The term fractional CFO gets used loosely. Some people use it to describe a senior bookkeeper who helps with budgeting. Others use it to describe a genuine financial strategist with fundraising experience who happens to work part-time. The difference between those two things is enormous, and hiring the wrong version of a fractional CFO for the wrong reasons is one of the more expensive mistakes a growing startup can make.
This guide explains what a fractional CFO actually does, how it differs from adjacent roles, when the engagement makes sense, what it costs, and how to evaluate whether the person you are considering can actually do the work you need.
What a Fractional CFO Does
A fractional CFO provides senior financial leadership on a part-time or project basis. The scope of the role is the same as a full-time CFO -- financial strategy, fundraising support, investor reporting, financial modeling, cash flow management, and financial team leadership -- but delivered at a fraction of the hours and cost of a full-time hire.
Week to week, a fractional CFO typically delivers:
- Board-ready financial reporting -- income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, and KPI dashboard in a format investors and board members can act on
- 13-week cash flow forecasting -- a detailed, rolling view of your cash position that gives you visibility into problems before they become crises
- Financial modeling -- building and maintaining the model you use to make decisions about hiring, pricing, fundraising timing, and capital allocation
- Fundraising support -- building the financial components of your pitch deck, creating the data room, modeling valuation scenarios, and managing investor due diligence on financial matters
- Scenario planning -- stress-testing your plan against different revenue and cost assumptions so you understand your exposure before you are exposed
- Financial team leadership -- hiring and managing bookkeepers and controllers, setting up financial systems, and building the financial infrastructure the company will need at the next stage
How It Differs from a Bookkeeper and a Full-Time CFO
A bookkeeper is backward-looking. Their job is to record what happened accurately and keep your books clean. They are not trained in financial strategy, they do not build models, and they should not be advising on fundraising or capital structure. A bookkeeper who is doing those things is doing work they are not qualified to do, and you should be concerned about the quality of that advice.
A full-time CFO is appropriate at a scale that most early-stage startups have not reached. A full-time CFO in a company where the financial function does not justify full-time leadership creates a role that is either overpaid for the work being done or a person who fills the excess time with work that is not their highest value activity. The typical threshold where a full-time CFO becomes clearly justified is $5M to $10M in ARR, or earlier if the business is going through a major liquidity event, M&A process, or preparing for an IPO.
A fractional CFO fills the gap between those two points. You get the judgment and the deliverables of senior financial leadership at a cost that matches your actual need.
What They Deliver Week to Week
The most useful way to evaluate a fractional CFO is to ask what you will have at the end of the first 90 days that you do not have today. A strong fractional CFO should be able to answer that question specifically. The typical answer for a Series A-stage startup includes:
- A three-statement financial model with clean assumptions and scenario toggles
- A 13-week cash flow model updated weekly
- A monthly board reporting package that your investors find useful
- An assessment of your current financial systems and a plan to address gaps
- A fundraising timeline with the milestones you need to hit before going out
If the person you are interviewing cannot describe a specific output like this, you are not talking to a fractional CFO. You are talking to a senior bookkeeper or a financial consultant who has adopted the CFO title.
When to Hire a Fractional CFO
The triggers that indicate you are ready for a fractional CFO are specific. They include:
- You are planning a fundraise in the next 12 months and do not have board-ready financials or a defensible financial model
- You are at $500K to $1M ARR with no financial oversight beyond basic bookkeeping and are making significant capital allocation decisions without financial modeling to support them
- You are running blind on unit economics -- you know your revenue but not whether each customer or product is actually profitable
- Your investors are asking for financial reporting you do not have the infrastructure to produce
- You are considering a major financial decision (large hire, expansion, debt financing) and have no one who can model the financial implications
If none of these apply and your business is pre-revenue or very early stage, a fractional CFO is likely premature. A good bookkeeper and an annual CPA engagement will serve you better at that stage.
What a Fractional CFO Costs
Fractional CFO rates typically range from $3,000 to $12,000 per month depending on the scope of engagement, the experience level of the CFO, and the complexity of your financial situation. More experienced CFOs with specific fundraising track records command the higher end of that range.
For comparison, a full-time CFO at a Series A company costs $200,000 to $400,000 in total compensation, plus equity. The fractional model gives you the same quality of judgment and deliverables for a fraction of that cost, sized to the actual work your stage requires.
How to Evaluate a Fractional CFO
The most revealing interview questions are about specific past work, not general capabilities:
- Walk me through the last fundraise you supported -- what was the company, what stage, what did you build, and what was the outcome?
- What does your first 30 days look like with a new client at my stage?
- What financial model template do you use and can I see an anonymized example?
- Can you give me references from founders at companies similar to mine?
- What do you not do, and who do you bring in when those things need to be done?
The last question is particularly important. A strong fractional CFO has a clear scope of what they own and a network of people they trust for the things outside that scope. A fractional CFO who claims to do everything is either overstating their capabilities or undercharging for the breadth.
Learn more about the broader financial picture in The Founder's Complete Guide to Financial Expertise. When you are ready to evaluate specific candidates, find vetted fractional CFOs at Expert Sapiens Finance. Before your first session, read Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Fractional CFO to prepare the right interview framework.