Upload a CSV of transactions and download a QIF file. QIF is the text format many personal finance apps accept for manual import, so this is a way in when your bank only gives you a CSV.
Your uploaded file is processed on our server and deleted right after the conversion. If you are signed in, the converted result is kept for 7 days so you can download it again from your account, then deleted. We never store the contents of your original file.
Columns are matched by their headers, so a date, description, and amount in any order are picked up without renaming.
Debits and credits keep their direction, so spending and income land on the correct side after import.
The download is a standard bank-type QIF file, ready to import where QIF is supported.
At least a date and an amount. A description or payee column is used when present. A balance column is optional and is used only to check the rows.
Quicken and several personal finance tools accept QIF for manual import. Newer Quicken versions may prefer QFX, so check what your app imports before you start.
Dates are written in MM/DD/YYYY, the form QIF readers expect. Common input date formats are recognized and converted.
No. QIF transactions carry a date, amount, and payee, but not a running balance, so the balance column from your CSV is not written to the QIF file.