K. M. Sykes, CPA
Business Details
About
Why walk past a long list of options for numbers and forms? K. M. Sykes focuses on keeping tax matters streamlined rather than scattered, offering personalized bookkeeping, payroll management, and audit support alongside year-round tax planning—all handled under one roof. Businesses that outsource prompt and precise financial organization consistently land flat-fee engagements that scale with size and season. From sole proprietors balancing multiple contracts to small corporations juggling inventory updates, shifting the paperwork burden seems part of the service.
Visit the practice above Herald Square at 112 W 34th St. #18, New York, NY 10120; the entrance is three stories up if you take the freight elevator to Suite 18. Certified public accountants here meet every filing deadline, whether that means consolidating multi-state returns or reconciling quarterly payroll tax deposits—no surprise extensions required. Occasionally, they also assist with entity formation papers, nonprofit compliance filings, and sales-tax exemption certificates for regional wholesalers. Organizations routinely ask them to reconcile intercompany royalties, reorganize LLC operating agreements, or draft financial footnotes for bank loan renewals.
Planning links up directly to next quarter: K. M. Sykes often handles mergers and acquisition buy-side due diligence along with succession blueprints for third-generation family partners. The phone line rings even when the lobby is empty: (212) 502-7071. Other visitors drop off documents in the mail slot between lobby hours; the desk is closed only on major holidays, not every other day for quarter-end catch-ups.
The building sits on a stretch where Macy’s giant holiday clock flashes above the street—one block south of Penn Station, far enough from Times Square to avoid the foot traffic loops and close enough to Penn’s sprinting commuters. The neighborhood still feels like a branch office of Manhattan: tall buildings banked with old street lamps, delivery bikes weaving through midday snow squalls tied to Thursday’s lease-signing numbers.