Turn your bank statement into CSV
Drop a text-based PDF statement and get your transactions back as a clean CSV — dates, descriptions and amounts, ready for Excel or your accounting tool. Your file is used only for this conversion.
Talk to your files
Anything that used to take five menus and three export dialogs is now one sentence in the chat. Watch it work:
Built for how you actually work
One assistant instead of a dozen single-purpose converter sites.
Every format in one place
Images, documents, video, audio and data — 50+ formats handled by one chat, with a dedicated page for every conversion.
Private by design
Your files are used to run your conversion and nothing else. No sharing, no training, no digging through your data.
Seconds, not minutes
Most conversions come back before you'd have found the right export menu.
Speaks your language
The whole product — pages, assistant and answers — works in seven languages.
Nothing to install
Runs entirely in your browser, on any device. No apps, no accounts to start, no updates.
Converting bank statements to CSV, in practice
Why people need this
Banks love PDF statements; accounting tools, budgeting apps and Excel want CSV. If your bank doesn't offer a CSV export (or you only kept the PDFs), extracting the transactions — date, description, amount — into a clean CSV is the missing bridge.
How the extraction behaves
The assistant reads the statement's text and reproduces each transaction row exactly as written — amounts and dates are never recalculated, reformatted into guesses, or filled in when unclear. Ask for the columns your tool expects: “date, description, amount, balance” or a specific import format.
Verify before importing: compare the extracted closing balance or transaction count against the statement. It's a seconds-long check that catches any parsing oddity in unusual statement layouts.
Digital statements only (for now)
The PDF needs selectable text — which is what banks' “download PDF” buttons produce. Scanned paper statements and photos need OCR, which isn't connected yet; you'll get a clear message rather than guessed numbers.
Privacy, plainly
A bank statement is about as sensitive as files get. Yours is used only to run the conversion you asked for — it isn't shared, retained for other purposes, or used for anything beyond producing your CSV. If you prefer, redact the account number before uploading; the transactions extract the same.
Bank Statement to CSV, answered
Common questions about converting bank statements to CSV.
Drop your statement PDF into the chat and ask for CSV. The assistant reads the text, extracts each transaction row exactly as written, and gives you the CSV. Verify the totals before importing — and note that scanned statements (photos) aren't supported yet, only PDFs with selectable text.
Yes. You can use it for free as a guest. Signing in raises your limits and lets you do more per day.
No — everything runs in your browser. There's nothing to download or set up.
Your file is only used for the task you asked for. We don't share it or use it for anything else.
Drop the statement PDF in the chat and ask for CSV — optionally naming the columns your accounting tool expects. You get a clean CSV of the transactions, extracted exactly as written in the statement.
Amounts are copied only from what's literally in the statement text, never calculated or guessed. Still, verify the closing balance against the original before importing — with financial data, that check is always worth it.
Not yet — the PDF needs selectable text. Statements downloaded from online banking work; photographed paper statements would need OCR, which isn't connected.
Turn your bank statement into CSV
Drop your file above and get the result in seconds — free to try.
Bank Statement to CSV