Turn any bank-statement PDF into a clean Excel file: one row per transaction, columns for date, description, debit, credit, balance and category. Open in Excel, build a budget, or hand it to your accountant.
Excel is still the default for analyzing money. The problem is that a bank statement arrives as a PDF laid out for reading, not for spreadsheets — copy-pasting it into Excel produces a single jumbled column. Converting it properly gives you one row per transaction with real columns you can sort, filter and total.
Build a monthly budget with a pivot table (category × month), flag your biggest expenses with a sort, spot recurring subscriptions, or filter a date range to reconcile against the statement total. Because the balance column is numeric, you can verify nothing is missing: opening balance + credits − debits should equal the closing balance.
Drop your PDF on bankpdf, and download the .xlsx. 80+ banks have a dedicated adapter; scans and phone photos work too. The first few statements each month are free, no account needed. Prefer a plain text file instead? Use the CSV export.
Yes. Debit, credit and balance are exported as numeric cells, so SUM, pivots and charts work immediately.
Yes — every transaction gets one of 15 categories automatically, and you can recategorize in bulk in your library.
The export is .xlsx (Excel 2007+), which every current version of Excel, Google Sheets and LibreOffice opens. For maximum compatibility, the CSV export works everywhere.
Looking for a specific bank? See supported banks, or the accountant exports.