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OFX to QIF

Converteer OFX- en QFX-bankbestanden naar QIF-formaat

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What's the difference between OFX and QIF?
OFX (Open Financial Exchange) is the modern XML-based format used by most banks and accounting software. QIF (Quicken Interchange Format) is an older plain-text format still used by Quicken, Reckon, MYOB AccountEdge, and GnuCash. Some legacy software only accepts QIF, even though most banks now provide OFX.
How do I convert an OFX file to QIF?
Drop your OFX or QFX file onto the converter. The parser reads every transaction, shows a preview, lets you select your QIF account type, and downloads the QIF file ready for import.
Which software accepts QIF files?
Quicken (all versions), Reckon Accounts, MYOB AccountEdge, GnuCash, Moneydance, YNAB, and many legacy personal finance applications. QIF is still the easiest path for migrating data into older software.
Is my financial data safe?
Yes. The conversion runs entirely in your browser. No files are uploaded, no data is stored, and no account is required.
Does it preserve transaction categories and memos?
Yes. Dates, amounts, payees, memos, and categories from the OFX file are preserved in the QIF output. The QIF format uses single-letter tags for each field (D for date, T for amount, P for payee, etc.).
Can I convert multiple OFX files at once?
Free users convert one file at a time. Core and Pro subscribers can batch-process multiple OFX/QFX/QBO files in a single session.
Is this tool free?
Yes — fully free with no account required. Paid plans add batch processing and larger file size limits.