My first client referral for a forensic accountant came through a divorce attorney who told me, flatly: “Just hire whoever’s cheapest — they all do the same thing.” Three months and $40,000 later, the opposing expert had dismantled every opinion on the stand because our guy had never actually testified before. He’d done exactly one deposition, in a contract dispute, six years prior. The attorney had no idea. Neither had I.
That mistake is entirely avoidable. But only if you know what questions to ask before the engagement letter is signed.
The Short Version: Credentials alone don’t pick the right forensic accountant. You need someone with the right combination of certifications, courtroom experience, and case-type fit — plus a signed commitment that the person you hire is the one who actually testifies. Here’s how to separate the real professionals from the credentialed imposters.
Key Takeaways:
- CPA is table stakes. For fraud cases, a CFE is non-negotiable. For valuation, look for ABV or CFF.
- Courtroom experience means federal and state testimony under cross-examination — not just “litigation support.”
- Confirm in writing that your named expert is the one who testifies. Firms routinely substitute.
- Ask for a sample report before you hire. It tells you everything.
The Credential Stack That Actually Matters
Most people stop at “are they a CPA?” That’s asking if a surgeon went to medical school. It’s necessary — but nowhere near sufficient.
Here’s the hierarchy, ordered by relevance to your case type:
| Certification | Full Name | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| CPA | Certified Public Accountant | Baseline — required in all cases |
| CFE | Certified Fraud Examiner | Embezzlement, fraud, asset concealment |
| CFF | Certified in Financial Forensics | General litigation support, damages |
| ABV | Accredited in Business Valuation | Business disputes, partnership dissolution |
| MAFF | Master Analyst in Financial Forensics | Complex multi-issue cases |
Pro Tip: If you’re in a divorce case involving a high-net-worth spouse or a business owner, you want someone with both CFF and some demonstrated experience with hidden assets — specifically the “curiosity” to go looking for what isn’t on the balance sheet. Forensic accountant Ginita Wall describes this as the defining trait in family law: the instinct to ask “what am I not seeing?”
A master’s degree in accounting, finance, or economics isn’t a vanity credential either. It signals someone who understands the economic theory behind their damages calculations, not just the arithmetic.
The Questions Nobody Thinks to Ask
Most people interview forensic accountants the same way they shop for a plumber: availability and price. Here are the questions that actually matter.
1. How many times have you testified in the last three years, and in what courts? Federal experience signals a different level of rigor than small claims. You want someone who’s been cross-examined by a competent opposing attorney and survived.
2. Can I see a sample expert report from a comparable case? This is the single most revealing request you can make. A weak report is verbose, hedged, and full of assumptions the opposing side will gut. A strong report is precise, sourced, and defensible.
3. Will you personally be the one who testifies — in writing? Forensic accounting firms routinely sell engagements using their star expert’s credentials, then hand the work off to a junior associate. Get the name of the testifying witness in the engagement letter. If they won’t commit to it, walk.
4. Have you worked on cases involving [your specific issue]? Tax fraud, insurance claims, business interruption, and marital asset tracing are different disciplines. Experience in one doesn’t transfer cleanly to another.
5. How do you handle situations where the evidence doesn’t support the client’s position? The right answer involves some version of “I report what I find.” Anyone who hedges or implies they’ll “work with you on the framing” is a liability in the courtroom.
6. What’s your fee structure, and what happens during trial prep? Testimony preparation is expensive and non-negotiable. Get the billing model in writing before you’re locked in.
Red Flags That Should End the Conversation
Reality Check: A forensic accountant who tells you what you want to hear before reviewing the documents is not on your side. They’re building a case that collapses on cross-examination — and taking your money while they do it.
Watch for these:
- Refuses to provide references from attorneys. Credible experts have relationships with litigators who will vouch for them. “I keep my client list confidential” is not the same as integrity.
- No published work, speaking history, or academic contributions. The experts judges find credible have reputations that extend beyond their firm’s brochure.
- Vague methodology. If they can’t explain how they reached their damages figure in plain English, a jury won’t understand it either — and an opposing expert will destroy it.
- Unfamiliar with GAAP. Forensic analysis that doesn’t adhere to generally accepted accounting principles is an immediate target for exclusion as expert testimony.
- They’ve never been cross-examined. Robert Bonavito, a veteran forensic accountant, describes the job as requiring “nonlinear thinking” — the ability to spot logical flaws in real time, under pressure, and argue back quickly. That skill only comes from being in the room.
Certified vs. Uncertified: An Honest Comparison
Here’s what most people miss: uncertified doesn’t mean unqualified, but it does mean unverified.
| Factor | Certified (CPA + CFE/CFF) | Uncertified Accountant |
|---|---|---|
| Credentialing body oversight | Yes | No |
| Continuing education required | Yes | No |
| Admissibility as expert witness | Stronger baseline | Opposing counsel will challenge |
| Judge/jury familiarity | High | Variable |
| Professional standards adherence | Documented | Self-reported |
Judges and juries give weight to recognized credentials. Settling pre-trial doesn’t mean your expert was weak — it often means the opposing side’s team saw the credentials and made a calculation. A well-credentialed expert changes the settlement math before anyone gets to court.
Nobody tells you this: the expert who forces a favorable settlement without ever testifying is often doing their job better than the one who goes twelve rounds on the stand.
Practical Bottom Line
You’re not just hiring an accountant. You’re hiring the person who will explain complex financial reality to a judge or jury — clearly, credibly, under hostile questioning.
Here’s the decision sequence:
- Match certifications to your case type. Fraud → CFE. Damages → CFF. Valuation → ABV. Don’t mix these up.
- Verify courtroom history directly. Call the referring attorney, not just the expert.
- Read a sample report. If you don’t understand it, the jury won’t either.
- Get the testifying expert named in the engagement letter. This is non-negotiable.
- Discuss fees before you’re committed. Trial prep will cost more than you expect.
For a broader look at what forensic accountants actually do and when you need one, start with The Complete Guide to Forensic Accountants. If you’re building a shortlist of qualified professionals in your area, browse by location — the right expert for a federal case in Chicago is a different profile than the right expert for a divorce proceeding in a smaller jurisdiction.
The difference between a good hire and a bad one here isn’t credentials on a wall. It’s whether they’ve been tested — and whether you asked before you found out the hard way.
Find A Forensic Accountant Near You
Search curated forensic accountant providers nationwide. Request quotes directly — it's free.
Search Providers →Popular cities:
Nick built this directory to help trial attorneys find credentialed forensic accountants without wading through general CPAs who overstate their litigation experience — a gap he encountered when trying to source a qualified damages expert for a commercial dispute.