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QIF to Excel Converter

Drop in a QIF file and download clean Excel. AI reads the file semantically, identifies financial or business transaction rows, and converts them into an import-ready Excel file.

.qif.xlsx

Free · no sign-up · AI-powered semantic conversion.

How to convert QIF to Excel

  1. 1

    Upload your QIF file

    Drag and drop your .qif file, or click to browse. Statemently sends it to the configured AI provider for semantic conversion.

  2. 2

    We convert it instantly

    Statemently uses AI to understand the uploaded QIF file, normalize transaction-like rows, and write a clean Excel file.

  3. 3

    Download your Excel file

    Your Excel (.xlsx) file downloads automatically, ready to import.

Why convert QIF to Excel?

You'll usually reach for a QIF → Excel converter when a bank, marketplace, bookkeeping tool, or business export gives you a QIF file, but the tool you actually work in needs Excel.

  • Move transactions from Older Quicken versions, GnuCash, and many personal-finance apps into Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets, Apple Numbers, and LibreOffice Calc.
  • Avoid manual re-keying and the errors that come with it
  • Let AI interpret non-standard columns and normalize dates, descriptions, and amounts

Example: before and after

A sample QIF file and the exact Excel this tool produces from it.

Input · .qif

!Type:Bank
D06/02/2026
T4200.00
PDirect Deposit ACME Payroll
^
D06/04/2026
T-86.43
PWhole Foods Market
^

Output · .xlsx

DateDescriptionAmount
2026-06-02Direct Deposit ACME Payroll4200
2026-06-04Whole Foods Market-86.43

What ends up in your Excel file

Excel fieldComes from
DateTransaction date, normalized to YYYY-MM-DD
DescriptionPayee / transaction name
AmountSigned amount (deposits positive, withdrawals negative)
BalanceRunning balance, when the source provides one
CurrencyCurrency code, when present

About QIF and Excel

QIF (.qif)

QIF (Quicken Interchange Format) is a long-standing plain-text format. Each transaction is a block of single-letter lines (D for date, T for amount, P for payee) ended by a caret. It predates OFX and is still widely supported.

Exported by:
Older Quicken versions, GnuCash, and many personal-finance apps.
Read by:
GnuCash, older Quicken, MoneyDance, Banktivity, and most money managers.

Excel (.xlsx)

Excel (.xlsx) is Microsoft Excel's native workbook format. Unlike CSV it preserves cell types and is ready for sorting, filtering, pivot tables, and formulas the moment you open it.

Created by:
Exported by Excel and most accounting tools.
Imports into:
Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets, Apple Numbers, and LibreOffice Calc.

Tips

  • The .xlsx file opens directly in Excel, Google Sheets, Numbers, and LibreOffice.
  • Files up to 8 MB are supported. Very large files may be summarized before AI conversion.

Frequently asked questions

Is the QIF to Excel converter free?

Yes — it's completely free, with no sign-up required.

What is a QIF file?

QIF (Quicken Interchange Format) is a long-standing plain-text format used by older Quicken versions, GnuCash, and many personal-finance apps.

What can I do with the Excel file?

Excel (.xlsx) is Microsoft Excel's native workbook format — ideal for sorting, filtering, formulas, and sharing a clean transaction table.

Is my financial data private?

Your file is processed by the configured AI conversion provider, never sold, and not stored by this converter after the conversion runs.

Is there a file size limit?

Files up to 8 MB are supported, which covers even multi-year exports.

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