Free Guide — Accountants & Bookkeepers

AI for accountants: cut admin hours without cutting corners

You got into accounting to work with numbers — not to spend half your day writing the same client emails over and over. Here's how to fix that.

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The billable hour problem nobody talks about

You charge for your expertise — analyzing financials, filing returns, spotting issues before they become expensive problems. That's the work clients are paying for.

But a huge chunk of every week isn't that work. It's explaining the same month-end summary to three different clients. It's writing a follow-up email asking for missing documents. It's drafting a proposal for a prospect who probably already knows they want to hire you. It's answering "what does this number mean?" for the fourth time this week.

None of that requires your CPA brain. It requires clear writing and consistent communication — which is exactly what AI is built for. This guide covers five specific tasks where accountants get the most time back, with the exact prompts to use for each.

40%
of an accountant's week is non-billable admin and communication
3–5h
saved per week by firms using AI for client communication
$0
cost to start — you can begin with free AI tools today

Task 1: Client emails that don't take 20 minutes each

Task 01

Write professional client emails in under 2 minutes

⏱ From 15–20 minutes → under 2 minutes per email

Most accounting client emails follow predictable patterns: requesting missing documents, explaining what you found, sending a summary, following up on an unpaid invoice, or reminding a client about a deadline. You've written each of these dozens of times.

AI handles the first draft instantly. You spend 60 seconds reviewing and adjusting the tone or any specific detail. Done.

Prompt — missing document request
Write a professional but friendly email to a client asking them to send over the following documents before [deadline]. Keep it under 150 words. Don't use words like "per my last email" or "as discussed." Documents needed: - [list items here] Client name: [name] Reason we need them: [brief context — e.g., "to complete your Q1 bookkeeping"] Tone: professional but approachable, not stiff
Prompt — month-end summary email
Write a brief email to a business owner summarizing their monthly financial results. Keep it under 200 words. Explain the key numbers in plain English — no accounting jargon. Highlight one positive and one area to watch. Client name: [name] Business type: [e.g., retail shop, consulting firm, restaurant] Revenue this month: [amount] Expenses this month: [amount] Net profit: [amount] Notable items: [anything unusual — big expense, spike in revenue, etc.]

The key principle: give AI the facts and the context, and let it handle the writing. You review for accuracy, send. Most clients will never know the difference — they'll just notice that you respond faster and communicate more clearly than anyone else they work with.

Task 2: Explaining financials in plain English

Task 02

Turn reports into explanations clients actually understand

⏱ From 30 minutes of re-explaining → a clear summary ready before the call

Most business owners didn't go to accounting school. When they see a P&L, they see a wall of numbers. They're nodding during the call but they'll email you three follow-up questions before dinner.

AI can translate any financial statement into plain English in seconds. Send the explanation before the call and you'll spend half the time re-explaining and twice as much time on the decisions that actually matter.

Prompt — P&L plain English summary
Explain the following profit and loss results to a small business owner with no accounting background. Use plain English. No jargon. Keep it to 3–4 short paragraphs. Focus on: what happened, why it matters, and one thing they should watch or act on next month. Business: [type of business] Period: [month/quarter] Revenue: [amount] Cost of goods sold: [amount] Gross profit: [amount] Total operating expenses: [amount] Net income: [amount] Key changes vs. last period: [describe any significant changes]

You can also use this for year-end summaries, tax prep explanations, or any time a client asks "so what does this actually mean for me?" Paste in the numbers, get the explanation, review for accuracy, send. The client feels heard and informed. You've spent 3 minutes instead of 30.

Task 3: Service proposals that close faster

Task 03

Draft an engagement letter or service proposal in minutes

⏱ From 2–3 hours → 20 minutes including review

Writing proposals is one of the highest-friction tasks in any accounting practice. You know what you're going to offer. You know roughly what you'll charge. But sitting down to structure it, write it out, and make it sound professional takes forever — especially after a full day of client work.

AI won't write the proposal for you. It will produce a strong first draft in 30 seconds that you then customize with your specific terms, pricing, and personality. The time you save is the time you used to spend staring at a blank page.

