Write for Bizora

Adam Tahir
June 3, 2026

Bizora is an AI-powered tax research platform built for CPAs, enrolled agents, and tax professionals who need citation-backed answers fast. Our platform shows its work, linking every answer directly to its source, whether that's the Internal Revenue Code, a Revenue Ruling, or a Tax Court decision. More than 10,000 tax professionals rely on Bizora for research they can trust, and the contributors published here are among the practitioners helping set that standard.

The blog holds the same bar. We publish practical tax content written by practitioners: real IRC sections, primary source citations, and analysis that a working CPA can use on a client matter the same day they read it. Getting published on Bizora means your expertise reaches an audience that reads critically, cites what's useful, and knows the difference between a sourced answer and a guess.

If you've solved a tax problem that most practitioners get wrong, navigated a gray area the IRS hasn't addressed clearly, or developed a workflow that makes research faster and more defensible, this is the right place to share it.

Bizora reaches more than 10,000 tax professionals across CPA firms, solo practices, and in-house tax departments. Every accepted contributor receives a byline, a backlink to their firm or professional profile, and distribution across our blog, social channels, and email newsletter. Send your pitch to adam@bizora.ai with "Guest Post Pitch" in the subject line and we'll respond within five business days.

Who Should Pitch Us

The Bizora platform is built for serious tax work, and the bar for contributors is the same. We want to hear from CPAs and enrolled agents with active client practices, tax attorneys handling federal, state, or international matters, financial advisors working complex tax situations for high-net-worth clients, in-house tax professionals at PE/VC firms or public companies, and tax academics at accredited institutions.

We don't accept submissions from software vendors, marketing agencies writing on behalf of clients, or writers without verifiable tax credentials. Articles also can't be used to promote your firm, practice, or any affiliated product or service, so if that's the goal, this isn't the right fit.

What We Publish

Every article on Bizora should answer a question a working tax professional is actually asking. The test is simple: would a CPA or enrolled agent reading this learn something they could apply to a real client situation today? General overviews don't pass that test, but original practitioner analysis does, and that's what we're looking for.

We accept four types of contributions:

Technical deep dives (1,500–2,500 words) 

In-depth analysis of a specific federal, state, or international tax issue. These pieces dig into the code section, the regulatory history, the IRS guidance, and what it actually means for practitioners. Examples, dollar thresholds, and real scenarios are required.

Workflow and practice pieces (1,200–1,800 words) 

How-to content grounded in practitioner experience: how you structure a research memo, how your firm handles a specific SALT issue, how AI tax research tools have changed your review process. The emphasis is on what works and why.

Emerging issue analysis (1,000–1,500 words) 

First-look coverage of new IRS guidance, legislative changes, or court decisions with real implications for practitioners. These pieces move faster than deep dives and prioritize clarity over exhaustive coverage.

Perspective pieces (800–1,200 words) 

A clear take on a professional issue, backed by evidence and grounded enough that a practitioner can agree or push back based on the facts you lay out.

What Bizora Tax Content Does and Doesn’t Cover
We publish this We don’t publish this
Federal tax planning with IRC citations General personal finance advice
State and local tax: nexus, apportionment, SALT “Top tips” content without source citations
IRS procedure, audits, penalty abatement Vendor comparisons or product promotions
Entity structuring and M&A tax Consumer-focused content
International tax: GILTI, FDII, Subpart F, treaties Opinion without supporting authority
AI tax research tools and workflow Repackaged IRS.gov summaries
Emerging issues: digital assets, OBBBA, new guidance Evergreen basics covered widely elsewhere

We're actively looking for articles on AI tax research tools and workflow, OBBBA legislative changes, SALT planning post-2025, and international tax developments under current Treasury guidance. These are the gaps where practitioner perspective adds something no research platform can generate on its own.

How to Pitch

Send a pitch before you write the full article, covering three to five sentences on four things: the specific question your article answers, why that answer isn't obvious or already well-covered, the primary sources you'll cite, and one line on your relevant experience with the issue.

A strong pitch looks something like this:

"My article covers the holding period trap in Section 1202 QSBS exclusions that acquisition attorneys and their CPA counterparts routinely miss during deal structuring. The IRS hasn't issued clear guidance on earnout interactions with the 5-year holding period, but three Tax Court decisions in the past two years give practitioners workable answers. I've handled six QSBS situations in the last 18 months and hit this issue every time."

