Inventory valuation, overhead absorption, cost of goods analysis, and multi-state compliance — manufacturing accounting requires both precision and industry knowledge.
Manufacturing companies live and die by cost control. Standard cost vs. actual cost variances, overhead allocation, inventory valuation methods — these aren’t accounting footnotes. They directly affect your pricing decisions, your margin visibility, and your ability to bid competitively.
Our partners have served manufacturers, engineers, and agricultural operations across Florida for decades. We understand the unique financial reporting requirements of your industry and the tax strategies that make the most impact.
Schedule a Consultation →Michael has extensive experience in manufacturing, engineering, and industrial operations. He understands cost accounting, inventory, and the specific financial reporting requirements manufacturers face.
FIFO, LIFO, and weighted average each have different tax implications and financial statement effects. The right choice depends on your inventory type, price trends, and financial reporting goals. We help you select and implement the method that best serves your business.
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under Section 199A can allow manufacturers structured as pass-through entities to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income. The calculation involves W-2 wages, qualified property, and business type — we help you maximize this deduction.
Yes. Many manufacturers qualify for the R&D tax credit (Section 41) based on activities that improve products, processes, software, or formulas. We identify qualifying activities, document the credit, and defend it under IRS scrutiny.
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