and experience.

If you get an out-of-state license, you might still be able to practice public accounting in your own state while registering in other states, but it will

depend on whether that state is considered a substantially equivalent state.

Long story short, I guess the answer is, no, it is not obligatory to sit for the

exam in your own state, but it has some advantages.

“I just want to know which state I should register for exams? I am Canadian

citizen and CGA.”

Answer: Hi, if you have fulfilled the 150 semester hours you can either go through Illinois or Colorado. Illinois is better because it is considered a

substantially equivalent state. It is also the most popular among Canadian

accountants as far as I know.

Page 4: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

For Illinois, my site may look confusing because the state board has been

changing rule back and forth. They used to allow those fulfilled 150 semester hour to automatically get the CPA certificate (not full license, but good

enough for you to use the CPA title in your business card with some restrictions) without any working experience. Lots of Canadian CAs go

through IL because of that.

Then, earlier in 2010 they announced that they are taking away the certificate so everyone needs to have at least one year of experience, to the

dismay of many aspiring CPAs.

Then, as recently as the end of June 2010, they are postponing this change

until 2 years later (July 1, 2012).

So in short, it should work for you, for now. Please check out the Illinois CPA requirements for details.

Lastly, you might be able to get qualified for a simpler version of CPA exam known as IQEX as long as you get your bachelor/master’s degree in Canada

or other countries with reciprocal agreements with the US. Please click the link and see if it applies to you.

“Hi Stephanie, I have done my bachelors and masters in commerce (B.com),

(M.com) from India with three years of work experience and currently

pursuing M.B.A course in London… I am quite confused to select a state among

Florida, Delaware, Colorado, California and Massachussets. Can you please

help me with your suggestion in which state I should apply for or should go for

any other state.”

Answer: It looks like you can probably fulfill the 150 semester hours with a M.comm, but knowing India has a 3-year university program it will be up to

the foreign credential evaluation agencies to decide. you can check out the WES’ Indian policy for reference because apparently the decision also

depends on which school and what grade you get from the B.comm. You can get the link from this page.

Delaware has easy CPA exam requirements but a pretty tough licensing

requirements, so be careful (e.g. they only recognize work that is verified by

the US CPA, not CPA anywhere).

Page 5: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

Not too familiar with Florida but I heard it’s a hassle to get a license there,

even for US nationals.

For Colorado, if you don’t have 150 semester hours you’ll need to work in PUBLIC accounting. So have to be careful also.

CA and MA should be more friendly so you can take a closer look.

“Hi Stephanie, I am from Pakistan and wish to go for CPA in 2011.i have done

B.COM (2 years) and CA intermediate(2 years) as well as I have 4 years of

Experience in Ernst &Young under CPA from US. plz tell me which state is

suitable for me to apply. Thanx.”

Answer: I understand that a 3-year B.Com degree (say from India) is typically equivalent to an associate degree. Not sure how 2-year degree is

treated but I would think it is likely to be something similar to an associate degree.

If this is the case, then Delaware will be your only choice. Delaware is very strict with respect to working experience requirement. They need 4 years of

experience for associate degree holders, but the greatest thing is that you are spot on. So looks like there shouldn’t be a problem.

Page 6: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

Fulfilling The Requirements

Stephanie’s note: most states require 150 credit hours (~ 5 years of university,

generally means 1 4-year bachelor degree + 1 year of master’s degree) while a

handful of states are fine with 120 credit hours.

For international students graduating in countries awarding 3 -year degrees,

this could cause some problems because a 3-year degree is generally

considered an “associate degree” in the US i.e. n ot enough for qualification

purposes. There are ways to work around it, for now, before all states close

up the “loopholes”.

A note on experience requirements: please be aware that the CPA exam is only

part of the CPA licensing process. You need to fulfill the required experience as

well so please do make sure you are able to fulfill that before spending your

time applying and studying for the exam.

“ Hi Stephanie, I am interested in giving the CPA Exam asap, but I have a B.Com degree from India, which I know is not equivalent to the CPA requirements as I don’t want give it from Delaware because of the 4 year work requirement. So I’m thinking of doing a CMA from Canada. But will that help me reach the 150 hr requirement?”

Answer: Hello, I think CMA *may* help you accumulate the 150 credit

hours (but it depends on which state you are applying to), but it will not help

to make your degree from say 3 years to 4 years… so probably doesn’t work

I am afraid.

“Hello Stephanie

I am from MD and I got my education evaluation done. I got 150 credit hours and FACS said that I qualify to sit for CPA exam. But MD has one more requirement to sit for CPA exam. It says that we should have 3 semester hrs in U.S. Business Law and U.S. Federal Income tax.

Page 7: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

Virginia has 120 to sit for CPA exam and 150 to get the license.

I have two options here:

1) Either I have to do CPA in MD by satisfying its requirements that costs me additional $1200.00 OR 2) Write CPA from VA as I satisfy their requirements. Me and my husband already decided not to take license as we are not interested in practice right away. I would like to finish CPA and work in companies.

Can you please advise me which one I have to follow?”

Answer: If you are just getting the CPA for credentails only, why not get it

from Illinois? I think their requirement is more “general” without specific

course requirement like Maryland (please call them up to make sure though).

