Alabama
Alabama CPA License Lookup
Search the Alabama State Board of Public Accountancy in seconds.
Alabama CPAs are licensed and disciplined by the Alabama State Board of Public Accountancy (ASBPA). Use the board's free online licensee search to confirm any Alabama CPA's status, license number, renewal date, and discipline history before signing an engagement letter.
5-step verification
How to verify a CPA license
The process is the same in every state: identify the CPA, find the issuing board, search the official portal, confirm the status, and check for discipline.
- 1
Get the CPA's full name and license number
Ask for the CPA's legal name as it appears on their license plus the license number and issuing state. A licensed CPA will share both without hesitation — anyone who won't is a red flag on its own.
- 2
Pick the right state board
CPAs are licensed by state, not federally. Verify with the board that issued the license. If the CPA practices across state lines under mobility, the issuing state is what matters for status — but check the practicing state too.
- 3
Search NASBA CPAverify or the state board portal
NASBA's CPAverify aggregates roughly 47 state boards in one free search. For states not in CPAverify (or for the cleanest record), go directly to the state board's license lookup page.
- 4
Confirm status, expiration, and license type
Look for an Active status with a current expiration date. Note whether the license is Active, Inactive, Retired, Lapsed, Suspended, or Revoked — only Active CPAs can sign attest work and represent you in audits.
- 5
Check discipline history and complaints
Most boards publish enforcement actions and consent orders. Search the CPA's name on the board's enforcement page. Recent suspensions, fraud findings, or unresolved consent orders are deal-breakers.
Official sources
State board lookups
CPAs are licensed by state. NASBA's free CPAverify aggregates roughly 47 jurisdictions in one search; for the rest, or for the most complete record, go straight to the state board.
NASBA CPAverify — multi-state lookupAlabama State Board of Public Accountancy — AlabamaReading the result
What each license status means
Status labels are similar across state boards. Here's the plain-English version — and whether each one is safe to hire.
| Status | What it means | Safe to hire? | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Active | License is current and in good standing. | Safe to hire | Can sign tax returns, audits, and reviews. |
| Inactive | Voluntarily placed on hold; CPE not required. | Caution | Cannot use the CPA title in practice or sign attest work. |
| Retired | CPA has retired the license, often after 55+. | Caution | Cannot offer paid CPA services; fine for informal mentoring. |
| Expired / Lapsed | License period ended and was not renewed on time. | Do not hire | Not authorized to practice until reinstated. |
| Probation | Active but under board supervision after a violation. | Caution | Read the consent order before hiring — terms vary widely. |
| Suspended | License paused by the board for cause. | Do not hire | Cannot legally practice as a CPA during suspension. |
| Revoked | License terminated by the board. | Do not hire | Do not hire. Revocations follow serious findings. |
| Surrendered | License voluntarily given up, often in lieu of discipline. | Do not hire | Treat the same as revoked for hiring purposes. |
Who does what
CPA vs EA vs tax preparer vs bookkeeper
"Accountant" is unregulated. These four titles cover the people most likely to touch your books or taxes — and only two of them can represent you before the IRS without restriction.
| Attribute | CPA | Enrolled Agent | Tax preparer (PTIN) | Bookkeeper |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regulated by | State board of accountancy | U.S. Treasury / IRS | IRS (PTIN only) | Not licensed; optional certifications |
| Exam | Uniform CPA Exam (4 sections) | Special Enrollment Exam (3 parts) | None required for PTIN | None (QBO/Xero certs optional) |
| Education | 150 college credits, typically a master's | No degree required | No degree required | No degree required |
| Can represent you in an IRS audit | Yes — unlimited representation | Yes — unlimited representation | Limited (only returns they prepared, if AFSP) | No |
| Can sign audited or reviewed financial statements | Yes | No | No | No |
| Typical work | Tax, audit, advisory, attest, complex planning | Tax prep, IRS representation, planning | Seasonal return prep | Day-to-day books, AR/AP, reconciliations |
| Hire when… | You need audited financials, complex tax, or strategic advisory. | You need affordable tax expertise and IRS representation. | Your return is simple and your budget is tight. | You need clean monthly books your CPA can build on. |
Hire-or-walk checklist
Warning signs before you hire
Any one of these is enough to walk away. The IRS publishes most of them as "ghost preparer" or fraud indicators every filing season.
