Dive Brief:
- New York Gov. Kathy Hochul on Friday signed into law state legislation (A7613B) that establishes an alternative route for candidates to obtain a certified public accountant license that doesn’t require 150 hours of college credit — typically the equivalent of five years of post-secondary education.
- The law sets up new rules which enable CPA candidates to become licensed with 120 college credit hours, two years of professional experience and the passage of the CPA exam. A bachelor’s degree is typically equivalent to 120 credit hours.
- “The Governor has officially signed the 120-credit-hour CPA pathway into law, giving future CPAs an additional route to enter the profession,” Calvin Harris Jr., CEO of the New York State Society of CPAs wrote in a Friday Linkedin post. “This new pathway becomes effective one year from today — and represents one of the most significant pipeline reforms in a generation.”
Dive Insight:
With the law on the Empire State’s books, at least 24 states have either changed their accounting certification laws this year or their professional boards have revised rules to offer an alternative path to licensure that would require just a bachelor’s degree. The 150-hour credit rule had been viewed by critics as a costly barrier that prevented some students from pursuing the profession.
New York joins a broader push by the industry to change the CPA licensing process in a bid to draw a new generation of CPA candidates and address the accounting talent shortage.
Experts have been watching New York and New Jersey legislatures closely because if they both enact laws by the end of the year half the country would have the revised CPA rules in place.
Keep up with CPA licensure changes with CFO Dive’s tracker on the topic here.