Also, you don’t need to fulfill working requirements to get the CPA license

which is good for you to get the wall certificate and become a member of

AICPA.

If you decide to get a full license, you can also do it in Illinois by fulfilling

one year of working experience.

“Hi Stephanie, I have 4 years working experience (audit) of public accounting in Hong Kong, will they recognize experiences gained in Hong Kong?

Thanks in advance!”

Hello, it will depend on whether your experience can be verified by your

supervisor who is a US CPA license holder.

Some states are more flexible and recognize verification from CPA

“equivalent” (i.e. essentially means CAs from Canada or CA/CPAs from

Australia).

If you apply through Indiana, they are even more flexible – only need

verification from any CPA license holder you know.

Otherwise, it might be difficult to get your experience recognized even

though you work at Big 4… but I would think that at least some partners /

senior manager / managers would have a CPA from the US? Best of luck!

Page 8: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

“Hi stephanie, I m doing MBA finance and i want to do CPA after doing MBA

finance but i want to know is there any possibility of exemption of my courses

for CPA program.”

Answer: If you have a MBA, you are probably able to fulfill the 150 credit

hours so you won’t need any exemptions… unless you don’t get the

minimum accounting courses. There are no exemptions as far as I know but

you can choose a state that has fewer accounting course requirements.

“I have my BBA from India, it is a 3 yr course. I had my mark sheets evaluated

and found out i had 99 semester hours. I want to take the exam from

California board which requires 120 credits hours and 24 accounting and 24

business credits. I am also taking an accounting certificate program from

UCSD and will get the remaining 24 credits by next month. I want to know if CA

board will accept my application, or will reject it because i don’t have a

“graduate degree” (a 4 yr degree) even if i have all the required credit hours?

My degree is considered an associate degree right? If i take the exam from

Delaware or Colorado board, is it hard to transfer those credits to CA board?

What is the procedure to transfer CPA exam credits from one state to another?”

Answer: Yes it depends if your degree is considered an “associate degree”

or “bachelor degree” (in the US, 4-year degree is a typical bachelor, unlike

India).

Colorado board also requires 120 credit hours, so for associate degree holders and equivalent they have to go through Delaware. Just check the

Delaware CPA exam requirements page for details – note they have strict working experience requirement to get the license.

Yes there might still be some restrictions in transferring because of the associate degree not fulfilling the requirements on any states… but if you

want to get the CPA for credentials only Delaware is good enough.

Hope things will work out for you!

Page 9: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

Foreign Credential Evaluation

Stephanie’s note: The state board of accountancy, who processes th e CPA exam

application for each state, is understandably not familiar to the educational

qualification outside of US.

They need some agencies to do the “translation” for them. This is when the

questions on foreign credential evaluation agencies come up.

Unless you take ALL the required courses in the US you will have to deal with

them.

“I need to send my transcripts and mark sheets to the evaluation agency, but I

only have one original copy. It’s exceedingly hard to ask my school to produce

an extra one. Do these agencies ask for originals? What should I do?”

Answer: Don’t worry, as most credential evaluation agencies accept notarized copies, which you can easily do in the US and hopefully, in your country as well. As far as I know, the only major evaluation agencies that

asks for original transcripts is WES.

“In one of your answers you were mentioning that Indian Bachelor’s degree is

recognized by WES. If I can produce all the transcripts that WES wants , is it

better to go with WES or both WES and FACS evaluate the same. Can you please

advise me to choose better evaluation organization.”

Answer: Hello, Actually, what I meant is that WES has a more transparent Indian policy that you can view online… it doesn’t mean that they are necessarily more lenient to Indian students. I don’t have the data or enough

sample to determine which is “better” per se, but you can check out the pros and cons of the two I have identified in this page on foreign credential

evaluation agencies. hope it helps!

Page 10: 12 FAQ by Intl CPA Candidates

“I was going through the website FACS and also saw their application for

education evaluation. In that, they say that they will be sending one copy of

evaluation to the State Board of Accountancy. This means that before we apply

for evaluation we have to apply for the state board? What if after evaluation I

fall short of 150 hrs, requirement to sit for CPA exam? What to do to cover the

fall short hours?”

Answer: Yes, you are right usually people apply to the state board and the

evaluation agency together. In any case, even if you don’t apply to the board first you have to at least decide on one.

If you have a M.Com, my gut feeling is that you shouldn’t be too far off from

the 150 semester hour requirement. If in case you do fall short of it, then what you can do is to simply take a few courses online from the accredited

colleges to make it up (I also need to do some of these makeups myself).

It is of course a hassle but is something doable, so you can think about

whether you will be willing to put in the extra time, effort and money if it turns out that you fall short of the 150 semester hours.

If you really don’t want to take further courses, then you can consider sitting

for the exam in one of those states that require 120 hours, which I am quite sure you can get with your M.Com degree. There are various restrictions/

disadvantages of these states but you can check them out here.

Your Next Steps

I hope the answer to these typical questions can shed some light on your

application process.

You can always go to these pages to gather more information:

CPA application process for international candidates 5 Most popular states for international CPA candidates

Foreign Credential Evaluation: An Overview

CPA Exam Requirements By State (where there are links to all 50 states and 4 jurisdictions

See you there!