QIF to CSV converter
Convert your QIF file to CSV without uploading it anywhere. Drop the file in, check the transactions it held, and download a clean CSV file — the conversion runs entirely on your device.
Three steps, all on your machine.
Choose your file
Pick or drag the file from your computer. It’s read right here in your browser tab.
Check the preview
See the transactions the file contained, laid out in clean columns, before you download.
Download the result
One click writes the converted file to your downloads. Nothing was ever uploaded.
This tool converts existing data files.
QIF is already structured transaction data, so converting it is instant and private. A bank-statement PDF is different — it needs extraction and a balance check first. For that, use the bank statement converter, which reviews every row against the source page before you export.
About QIF to CSV
Does my file get uploaded anywhere?
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser tab — your OFX, QFX, QBO, or QIF file is read on your own device and never sent to a server.
What does the CSV contain?
One row per transaction: date, description, and a signed amount. A currency column is added when the source file states one, and reference or transaction-id columns when the file carries them.
Is the CSV safe to open in Excel?
Yes. It is written as UTF-8 with a byte-order mark so Excel opens it without a prompt, and any cell starting with =, +, -, or @ is escaped so a spreadsheet won’t run it as a formula.
This isn’t a PDF — where do I convert those?
This tool converts existing data files. To turn a bank-statement PDF into CSV or Excel with a full review and balance check, use the bank statement converter.