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Government contracts for accounting & financial services in North Carolina
A snapshot of open federal, state, and local opportunities in North Carolina, updated daily. To search them and get daily matches for your business, sign up free.
About accounting & financial services contracts in North Carolina
Accounting & financial services contracts in North Carolina typically cover annual financial-statement audits for cities, counties, and school districts, single audits of federally funded grant programs, outsourced bookkeeping and payroll, forensic and internal audits, utility rate studies, and interim finance-director support. Federal posts in this category fall under NAICS 541211 (Offices of Certified Public Accountants), with related work under 541219 (Other Accounting Services), and the bulk of the work flows to civilian agencies, offices of inspectors general, and the DoD, alongside a steady base of state and local audit committees. Auditor-independence and rotation rules mean agencies must periodically rebid audit work, which keeps a steady stream of right-sized engagements open to local and regional CPA firms.
North Carolina currently has 1 open accounting & financial services contract in our database, with 1 added in the last 30 days. Volume in smaller markets is lumpy: a single base or facility can drive a quarter of annual postings. The most active buyer is CRAVEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE (1 open posts), but contracts also come from federal civilian agencies and state-level departments operating in North Carolina.
Beyond federal opportunities, much of the accounting & financial services work in North Carolina is posted through the North Carolina Interactive Purchasing System (IPS), with recurring buyers including NCDOT, the University of North Carolina System, and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. The Statewide HUB (Historically Underutilized Business) program drives subcontracting goals on most large North Carolina awards. ContractRadar pulls federal postings from SAM.gov alongside state and local feeds so an accounting and financial-services firm doesn't have to monitor each portal manually.