Chase Statement Converter
Convert Chase PDF bank statements into structured files like CSV, Excel (.xlsx), JSON, or QuickBooks (.qbo). Upload your statement and download clean transaction data in seconds — no manual copy-paste.
Choose Your Output Format
How to Convert Chase Statements
1. Download your Chase statement PDF from online banking.
2. Upload the PDF to MintConvert.
3. Choose CSV, Excel, JSON, or QuickBooks as your output format.
4. Download the converted file with all transactions extracted.
Most conversions complete in under 30 seconds.
About Chase PDF Statements
Chase bank statements are typically downloaded as PDF files from online banking portals. While these PDFs are easy to read, extracting transaction data manually can be time-consuming.
MintConvert extracts the transaction table from your Chase statement and converts it into structured data. Each transaction — including date, description, debit, credit, and balance — is parsed and exported into clean formats like CSV or Excel.
Chase bank statements are standard PDFs downloaded from Chase Online — no password required. Checking, savings, and business statements all use the same format. Chase PDFs list deposits and withdrawals in separate sections before showing a chronological transaction list. MintConvert uses the chronological list for output.
Chase Statements for Accounting and Tax
Many users convert Chase statements when preparing financial records, analysing spending, or importing data into accounting software.
CSV and Excel formats are commonly used for bookkeeping and financial analysis. QuickBooks (.qbo) files can be imported directly into accounting software.
In the US, bank statements support Schedule C and Schedule E preparation, IRS record-keeping requirements, and small business bookkeeping. In United States, converted statements are often used for QuickBooks import, IRS record-keeping, and Schedule C preparation.
Files exported by MintConvert are compatible with QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks Desktop, Wave, FreshBooks.
Why People Convert Chase Statements
Users convert Chase bank statements for several reasons:
• importing transactions into accounting software
• analysing spending patterns in spreadsheets
• preparing financial reports or tax filings
• merging multiple monthly statements into one dataset
Structured formats like CSV or Excel make it easier to filter, sort, and analyse transactions compared with raw PDF statements.
Why MintConvert
- Optimised for Chase statements — Chase PDFs list deposits and withdrawals in separate sections before showing a chronological transaction list. MintConvert uses the chronological list for output.
- 4 output formats — CSV, Excel, JSON, and QuickBooks QBO — all from one upload.
- USD preserved — All USD amounts are exported as numeric values.
- Multi-page support — All pages of your Chase statement are extracted.
- Privacy first — Chase PDF files are deleted immediately after conversion.
- Free to start — 5 free conversions per month. No credit card required.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert a Chase statement to CSV?
Log in to Chase.com → Accounts → Statements → Select month → Download PDF. Upload the PDF to MintConvert, choose CSV, and download the extracted transaction data in seconds.
How do I download my Chase statement as a PDF?
Log in to Chase.com → Accounts → Statements → Select month → Download PDF.
What are the quirks of Chase PDF statements?
Chase PDFs list deposits and withdrawals in separate sections before showing a chronological transaction list. MintConvert uses the chronological list for output.
Which Chase account types are supported?
MintConvert supports Chase Chase Total Checking, Savings, and Business Complete Checking accounts. All account types use the same statement structure.
Can I use Chase statements for accounting or taxes?
In the US, bank statements support Schedule C and Schedule E preparation, IRS record-keeping requirements, and small business bookkeeping.
What formats can I convert Chase statements to?
MintConvert converts Chase statements to CSV, Excel (.xlsx), JSON, and QuickBooks (.qbo).