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If 2025 was the year AI entered the accounting workflow, 2026 is the year teams will be expected to own it.
We’ve officially moved past the hype cycle with accounting and AI. The conversation has shifted from "What is this?" to "What is our strategy for adoption?" CFOs and Controllers are shifting from experimentation to accountability, focusing on data quality, building internal AI expertise, and integrating systems that drive real outcomes.
FloQast sits at the center of this evolution for accountants. As we help teams automate the close, strengthen compliance, and upskill their people with auditable, agentic AI, we are seeing clear patterns emerge across the industry.
A recent Gartner CFO survey found that while 78% of CFOs are actively investing in AI and automation, only 47% believe their teams are equipped to use these tools effectively. That gap isn’t a small problem — it’s the defining challenge of the year ahead.
Here are the five predictions shaping accounting and AI in 2026, and what you can start doing now to stay ahead.
For years, innovation was treated as a consulting project. That era is ending. In 2026, AI fluency will become a core internal competency. You can’t outsource your way to accountable AI, and IT alone can’t tell you how to automate financial workflows.
Finance leaders now recognize a simple truth: to trust the output, they must understand the engine behind it. That means accountants need new skills — how to prompt, review, validate, and govern AI systems.
There is a rising demand for roles like:
These aren’t sci-fi titles for some far-off high-tech business. They’re hitting the job boards already.
How to Stay Ahead:
The days of manual "ticking and tying" are numbered. In 2026, automation will increasingly handle:
This shift isn’t about replacing accountants — it’s about elevating them from preparers to reviewers. When the rote work is automated, accountants can focus on reviewing insights, improving controls, and supporting the business in more strategic ways.
It also helps curb burnout — a critical issue given the ongoing talent shortage.
Take it from Alex, a finance leader leveraging automation to improve culture: "Our leadership highly values employee morale. Before, people were staying up late during the monthly close, working long hours. Now, they're finishing at reasonable hours, improving both their productivity and their overall well-being."
How to Stay Ahead:
The traditional close accounting process is reactive and stressful. The future is a continuous close, where reconciliation and anomaly detection run in the background, and the close becomes an ongoing process.
The next phase unlocks:
Manual checklists give way to exception management. The close becomes a flow, not a sprint.
How to Stay Ahead:
As AI becomes embedded in financial systems, the scrutiny increases. In 2026, boards and auditors will expect clear answers to questions like:
With momentum building around the EU AI Act and SEC considerations, we anticipate the development of new standards regarding transparency and governance. The new benchmark for 2026 is "Audit-Ready AI" — systems that are auditable, explainable, and secure. The "black box" approach will not survive in a regulated finance environment.
How to Stay Ahead:
It sounds paradoxical, but the more we automate, the more human accounting becomes.
When the ledger balances itself, your value comes from:
Accountants will become advisors, not processors. This shift rewards those who can interpret results, communicate insights, and influence business decisions, not just produce reconciliations.
How to Stay Ahead:
For Finance Leaders (CFOs, Controllers)
For Accounting Professionals
The accounting teams that thrive in 2026 won’t just adopt AI; they’ll own their approach to it. Whether you lead a finance organization or contribute to one, the path forward starts with clarity: understanding your processes, strengthening your skills, and laying a foundation for responsible and transparent AI use.
Because AI won’t replace accountants.
But accountants and finance leaders who embrace AI thoughtfully and proactively will shape the future of the profession.
To hear what our CEO & Co-Founder, Mike Whitmire, and our CPO & Co-Founder, Chris Sluty predict for 2026, join our webinar on January 22nd, “2026 Accounting Trends: What’s Next for the Profession.”
FAQ: Accounting AI Predictions for 2026
1. How will AI change accounting jobs in 2026? AI will automate manual tasks, such as reconciliations and journal entries, allowing accountants to focus on analysis, strategy, and oversight. Roles like "AI Controller" or "Automation Specialist" will emerge, as AI skills will be needed for accounting.
2. Will accountants be replaced by AI in 2026? No. Accountants who embrace AI will become more valuable. AI handles repetitive work — humans provide the judgment, context, and compliance that machines can’t replicate.
3. How can finance leaders build AI skills in their teams? Start by identifying use cases already within your workflow (e.g., the close, audit prep). Encourage upskilling through certifications, such as FloQast’s FCA program.
4. What does ‘continuous close’ mean? Continuous close refers to using automation and AI to reconcile and analyze financial data in real-time, rather than waiting until month-end.
5. What are the most significant AI risks for accounting teams? Data privacy, model bias, and lack of explainability. Utilizing "audit-ready" AI tools, specifically designed for finance, helps mitigate these issues.