This page provides practical guidance for CPA firms navigating FTC Safeguards compliance, including cost expectations, staffing models, and required security controls.
Who This FTC Safeguards Guidance Is For
This resource is designed specifically for:
- CPA firms subject to the FTC Safeguards Rule
- Firms with 20–50 employees
- Firms without dedicated internal security or compliance staff
- Firms responding to client due-diligence or security questionnaires
- Firms preparing for regulatory reviews or audits
- Firms seeking clarity on cost, scope, and operational impact
If your firm handles non-public client information, FTC Safeguards compliance is not optional.
What the FTC Safeguards Rule Requires CPA Firms to Do
Under the FTC Safeguards Rule, CPA firms must implement and maintain a Written Information Security Program (WISP) appropriate to their size, complexity, and risk profile.
In practical terms, this includes:
- Designating a Responsible Individual to oversee the program
- Performing and documenting risk assessments
- Implementing access controls and enforced multi-factor authentication (MFA)
- Monitoring systems to detect security events
- Maintaining written policies and procedures
- Retaining audit-ready documentation and evidence
- Reviewing and updating controls on an ongoing basis
FTC Safeguards does not require enterprise-scale security teams or excessive tooling—but it does require provable controls, oversight, and documentation.
FTC Safeguards Resources for CPA Firms
The resources below address the most common and urgent questions CPA firms ask when implementing FTC Safeguards compliance.
Cost & Budgeting
What Does FTC Safeguards Compliance Cost for a CPA Firm?
Clear pricing ranges, cost drivers, and what CPA firms should expect to budget for ongoing compliance.
Staffing & Governance
Can a CPA Firm Pass an FTC Safeguards Audit Without Hiring a Full-Time Security Officer?
How the Responsible Individual role works and how firms meet requirements without adding internal headcount.
Controls & Security Architecture
What IT and Security Controls Do CPA Firms Actually Need — and What Do Vendors Oversell?
A risk-based breakdown of required controls versus unnecessary tool sprawl.
Timeline & Readiness
How Long Does It Take a CPA Firm to Become FTC Safeguards Compliant?
Typical timelines for FTC Safeguards compliance, including what allows some CPA firms to become audit-ready in 30–45 days and why others require 60–90 days.
Risk & Consequences
What Happens If a CPA Firm Fails FTC Safeguards Compliance?
The regulatory, financial, and business consequences of non-compliance, including how gaps are usually discovered through client due-diligence, insurance reviews, or incidents.
Roles & Accountability
What Is a “Responsible Individual” Under FTC Safeguards for CPA Firms?
A clear explanation of the Responsible Individual requirement, who typically fills this role in CPA firms, and what responsibilities it includes — without requiring a full-time security hire.
How CPA Firms Typically Operationalize FTC Safeguards Compliance
Most CPA firms follow a practical, phased approach:
- Initial risk assessment and gap analysis
- Policy and documentation alignment
- Control implementation and enforcement
- Centralized evidence collection and monitoring
- Ongoing reviews, updates, and audit readiness
This approach allows firms to stay compliant year-round, even during busy season.
Common FTC Safeguards Mistakes CPA Firms Make
CPA firms often run into compliance issues due to avoidable missteps, including:
- Treating FTC Safeguards as a one-time project
- Buying security tools without documentation or oversight
- Assigning compliance responsibility informally
- Lacking audit-ready evidence during reviews
- Ignoring the operational realities of tax season
These gaps typically surface during client questionnaires or regulatory scrutiny.
Next Steps for CPA Firms
CPA firms typically begin FTC Safeguards compliance with a risk-based readiness assessment to identify current gaps, required controls, and documentation needs.
If your firm is unsure where it stands—or wants clarity before an audit or client review—starting with a structured assessment is the most effective first step.