Cannabis CPA in Connecticut
19 cannabis accounting firms serving Connecticut dispensaries, cultivators, manufacturers, and MSOs. IRC Section 280E tax planning, COGS allocation under IRC 471, METRC reconciliation, bookkeeping, and IRS audit defense.
Connecticut cannabis tax and accounting landscape
Connecticut launched recreational cannabis sales with a strong equity focus and publishes industry data through its open data portal. Connecticut is an emerging cannabis market with approximately 300 active cannabis licenses operating under CT rules. Every Connecticut cannabis operator faces federal IRC Section 280E, which disallows ordinary business expense deductions and makes proper COGS allocation under IRC Section 471 the single most important accounting discipline for the industry.
State tax advantage: Connecticut has decoupled from Section 280E for state income tax purposes. Cannabis operators can deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses on their Connecticut state return even though those expenses remain non-deductible federally. A cannabis-specialized CPA will prepare federal and Connecticut returns with different deductibility treatment and document the permissible state add-backs clearly. Regulator: Department of Consumer Protection - portal.ct.gov/cannabis.
19 Cannabis Accounting Firms Serving Connecticut
Calyx CPA
CPAs & Accountants
Calyx CPA specializes exclusively in cannabis and psychedelic businesses, offering tax preparation, planning, and IRS audit representation nationwide.
GreenGrowth CPAs
CPAs & Accountants
Expert CPA services for cannabis businesses - cultivators, retailers, and MSOs. Specializes in 280E compliance and scaling.
Cannabis CPA Tax
CPAs & Accountants
Boutique CPA firm serving small- and medium-sized cannabis and CBD companies across 19 states and DC.
MGO CPA
CPAs & Accountants
One of the first national accounting firms to develop targeted services for the cannabis and hemp industries.
HBK Cannabis Solutions
CPAs & Accountants
Accounting Today Top 100 CPA Firm with a dedicated team of cannabis industry subject matter experts.
CohnReznick
CPAs & Accountants
Top 25 national firm helping both plant- and non-plant-touching companies navigate cannabis accounting challenges.
The Canna CPAs
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis-focused CPA firm with over 20 years of IRS representation experience serving dispensaries and cultivation operations nationwide.
Dark Horse CPAs
CPAs & Accountants
Modern CPA firm offering cannabis-specific tax planning, bookkeeping, and fractional CFO advisory services.
DOPE CFO
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis accounting education, training, and services network. Founder speaks at AICPA National Cannabis Conferences.
Marcum LLP
CPAs & Accountants
Top 100 firm with 23 offices and a dedicated Cannabis Services Group.
MyCannabisAccountant
CPAs & Accountants
Accounting firm specializing in CPA services, tax preparation, and financial advisory for cannabis industry clients.
PK Cannabis
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis-focused accounting and business consulting firm based in Texas.
Cendrowski Corporate Advisors
CPAs & Accountants
Corporate advisory firm with cannabis accounting specialization. Offices in Michigan and Chicago.
Your420Accountant
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis-focused accounting and CFO advisory services for cannabis businesses.
Mindtrix Accounting
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis-specialized accounting firm offering bookkeeping, outsourced CFO, and 280E strategy services.
Dope CPA
CPAs & Accountants
Cannabis accounting and CFO services focused on growth and compliance for operators.
Cherry Bekaert
CPAs & Accountants
Top 25 national CPA firm with a cannabis industry practice group.
Sax LLP
CPAs & Accountants
Top 100 CPA firm with cannabis industry expertise serving multi-state operators and license applicants.
BGM
CPAs & Accountants
BGM has guided 600+ cannabis businesses since 2009, one of the most experienced cannabis accounting firms in the US.
Need a cannabis attorney too?
12 cannabis attorneys serve Connecticut. Most cannabis tax and accounting matters in Connecticut are stronger when an attorney and CPA coordinate, especially on entity structuring, dual-entity 280E strategies, and IRS audit response.
Cannabis Lawyers in Connecticut→Frequently Asked Questions - Connecticut Cannabis CPAs
What does a cannabis CPA in Connecticut do differently than a regular accountant?+
Cannabis CPAs serving Connecticut specialize in IRC Section 280E compliance, which prohibits cannabis businesses from deducting ordinary operating expenses federally. They focus on maximizing Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) allocation under IRC Section 471 - the only legitimate path to reducing cannabis federal tax liability. Connecticut cannabis CPAs also handle METRC or state-system inventory reconciliation, dual-entity structuring (CHAMP-style), state-level tax treatment, and IRS audit defense. Regular CPAs generally lack experience with cannabis-specific inventory accounting and are not equipped for plant-touching tax work.
How much does a cannabis CPA in Connecticut cost?+
Cannabis CPA fees in Connecticut vary by business size and scope. Monthly bookkeeping for a Connecticut dispensary typically runs higher than standard retail bookkeeping because of inventory reconciliation and 280E-compliant COGS tracking. Tax preparation and Section 280E planning are usually billed separately. Specialty work (IRS audit defense, dual-entity setup, M&A due diligence) is billed hourly at specialist rates. Always ask for a written engagement letter that separates ongoing bookkeeping from tax work and planning.
Does Connecticut follow IRC Section 280E for state income tax?+
No. Connecticut has decoupled from IRC Section 280E at the state level. Cannabis operators CAN deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses on their Connecticut state income tax return, even though those same expenses remain non-deductible federally. This decoupling creates a legitimate state-level tax benefit most non-cannabis CPAs miss. A cannabis-specialized Connecticut CPA will file federal and state returns with different deductibility treatment and document the permissible state add-backs clearly.
How is COGS allocated for a cannabis business in Connecticut?+
Under IRC Section 471, cannabis businesses must properly allocate direct and indirect production costs to inventory (COGS) rather than expensing them as operating costs. For Connecticut cultivators this includes seeds, nutrients, cultivation labor, and grow-facility overhead. For manufacturers it includes extraction labor, solvents, lab testing costs, and production equipment depreciation. For dispensaries COGS is generally limited to the wholesale purchase price plus inbound transportation. A cannabis CPA familiar with Connecticut operations can document the allocation properly under Section 471 and defend it to an IRS examiner.
What should I look for in a cannabis CPA for Connecticut?+
Look for: explicit Section 280E and IRC 471 experience, track record with cannabis clients in Connecticut or similar jurisdictions, comfort with METRC (or the state-specific tracking system in Connecticut), experience defending cannabis clients in IRS audits and examinations, familiarity with dual-entity (CHAMP-style) structuring, and a clear understanding of CT state-level tax rules. Ask for references from other cannabis clients. Many cannabis CPAs serve nationally via video and secure portals, so you are not limited to in-state firms.
Do I need a CPA if cannabis is getting rescheduled to Schedule III?+
Yes. IRC Section 280E only applies to Schedule I and II substances, so rescheduling to Schedule III should eliminate the federal 280E burden once finalized. However, the transition is the highest-risk moment for cannabis operators. Amended returns, carryback claims, changes in accounting method, and timing of the deductibility shift all require careful planning. State-level rules in Connecticut may or may not automatically follow the federal change. A cannabis CPA is essential during this transition to avoid leaving legitimate savings on the table or creating new audit exposure.