Won't share a license number
A practicing CPA's license number is public information. Refusal almost always means the title is unearned or the license is not in good standing.
No PTIN on the return
Anyone paid to prepare a federal tax return must sign it and include their PTIN. An unsigned return — or 'self-prepared' on a return you didn't prepare — is an IRS-defined red flag.
Fee is a percentage of your refund
The IRS and every state board prohibit contingent fees on original tax returns. A percentage-of-refund pitch signals an unlicensed or unethical preparer.
Guarantees a specific refund before seeing your documents
No legitimate CPA promises a refund amount sight unseen. Guarantees are a hallmark of fraud and identity-theft schemes.
Asks you to sign a blank or incomplete return
You should review the completed return — including the preparer signature, PTIN, and firm EIN — before signing. Never sign a blank 8879 or paper return.
Routes your refund to their account
Refunds belong in your bank account or a check made out to you. Preparer-controlled refund accounts are a common fraud pattern.
No verifiable physical address or firm name
A real CPA practice has a registered firm name, a physical address, and (usually) firm registration with the state board.
Recent discipline or unresolved consent order
Suspensions, revocations, and open complaints on the board's enforcement page are public for a reason. Read them before signing an engagement letter.
Skip the guesswork
Every CPA in our directory is license-verified.
CPAZenith confirms an active license with the issuing state board for every firm we list. Search by city, state, or specialty to find one that fits.
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FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Who regulates CPAs in Alabama?+
The Alabama State Board of Public Accountancy (ASBPA) issues, renews, and disciplines every Alabama CPA license. The board publishes a free online licensee search and posts enforcement actions for public review.
Where is the Alabama CPA license lookup?+
Use the ASBPA online licensee search at asbpa.alabama.gov. You can search by name, license number, city, or firm. Results show license status, issue date, expiration, and disciplinary history if any.
When do Alabama CPA licenses renew?+
Alabama CPA registrations renew annually by September 30. CPAs in active practice must complete 40 hours of CPE per year, including at least 8 hours in accounting and auditing and 2 hours of ethics.
Can a CPA from another state practice in Alabama?+
Yes — Alabama recognizes CPA mobility for individuals in good standing who hold a substantially equivalent license. Firms performing attest work (audits, reviews, compilations) for Alabama clients must register the firm with the ASBPA.
What's the difference between a CPA, an Enrolled Agent, and a tax preparer in Alabama?+
An Alabama CPA is state-licensed and can sign audited financials and represent clients in IRS and Alabama Department of Revenue matters. An Enrolled Agent is federally credentialed for tax work and unlimited IRS representation. A tax preparer holds only a PTIN — required for paid federal returns but not a license.
Is CPAverify the same as a state board lookup?+
CPAverify is a free NASBA-hosted aggregator that searches roughly 47 of 55 U.S. jurisdictions in one place. It's the fastest first stop, but a small number of boards aren't in the index — and the state board's own portal is always the authoritative source for status, expiration, and discipline.
What does it cost to verify a CPA license?+
Nothing. Every state board publishes a free license lookup, and NASBA's CPAverify is free as well. If a site charges a fee to confirm a CPA's status, it's not the board — it's a third party.
Can a CPA practice in a state where they aren't licensed?+
Yes — under CPA mobility, a CPA in good standing in one state can serve clients in most other states without a second license, as long as they hold a substantially equivalent license. Attest work (audits, reviews) often still requires firm registration in the client's state.