Revealing the Truth Hidden in the Numbers

What Makes a Forensic Accountant Different from a CPA?

Why attorneys should look beyond the CPA license in litigation and fraud cases

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Introduction

It’s a common question among attorneys:
“Do I really need a forensic accountant, or can a CPA handle this?”

While CPAs are skilled at preparing taxes or audits, those skills don’t translate to investigating fraud, calculating damages, or testifying in court. In fact, relying on a CPA without forensic credentials can jeopardize the credibility of your case, especially when the financial evidence is complex, contested, or concealed.

Forensic accountants do more than balance the books — they uncover what the books are hiding, and they do it with courtroom-ready precision.

What CPAs Are Licensed to Do

Only certain types of work require someone to be a licensed CPA or part of a licensed CPA firm. These include:

  • Issuing audit or review opinions on financial statements
    This involves expressing formal assurance that financial statements are fairly presented according to accounting standards. It’s regulated because these opinions are used by investors, regulators, and other third parties.
  • Providing attestation services (e.g., SSAE engagements)
    This includes specialized reports that “attest” to the reliability of specific information, often in highly regulated contexts like SOC reports or internal controls evaluations.
  • Signing or issuing financial statements with assurance
    If someone prepares and signs off on a financial statement in a way that implies it’s been verified or reviewed, a CPA license is typically required.

These skills are important for business operations, but they are not designed for litigation, adversarial settings, or the nuances of financial misconduct. Most CPAs have little or no training in investigating fraud or calculating damages for trial.

What Forensic Accountants Are Trained to Do

Forensic accountants are specialists in:

  • Investigating allegations of fraud, embezzlement, and financial abuse
  • Analyzing data patterns, transactions, and concealed accounts
  • Calculating commercial damages, losses, or misappropriation
  • Preparing expert reports, exhibits, and rebuttals
  • Communicating clearly and credibly in depositions and at trial

These professionals often hold advanced credentials that go beyond the CPA, such as the Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) credential or a specialized Master of Science in Forensic and Fraud Examination (MSFFE) degree, and are specifically trained to meet legal evidentiary standards.

Key Differences Attorneys Must Understand
AreaCPAForensic Accountant (e.g., MSFFE, CFE)
FocusCompliance, taxes, auditsLitigation, fraud, damages
TrainingGAAP, tax code, financial reportingInvestigation, financial analysis, court procedure
CredentialsBachelor’s degree, CPA licenseCFE, MSFFE, litigation-specific training
OutputFinancial statements, auditsExpert reports, exhibits, courtroom testimony
Legal AwarenessLimitedDeep knowledge of discovery, admissibility, deposition
When You Need More Than a CPA

In legal matters involving money, you don’t need someone who just knows accounting, you need someone who knows how to investigate, analyze, and testify.

Bring in a forensic accountant when:

  • There are allegations of fraud, theft, or financial misconduct
  • You need damages calculated, not just numbers summarized
  • Financial records don’t reconcile — or are deliberately obscured
  • You’re preparing for trial and need someone who can testify with clarity and authority
  • The opposing side names a financial expert and you need a strong rebuttal

eritas Insight

Litigation is not business as usual — and it demands more than a generalist’s skill set. A forensic accountant’s role is to uncover, explain, and support financial truth in legal settings. That means a CPA license alone isn’t enough, and isn’t necessary.

At Veritas Consulting & Analytics, we bring courtroom-focused training and deep investigative insight to every case. Our founder holds a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) credential and a specialized Master of Science in Forensics and Fraud Examination (MSFFE) — not just proving knowledge, but ensuring a level of depth, objectivity, and clarity that legal professionals can trust.

Conclusion

When financial evidence matters, the right expert matters more. A CPA may prepare taxes and financial statements, but a forensic accountant prepares you for court.

Veritas Consulting & Analytics partners exclusively with attorneys, providing expert forensic analysis that is clear, defensible, and designed to support effective litigation strategy.

Contact us today to discuss your case and determine if forensic expertise is the right next step.