![]() So it configures out itself, that this is the date format is day/month/year. And for some obvious cases, like this one, you can see, that this is modern twelve, this is the month, this is four digits year. The converter tries to understand the date format on your CSV file. For US users it could be month/date/year. So you may see dates on your CSV file, in this case, the Date applies as date/month/year. Let's say some dates, especially for customers or users outside the US, you may see dates in different formats. If you see Data, like this, you should click the button 'Change +/-' once per file and verify, that your expense amounts are negative and deposits are positive.Īnother important moment. So, if the Credit Card or Checking Account expenses must be negative and deposits or payments to the account must be positive. But for QBO files the rule doesn't apply. What does it mean? It usually looks like this: some Credit Card files have expenses as positive numbers because from the Credit Card Company perspective view is increasing the balance of your Credit Card and payments to the account are negative numbers since your increasing balance on your Credit Card. But for some Credit Card files, the CSV file applies in an opposite way, Amount applies in the opposite way. It applies the same role for Checking Account, Saving Account, Credit Card. Another important moment to look at, that expenses must be negative and deposits must be positive. Text column uses as Payee, but for your specific file it could be a different way like this column has to be Payee, this column has to be Memo or your CSV file doesn't have Payee and Memo, it has just a long description, so you can use this description for both Memo and Payee. It sees the Text column and uses, as a Memo column, it is another column. Or let's say some columns have some Payee and Memo columns and they could be switched, like the converter decides, especially if the columns are not properly marked and there is no first line, as column names. But it could be not the column you want to use, so you can review Mapping if needed or you can reassign columns. If your CSV file has multiple Date columns, it may choose the first column or the column it decides most appropriate. What do you see at the Transaction tab? You see how the converter understood your CSV file. ![]() It configures out, that this is the 'Date' column, this is the 'Amount' column, this is the 'Payee' column, this is the 'Memo' column, this is the 'Check #' column, and so on. The converter is able to understand this column names and map, without your manually mapping the file. It is very helpful for the converter, if your CSV file has the first line, as column names in common English words, like Date, Amount, Debit, Credit, Payee, Memo, Check #, Type. There is a 'Table View' tab, that shows the CSV file is a Table.Īnd there is a 'Raw View' tab, that shows how actually the file looks like, if you open it, as a text file. Look at the file, by clicking on the 'Source Tab'. Open the CSV file, it has four transactions: three expenses and one deposit. You can download a sample.csv file from the page, as well. The utility is digitally signed and you can verify, that it is verified by publisher ProperSoft Inc. IMPORTANT : CSV2QBO is now replaced with the Transactions app, which converts from more formats and converts to more formats.Ĭlick PC download, if you download for PC, or macOS if you download for macOS. This tutorial shows how to convert a CSV or Excel file with transactions, typically downloaded from your bank or you can create it by yourself, to QBO (Web Connect) format and import into Quickbooks desktop. Solution home Transactions app QuickBooks How to import CSV or Excel files as QBO into Quickbooks
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