Independently researched from published sources. Last researched: April 2026. Results vary: this article teaches AI skills, not employment outcomes. See Terms and Privacy.
This article covers a profession with specific obligations in the area named above. It is not a substitute for your licensing, supervision, or professional duties, and nothing here is legal or compliance advice. Keep a human decision-maker on anything those obligations touch, and check your company's AI policy before using any prompt or tool with real work data.
Most accountants have tried asking ChatGPT something like 'write a tax summary letter' and gotten back something generic and unusable. The difference is in the prompt. These six are independently researched and structured for tasks accountants actually repeat: tax summaries, management reporting, client emails, cash flow forecasts, tax planning comparisons, and variance explanations.
Each prompt includes specific format, tone, and length constraints so the output is usable on the first try. You fill in the bracketed placeholders with your client's details, paste the whole thing into any AI chat tool, and get a draft you can work with. No prompt engineering background required.
Pick any prompt below, replace the brackets with real details, and paste it. Ten minutes from now you could have first drafts for the tasks that usually eat your afternoon.
Every tax return ends with a letter the client probably won't read if it sounds like an ATO notice. This prompt forces plain language ('say your total income, not assessable income'), caps the output at 300 words, and includes a forward-looking planning note. That planning note is what turns a compliance letter into an advisory touchpoint.
How to use it: Replace the bracketed fields with your client's return details and paste into any AI chat tool. Review the planning note at the end and adjust it to something specific you have discussed with the client.
The numbers are the easy part. Writing commentary a business owner will actually read is what takes the time. This prompt structures output around a three-sentence executive summary, then revenue, expenses, cash flow, and recommendations, all in plain language. It also makes you list the specific variances upfront so the AI cannot invent explanations.
How to use it: Paste your key figures and the two to four variances you want explained. Use the output as your first-draft commentary, then adjust any recommendations to reflect what you actually know about the client.
Chasing documents is half the job during tax season. Most request emails read like a government form, which is why clients ignore them. This prompt produces a checkbox-format email grouped by category, with brief explanations of why each document matters and a note about what happens if things arrive late.
How to use it: List the exact documents you need and your deadline. The output is ready to send after you add your firm's upload portal link or preferred delivery method.
Finding these useful? The full guide has 16 of them, plus tool reviews and a 30-day plan. Get it for $39.
Clients ask 'will I run out of cash?' more than almost anything else. This prompt generates a 13-week rolling forecast with weekly categories, formulas notation for Excel, and flags any weeks where cash goes negative. It also produces an assumptions list, which is what separates a useful forecast from a guess.
How to use it: Enter the client's starting cash balance, average weekly revenue, collection period, recurring expenses, and any known lump-sum payments. Recreate the output table in Excel or paste it into a spreadsheet tool directly.
Comparing structures like sole trader, company, and trust is one of the highest-value conversations you have with a client. This prompt generates a comparison table with estimated tax, effective rate, advantages, disadvantages, setup costs, and risk factors for each scenario. It also includes a built-in disclaimer reminding the client to confirm the approach with their adviser before acting.
How to use it: Fill in the client's projected income and the two or three structures you want to compare. Use the output table as a discussion document in your next planning meeting, not as final advice.
Writing variance explanations line by line across a dozen accounts is tedious work. This prompt classifies each variance as favourable or unfavourable, suggests root causes based on the client's industry, and flags whether the variance is likely one-time or recurring. It also generates a three-sentence executive summary you can drop straight into the management report.
How to use it: Paste your variance data with line item, budget, actual, dollar variance, and percentage variance. Set your materiality threshold and the client's industry, then use the output table and summary directly in your report draft.
The full Accountant guide goes much further: 16 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 13 tools with current prices, a dos and don'ts chapter, and a 30-day plan to put it all into practice.
Get the full guide. $39One-time purchase. Instant download. Or see the full AI guide for accountants.