One of the most common questions government contracting CEOs ask is whether they need a full-time CFO or whether a fractional CFO can provide the expertise they need. The answer depends less on revenue and more on complexity. Many organizations hire too early. Others hire too late.

What Is a Fractional CFO?

A fractional CFO is an experienced executive who provides strategic financial leadership on a part-time basis. Unlike consultants who primarily provide recommendations, fractional CFOs typically participate directly in decision-making.

They often support strategic planning, forecasting, KPI development, board reporting, cash flow management, M&A readiness, and due diligence preparation. For many growing government contractors, this model provides executive-level capability without the cost of a full-time hire.

Advantages of a Fractional CFO

When a Fractional CFO Makes Sense

Fractional CFOs are frequently a strong fit when revenue is between $10M and $50M, growth is accelerating, forecasting needs improvement, M&A discussions are beginning, or financial infrastructure requires strengthening.

"The decision between a fractional CFO and a full-time CFO is not really about cost. It is about capability."

When a Full-Time CFO Makes Sense

A full-time CFO often becomes appropriate when multiple business units exist, acquisitions become frequent, investor expectations increase, organizational complexity grows, or daily executive involvement is required. At this stage, leadership needs continuous financial partnership.

Common Hiring Mistakes

What Private Equity Firms Care About

Sponsors generally care less about titles and more about capability. They want confidence that reporting is reliable, forecasts are credible, cash is managed effectively, and leadership can execute. Whether that capability comes from a fractional CFO or a full-time CFO matters less than the outcome.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a fractional CFO cost?
Fractional CFO engagements in GovCon typically range from $5,000–$15,000 per month depending on scope and hours required. This compares to $400K–$600K+ for a full-time CFO in total compensation.
When should I switch from fractional to full-time?
The most common trigger is when the business requires daily CFO involvement — typically around $75M–$100M+ revenue, multiple business units, or frequent acquisitions.
Can a fractional CFO lead an M&A process?
Yes. Many fractional CFOs are specifically engaged for transaction preparation and diligence support. They often have more transaction experience than full-time CFOs at companies of similar size.
What is the difference between a fractional CFO and a CFO consultant?
A fractional CFO typically operates as part of the leadership team — participating in decisions and owning outcomes. A consultant typically delivers recommendations and steps back.
How long does a fractional CFO engagement typically last?
Engagements range from a few months (transaction preparation) to multi-year relationships. Many companies keep fractional CFOs for 2–4 years as the business scales.

Know where you stand — before buyers do.

Take the GovCon CFO Readiness Assessment and benchmark your organization across reporting, forecasting, cash management, and M&A readiness.

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