Payroll, tax top choices for outsourcing in finance

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2014. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Payroll and tax remain the most often outsourced functions for accounting and finance departments in the US and Canada, according to a new survey.

Outsourcing of payroll occurs at nearly half of US and Canadian companies participating in the fifth annual benchmarking survey released jointly Tuesday by staffing services firm Robert Half and Financial Executives Research Foundation, the research affiliate of Financial Executives International.

Forty-seven per cent of US companies and 47% of Canadian companies reported outsourcing payroll. The largest companies are more likely to outsource payroll, as 73% of US companies in the survey with revenues of $5 billion or more outsourced this function.

Nearly 1,600 companies – 79% from the US and 21% from Canada – participated in the survey.

The payroll outsourcing percentage was slightly higher in the US than in 2013 (46%). The percentage of Canadian companies outsourcing payroll dropped from 54% in 2013.

Outsourcing of tax rose in 2014 among respondents in the US (42%, up from 30% in 2013) and Canada (37%, up from 31%).

Other findings from the 2014 survey included:

  • Fifty-nine per cent of US respondents and 66% of Canadian respondents reported that they still reconcile their accounts manually.
  • A majority of respondents in the US (74%) and Canada (67%) anticipate that their compliance burden will increase over time.
  • Among US respondents, accounting and finance managers average 47 hours of work per week, while non-management staff averages 42 hours per week. Canadian respondents said managers average 46 hours and non-management staff averages 40 hours.

“What’s striking is the continuing high percentage of companies that rely on manual reconciliation of accounts – some with thousands of general ledger accounts,” Paul McDonald, a Robert Half senior executive director, said in a news release. “There is a significant opportunity for these firms to streamline the close and use their resources more efficiently.”

Ken Tysiac (ktysiac@aicpa.org) is a CGMA Magazine senior editor.

Up Next

AI vulnerabilities emerge as fastest-growing cyber risk

By Steph Brown
January 13, 2026
AI is expected to be the most significant driver of change in cybersecurity in the year ahead, according to a World Economic Forum survey.
Advertisement

LATEST STORIES

AI vulnerabilities emerge as fastest-growing cyber risk

How BI and analytics enhance management accountants’ partnering role

The evolving roles of CFOs in the Middle East

Outsourcing grows globally as leaders grapple with talent, cost constraints

Finance and cyber resilience

Advertisement
Read the latest FM digital edition, exclusively for CIMA members and AICPA members who hold the CGMA designation.
Advertisement

Related Articles