If you’ve been searching for CFO support and found yourself reading about fractional CFOs in one tab and interim CFOs in another, you’re not alone. The two terms get used interchangeably, and the confusion leads to hiring decisions that don’t actually solve the problem at hand. If you’ve been searching for CFO support and found yourself reading about fractional CFOs in one tab and interim CFOs in another, you’re not alone. The two terms get used interchangeably, and the confusion leads to hiring decisions that don’t actually solve the problem at hand. They are not the same thing. The distinction matters, and getting it wrong costs you time, money, and in some cases, the window to fix whatever issue prompted the search in the first place. Here’s how to think about it clearly.
A fractional CFO is a part-time finance executive who works across multiple companies simultaneously. Think of it as shared executive capacity — you’re buying a portion of someone’s time and strategic attention, typically on a retainer or monthly engagement basis. This model works well when:
The fractional model has grown in popularity for good reason. For a company doing $5M–$30M in revenue that isn’t yet ready to commit to a $250,000–$350,000 CFO salary, it can provide meaningful strategic finance leadership at a fraction of the cost.
The limitation is equally real: a fractional CFO is managing multiple clients. When something urgent happens in your business, you are one of several competing priorities. That’s not a criticism — it’s simply the nature of the model.
An interim CFO is a full-time, dedicated executive brought in for a specific period or purpose. They are embedded in your organization — present, accountable, and focused entirely on your business for the duration of the engagement. Interim CFOs are typically deployed in situations where:
The key distinction is availability and accountability. An interim CFO is not splitting their focus across other companies. They show up every day — to your leadership team, your board, your finance function — and they own outcomes in a way that a fractional arrangement typically doesn’t allow for.
Part of the problem is that both roles involve a CFO who isn’t a permanent employee. That surface-level similarity — “senior finance executive, temporary engagement” — leads people to treat them as equivalent options on a menu.
They’re not. One is a part-time advisor. The other is a full-time executive who happens to have a defined end date. The engagement model, the accountability, the cost, and the appropriate use case are fundamentally different.
A second source of confusion: some professionals market themselves as both. “Fractional and interim CFO” appears on many LinkedIn profiles. That’s fine, many experienced finance executives do both, depending on what a client needs. But it means the label alone doesn’t tell you what you’re getting. You need to know what you’re actually asking for.
Before you start a search, answer these honestly.
If your business is PE-backed, the fractional vs. interim question almost always resolves toward interim — and the sooner, the better.
Private equity operates on compressed timelines and high expectations around financial reporting, forecasting, and strategic visibility. The 100-day plan, the value creation work, the reporting cadence back to the fund — none of this lends itself well to a part-time arrangement.
Beyond the operational needs, there’s a credibility dimension. Your PE sponsor wants to see that you’ve put a capable, dedicated executive in the finance seat. A fractional arrangement, even with a highly capable individual, can signal to investors that you’re not fully committed to building the function properly.
Interim CFOs who have worked in PE-backed environments understand the language, the expectations, and the pace. They’ve been in rooms with operating partners, built 13-week cash flows under pressure, and know what a clean data room looks like. That experience doesn’t come part-time.
Choose a Fractional CFO when:
Choose an Interim CFO when:
Whether you need a fractional or interim CFO, the search process matters as much as the label. The most common mistake is hiring on credentials alone — impressive background, right industry, strong references — without stress-testing fit for your specific situation. A fractional CFO who is exceptional at supporting stable, investor-ready businesses may struggle in a company going through transformation. An interim CFO who thrives in transactions may not be the right choice for a steady-state fractional engagement.
At Clarity, we place interim CFOs and senior finance executives across Toronto and Vancouver, working primarily with PE-backed, private, and high-growth companies. Our process starts with understanding your situation — the urgency, the complexity, the board expectations, the culture of the finance function — before we build a shortlist. We’re not in the business of sending you candidates who look right on paper. We’re in the business of finding people who will perform in your specific environment.
Interim roles through Clarity can be filled in as little as 48 hours for urgent needs, with a broader search process that typically runs two to four weeks depending on seniority and complexity.
If you’re trying to figure out whether you need a fractional or interim CFO — or if you already know and just need to move — we can help you think it through and act on it quickly. Talk to our team at contact@findingclarity.ca or visit findingclarity.ca to start the conversation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a fractional CFO and an interim CFO?
A fractional CFO works part-time across multiple companies, providing ongoing strategic finance support without full-time commitment. An interim CFO is a full-time, dedicated executive brought in for a specific period — typically to fill a gap, lead a transition, or drive a project that requires full availability and accountability.
Which is more expensive: a fractional or interim CFO?
Interim CFOs typically cost more on a monthly basis because they are full-time executives. Fractional CFOs offer lower monthly retainers, but the cost-benefit calculation depends on what you actually need. For a company in the middle of a transaction or building out a finance function under PE oversight, an interim CFO almost always delivers better ROI than a fractional arrangement.
How long does an interim CFO engagement typically last?
Most interim CFO engagements run three to twelve months, depending on the nature of the gap or project. Some extend beyond that if a permanent search takes longer than expected, or if the company is going through a multi-phase transition. Clear scope and defined success criteria at the outset help both parties manage expectations.
Can a PE-backed company use a fractional CFO?
It's possible, but uncommon. PE-backed businesses typically require dedicated, full-time finance leadership given the reporting cadences, board expectations, and pace of value creation activity. Most PE sponsors prefer to see an interim or permanent CFO in the seat rather than a fractional arrangement, particularly during the first 12–18 months post-acquisition.
How quickly can an interim CFO start?
Through a specialist recruiter like Clarity, an experienced interim CFO can typically be placed within 48 hours for urgent needs, or within two to four weeks for a more structured search. The speed depends on how clearly defined your requirements are and how quickly decisions can be made on your end.
What should I look for when hiring an interim CFO?
Beyond technical finance credentials, look for sector relevance (does this person understand your industry?), stage experience (have they worked in companies at your growth stage or transaction complexity?), and cultural fit with your leadership team and board. An interim CFO needs to establish credibility quickly — so their ability to communicate, build trust fast, and operate without a long runway matters as much as their technical skills.
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