BDO has launched a cull of dozens of UK partners as it seeks to open up senior roles for younger staff at the country’s fifth-largest accounting firm. It plans to cut 31 partners, about 6 per cent of the total, according to people familiar with the matter.
The news comes just months after BDO announced in November that its UK and Ireland entities would combine to increase scale.
The partners leaving the firm were mainly older staff who were expected to retire soon or hires from rivals, the people added.
The move comes amid a downturn for professional services, as the industry faces growing pressure from the rise of AI. Last week, KPMG announced to staff it would axe 600 jobs as part of restructuring efforts.
RM Block
Last year, BDO’s profits fell 7 per cent while the average payout for its equity partners declined from £681,000 to £589,000.
Professional services firms such as BDO are owned and managed by their most senior staff, a business model that relies on developing a pipeline of younger employees who will progress to the top ranks.
In 2024, PwC asked about 50 longstanding partners in the UK to take early retirement as a way of protecting profits and creating opportunities for promotions.
Demand for consultants boomed during the pandemic when companies sought advice on issues such as supply chain management and updating technology. Consultancy firms hired accordingly but the worsening economic outlook has left many overstaffed.
BDO also benefited from a surge in demand from midsized UK businesses, as the Big Four — Deloitte, EY, KPMG and PwC — pulled back from some areas following heightened scrutiny of the sector after the collapses of contractor Carillion and retailer BHS.
BDO said: “In the current economic environment, BDO needs to be in the best shape possible to advise the UK’s entrepreneurial, growing and ambitious businesses, our mid-market heartland. To ensure we are a partnership operating at peak performance in high-growth areas, a small number of partners from each business area is leaving the firm, with some partners having brought forward their existing retirement plans.”
The cuts come as private equity investment is shaking up the accounting sector.
In 2024 Grant Thornton, BDO’s mid-market rival, sold a stake to buyout group Cinven in a deal that valued it at about £1.5 billion. Wealth manager Evelyn Partners has sold its professional services business to Apax Partners.
Private equity firms have also been buying up and merging smaller regional firms.
The FT has previously reported that BDO was exploring using private capital to fund mergers between its regional firms. - Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2026



















