The Ohio Society of CPAs announced yesterday that their state is leading the way in alternative pathways to CPA licensure, officially. Here’s what they said:
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine signed House Bill 238 into law on Jan. 8, which includes OSCPA-backed legislation that will position Ohio as a national leader in addressing the dire CPA shortage.
Effective in 90 days, qualified CPAs from out of state can work in Ohio. This improves existing interstate mobility laws by evaluating candidates on their individual professional status rather than what state they are licensed in. Many states are also working to adopt similar language to Ohio.
Effective January 1, 2026, two pathways to CPA licensure will be available:
- A master’s degree, completing the required accounting concentration of coursework, one year of experience and passing the CPA Exam
- A bachelor’s degree, completing the required accounting concentration of coursework, two years of experience and passing the CPA Exam
The new law addresses some big challenges the profession is now facing: the shrinking population of CPAs caused by retirements and too few new licensees, and strengthening existing interstate mobility laws to protect current licensees in the future.
When the Minnesota Society of CPAs “upset the applecart” in early 2023 by being the first state society to loudly promote an alternative to the 150-hour rule the AICPA came out in strong opposition to any alternate pathways to licensure that would make 120 hours of education and two years of experience an option for aspiring CPAs in their state. The foundation of the AICPA argument was that any such legislation would risk mobility and such proposals “would undermine the profession and the CPA license.” The Ohio legislation laughs in the face of said argument evidently.
This is exactly what the AICPA was afraid of. “What exists is a very delicate system of agreement and trust,” said AICPA CEO of Public Accounting Sue Coffey to Financial Times in 2023 for their article ‘US accounting profession rethinks entry rules amid staffing crisis.’ “This has been my challenge with Minnesota. It just takes one to upset the applecart and that could upend mobility across the country.” We still love you, Sue. But you lost.
Rather than alternate pathways the AICPA has been promoting its Experience, Earn, and Learn program. When the program first launched it was open only to registered accounting employers but was recently opened up to any accounting graduate who is “earning a paycheck from an employer not associated with the program.” See: The Powers That Be Are Getting Desperate For People to Do This Experience and Learn Thing.
“Ohio has forged a new path forward and the entire profession will benefit,” said OSCPA. “We expect other states will follow our lead.”

