Allison Hoeinghaus

Managing Director
15+ years in compensation and benefits
Specializes in M&A and bankruptcy compensation issues
Focuses on tax and accounting aspects of HR
Dallas
@alvarezmarsal
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Allison Hoeinghaus is a Managing Director with Alvarez & Marsal Tax's Compensation and Benefits practice in Dallas.

Ms. Hoeinghaus helps companies effectively and efficiently tackle paying and incentivizing their employees. She works with companies to design and benchmark annual bonus and long-term incentive compensation programs, while considering the applicable tax, accounting, and other regulatory ramifications.

Ms. Hoeinghaus focuses on mergers and acquisitions, including golden parachute rules and bankruptcy compensation. She also works on executive compensation matters such as equity compensation, the one-million-dollar deduction limitation, qualified and non-qualified retirement plans, and payroll compliance. Ms. Hoeinghaus helps her clients stay up to speed on emerging compensation trends such as employment-related pandemic relief, gender/racial pay equity, and the impact of environment, social, and governance (ESG) efforts on compensation programs.

Ms. Hoeinghaus earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting and a master’s degree in professional accounting from the McCombs School of Business at The University of Texas at Austin. She is a Certified Public Accountant and a Certified Executive Compensation Professional (CECP) through the WorldatWork organization.

Insights By This Professional

A&M’s 2025 / 2026 Executive Change in Control Report analyzes the benefits received by CEOs and CFOs of 100 companies in the S&P Composite 1500 Index, highlighting disclosure practices, shareholder expectations, and benchmarking strategies across market capitalization sizes.
Learn how peer group observation helps identify trends, self-benchmark to maintain competitiveness, and showcase responsibility in executive compensation.
Learn how peer group observation helps identify trends, self-benchmark to maintain competitiveness, and showcase responsibility in executive compensation.
IRC Section 162(m) limits publicly held corporations to deducting no more than $1 million in compensation per taxable year for certain covered employees. How can corporations manage the multiple categories of covered employees under these new regulations?
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