Prompt — monthly bookkeeping proposal
Write a professional service proposal for monthly bookkeeping services. Tone: clear, confident, not salesy. Length: 300–400 words. Include: scope of services, what's included/excluded, how the engagement works, and a brief section on what the client can expect in the first 30 days. Prospect name/business: [name] Services included: [e.g., monthly reconciliation, P&L, payroll summary review] Services not included: [e.g., tax filing, payroll processing] Monthly fee: [amount or "pricing to be discussed"] Turnaround time for monthly reports: [e.g., by the 10th of each month] Any specific pain point they mentioned: [e.g., "they said their books are always behind"]

Once you have a working draft, save it as your base template. The next proposal takes 10 minutes instead of 2 hours — you just update the specific details. Over a year, that's dozens of hours back.

Task 4: Answering the same questions without writing them from scratch

Task 04

Build a library of client-ready answers for your most common questions

⏱ Stop rewriting the same answer 15 times a year

Every accounting practice has a list of questions they answer on repeat. "What do I need to keep track of for taxes?" "Should I be an S-corp?" "What's the difference between cash and accrual?" "When do I need to pay estimated taxes?"

You know the answers cold. The problem is writing them out in a clear, client-appropriate way every time someone asks — especially when the question comes in at 9 PM via email.

Prompt — build a reusable FAQ answer
Write a clear, accurate answer to this common accounting question for a small business owner. Keep it under 250 words. Use plain English. No jargon. End with one action item they can take today. Question: [paste the question] Key points to cover: [list 2–3 things you always mention when answering this] Anything to avoid saying: [e.g., "don't say this is always the right answer — it depends on their situation"] Tone: direct and helpful, like a trusted advisor explaining over coffee

Build 10–15 of these answers once. Save them somewhere you can find them. The next time a client asks, paste, review, send. Total time: 30 seconds. You get to stop writing the S-corp explanation for the nineteenth time and start spending that 10 minutes on something that actually moves your business forward.

Task 5: Tax season communication without the chaos

Task 05

Write the annual document request, reminders, and status updates in one sitting

⏱ Draft a whole season's client communication in under an hour

Tax season is the same every year — and so is the communication around it. You need to send a document request in January, reminder in February, status update when the return is ready, and follow-up on any extensions. The content barely changes client to client.

Instead of writing each one fresh, batch them. Use AI to draft the full sequence once, then customize names and specific details for each client. An hour of work at the start of the season eliminates weeks of scattered email-writing later.

Prompt — annual tax prep document request
Write a professional, friendly email to a small business client requesting their tax documents for the [year] tax year. Length: under 200 words. Include: a checklist of what to send, the deadline to submit for on-time filing, and how to send the documents. Client name: [name] Business type: [e.g., LLC, S-Corp, sole proprietor] Documents needed: [list — e.g., bank statements, 1099s, payroll summary, receipts over $X] Submission deadline: [date] How to send: [e.g., upload to client portal at [URL]] Tone: warm and clear — they've worked with us for years
Prompt — return ready notification
Write a short, clear email telling a client their tax return is ready for review and signature. Under 120 words. Include: what they need to do, deadline to sign, and a note about their refund or amount owed (brief, not detailed). Client name: [name] Return type: [e.g., individual 1040, business S-Corp] Result: [refund of $X / balance due of $X / no change] How to review and sign: [e.g., log in to client portal, or we'll schedule a 15-minute call] Signature deadline: [date]

Draft the full sequence now. You'll thank yourself in March when your inbox is at peak chaos and every client email is already written.

What AI shouldn't do in your practice

AI is genuinely useful for accounting admin. It's not a replacement for your professional judgment. Here's the clear line:

How to get started this week

  1. Pick one email type you write constantly

    Document requests, monthly summaries, overdue invoice follow-ups — pick the one that takes you the most time. Write the prompt for that type first.

  2. Draft the prompt, test it on a real example

    Paste in a real scenario (with client names removed) and see what comes out. Adjust the prompt until the output needs minimal editing. Save that prompt.

  3. Build your prompt library over 2 weeks

    Every time you write an email type you haven't added yet, create the prompt for it. After two weeks, most of your common communication types are covered.

  4. Share it with your team

    If you have staff, put the prompts somewhere everyone can access them. The consistency benefit alone — everyone communicating in the same professional tone — is worth the 30 minutes to set it up.

Get the complete accounting communication kit

The Library includes a full set of done-for-you prompts for accounting and bookkeeping firms: document request templates, monthly report summaries, proposal frameworks, tax season sequences, and client FAQ answers. Already written. Already tested. Just fill in the details and send.

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