Send pitches to adam@bizora.ai with "Guest Post Pitch" in the subject line and we'll respond within five business days.

Our Editorial Standards

Bizora's platform is trusted because it shows its work, with every answer linked to its source and every step in the reasoning visible. We hold guest contributions to the same standard, editing every submission for accuracy, clarity, and voice, not to water down your expertise, but to make sure what goes out under the Bizora name holds up.

Accuracy first: Every factual claim needs a primary source: the Internal Revenue Code, Treasury Regulations, Revenue Rulings, IRS Notices, or court decisions. "In my experience" isn't a citation, and if a claim can't be traced to primary authority, it gets softened or cut. Use "Section 199A" in body text rather than "IRC §199A," format IRS documents as "Rev. Rul. 2024-XX" or "IRS Notice 2024-XX," and italicize case names.

Peer-to-peer, not professor-to-student: Write like you're explaining something to a colleague who already knows the basics. Our readers don't need definitions. They need the nuance inside a GILTI high-tax exclusion election or the timing trap in a Section 1031 exchange. Help, don't lecture.

Concrete over general: Use named IRC sections, actual dollar thresholds, and real scenarios a practitioner can recognize. "A solo practitioner with a client holding a $2.1M qualified opportunity zone investment faces this exact timing question" does more work than "many practitioners encounter timing issues."

Style rules to know upfront: Keep paragraphs to three sentences with one idea each. No em dashes anywhere, replaced by commas, parentheses, or a restructured sentence. Skip filler transitions like "furthermore," "moreover," or "it is important to note," and take clear positions rather than hedging everything.

Article Specifications

Bizora Content Submission Requirements
Word count 800–2,500 words depending on contribution type
Citations Primary sources throughout: IRC, Treasury Regs, IRS.gov, Revenue Rulings, case law
Structure At least one table, numbered list, or comparison element, with H2 headings that stand alone as takeaways
Examples Practitioner-facing scenarios, not hypotheticals
Format Plain text or Word document, with proposed headings and sources included
Originality Not published or live anywhere else

What You Get

Bizora reaches more than 10,000 tax professionals across CPA firms of all sizes, solo and small practices, enrolled agent practices, and in-house tax departments. When your article runs here, it reaches practitioners who are already doing serious research and know how to use what you share.

Every published contributor receives a byline with their name, credentials, and a bio of up to 75 words, along with a followed backlink to their firm, practice, or professional profile. We share every article across Bizora's social channels with author attribution, and your piece goes out to our full newsletter subscriber list. Our editorial team polishes every submission to Bizora's standard, editing for clarity rather than credit.

We don't pay per article. Contributors write for Bizora because reaching more than 10,000 engaged practitioners is worth it.

The Process

  1. Pitch: Send three to five sentences to adam@bizora.ai with "Guest Post Pitch" in the subject line
  2. Response: We reply within five business days with a yes, a pass, or a request for more detail
  3. Draft: Accepted pitches move to a full draft in plain text or Word, with sources and proposed headings included
  4. Editorial review: We review for accuracy, voice, and fit, and may return the draft with edits or questions
  5. Publication: We send you the publication date and share the live link when the article goes up

Frequently Asked Questions

Who can submit a guest post to Bizora?

Any credentialed tax professional with hands-on practice experience: CPAs, enrolled agents, tax attorneys, financial advisors, and tax academics. We verify credentials before publishing.

Do I need to use Bizora to contribute?

No. Your article just needs to serve our practitioner audience. Mentions of AI tax research tools are welcome where relevant, but no promotion of your own tools or services.

Can I republish my article after it goes live on Bizora?

We ask for a 60-day exclusive window, after which you can republish with a canonical link back to the original Bizora article.

How long from pitch to publication?

Typically three to five weeks: pitch response within five business days, editorial review of two to three weeks after draft submission, then scheduling.

What topics are you prioritizing right now?

AI tax research tools and workflow, OBBBA legislative changes, SALT planning post-2025, QSBS and opportunity zone updates, and international tax developments under current Treasury guidance.

Does Bizora pay contributors?

Not at this time. Contributors receive a byline, a backlink, and distribution to more than 10,000 tax professionals, and most find that reach more valuable than a flat fee.

Ready to Pitch?

Send your pitch to adam@bizora.ai with "Guest Post Pitch" in the subject line and we'll get back to you within five business days.