Bank Statement to QIF for E-commerce Sellers

Convert any bank statement PDF to QIF for e-commerce sellers. Users of Quicken, older QuickBooks Desktop versions, and legacy financial software that accepts QIF but not OFX or CSV

Convert to QIF Free
99%+Accuracy
30sPer Statement
40+Banks Supported
FreeTier Available

Why E-commerce Sellers Need QIF Format

As an e-commerce seller, converting bank statements to QIF saves hours of manual data entry. Quicken Interchange Format (.qif) is a legacy but widely supported format originally created by Intuit for Quicken, now accepted by many financial applications. Saves 2-3 hours per week on marketplace payout reconciliation for sellers processing 500+ orders per month across multiple channels

How It Works

1

Upload any bank statement PDF

Supports all major banks. Saves 2-3 hours per week on marketplace payout reconciliation for sellers processing 500+ orders per month across multiple channels

2

AI outputs QIF

Our AI extracts all transactions and outputs QIF (.qif). BankScan AI generates QIF files with the correct date format for your locale (D

3

Use in your e-commerce sellers work

Import into Xero, A2X, QuickBooks or use for direct analysis.

QIF Tip for E-commerce Sellers

BankScan AI generates QIF files with the correct date format for your locale (D field), payee names (P field), amounts (T field), and category hints (L field) where identifiable.

Supported Banks

BankScan AI works with all major UK and US banks, including:

HSBC Barclays Lloyds NatWest Monzo Santander Revolut Chase Bank of America Wells Fargo Citibank US Bank Capital One

QIF Features for E-commerce Sellers

QIF Converter — Built for E-commerce Sellers

Users of Quicken, older QuickBooks Desktop versions, and legacy financial software that accepts QIF but not OFX or CSV

Convert to QIF Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I convert bank statements to QIF?
Yes. BankScan AI converts any bank statement PDF to QIF with 99%+ accuracy. Quicken Interchange Format (.qif) is a legacy but widely supported format originally created by Intuit for Quicken, now accepted by many financial applications.
Is QIF the right format for e-commerce sellers?
Users of Quicken, older QuickBooks Desktop versions, and legacy financial software that accepts QIF but not OFX or CSV E-commerce Sellers use QIF for Xero, A2X workflows.
What are QIF's limitations?
No standardised date format (varies by locale). Does not support unique transaction IDs, so re-importing can create duplicates. Being phased out in favour of OFX and QFX.

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