Romina Oviedo Pérez

Romina Oviedo Pérez developed a career shaped by academic music, professional study and personal reinvention. Born in Buenos Aires, she moved through the viola, orchestras, accounting, law and tax advisory work in the United States. Her story makes it possible to observe a passion sustained by discipline, learning and the ability to transform experience into tools for others.
Music as the first territory of vocation
Romina Oviedo Pérez was born in Caballito, in the City of Buenos Aires, on December 9, 1977. Her connection with music began through academic training, with piano and viola studies at the National Conservatory. The choice of the viola marked a particular sensitivity: it is an instrument that requires internal listening, precision and a sense of ensemble. That first stage formed a way of working based on concentration, method and continuity.
The viola and a career built with discipline
Her development as an instrumentalist led her to join highly demanding artistic spaces. She entered the Chamber Orchestra of the National Congress through a competitive selection process, where she worked for more than a decade as a viola soloist. She was also part of the Academic Youth Orchestra of the Teatro Colón and worked as a contracted musician in the Permanent Orchestra of the Teatro Colón. Music was, for her, a profession, a technical school and a way to sustain personal projects.
Stages, tours and international experience
Romina Oviedo Pérez’s musical career included national and international tours, scholarships and performances in venues of strong symbolic value. She performed at the Vatican for Pope Benedict XVI, within a career linked to recognized cultural institutions. That artistic experience broadened her professional outlook: academic music teaches coordination with others, respect for long processes and precision in demanding contexts.
From art to law and accounting
While developing her musical activity, Romina studied accounting and law. That dual education added technical tools to interpret regulations, contracts, corporate structures, taxes and economic movements. Accounting organizes financial information and allows decisions to be made on a verifiable basis. Law provides a framework for understanding obligations, responsibilities and institutional processes. In her path, both disciplines expanded the reach of her vocation.
Migrating and reorganizing a professional life
In 2023, Romina Oviedo Pérez emigrated to the United States with her husband Alejandro and their three children. The family settled in Florida, in the Orlando area, after a life already established in Buenos Aires. The move opened a stage of cultural, professional and family adaptation. In that new context, her previous experience acquired another function: supporting people and companies that need to understand the U.S. tax and corporate system.
OPC Taxes and advisory work for entrepreneurs
Romina founded OPC Taxes, a firm dedicated to accounting and tax services for individuals, companies, entrepreneurs and investors. Her work is aimed at those seeking to operate in the United States with fiscal order and an appropriate structure. In that field, advisory work fulfills a practical function: choosing the type of company, understanding obligations, organizing documentation and avoiding mistakes that can affect a commercial operation. Her passion came to be expressed as applied knowledge.
Passion as a form of reinvention
The story of Romina Oviedo Pérez shows a passion that changed settings without losing intensity. First it was in music; then in legal and accounting study; later, in migration and support for entrepreneurs. Her dedication does not depend on a single activity, but on a sustained conduct: learning, organizing, executing and transmitting knowledge. That continuity explains a career in which art, family and profession form part of the same life structure.
