# Convert Chase CSV to QuickBooks (.QBO)

_Canonical: https://qbomaker.com/banks/chase.html_

Chase makes downloading transactions easy, from the account Activity page you can grab a CSV (Spreadsheet), QIF, QFX, or QuickBooks (.QBO) file. The catch is that Chase's CSV layout doesn't line up with what QuickBooks Online expects on its upload screen. A Chase checking export uses the columns Details, Posting Date, Description, Amount, Type, Balance, and Check or Slip #, far more than QuickBooks' three- or four-column importer wants.Chase's direct .QBO/Web Connect download works well when it's available, but it's capped at roughly 24 months of history (and about 1,000 rows per download), and credit-card or older-statement data often forces you back to CSV. When that happens, you're left manually deleting the Details, Type, Balance, and Check or Slip # columns and remapping the rest.QBO Maker does that reshaping for you. Feed it the raw Chase CSV or Excel file and it produces a clean, valid .QBO (OFX) that QuickBooks imports without a column-mapping screen. It all runs client-side in your browser, nothing is uploaded. Convert your Chase CSV now.

## Steps

1. Export your transactions from Chase online banking as CSV or Excel.
2. Open the QBO Maker converter and drop the file in.
3. Confirm the auto-detected date, amount (or separate debit/credit) and description columns.
4. Choose .QBO as the output and click download.
5. In QuickBooks Online: Transactions → Bank transactions → Upload from file, then select the .QBO. In Desktop: Banking → Bank Feeds → Import Web Connect File.

**Chase already offers a .QBO download, why use a converter?**
Because Chase's native Web Connect download is limited to about 24 months and ~1,000 rows, and it's not always offered on credit cards or older activity. If you've exported CSV instead, or you need to clean up history, QBO Maker rebuilds a valid .QBO from the CSV so you don't have to re-pull anything.

**What columns does the Chase checking CSV include?**
A Chase checking download typically has Details, Posting Date, Description, Amount, Type, Balance, and Check or Slip #. QuickBooks only needs date, description, and a signed amount, QBO Maker maps those and discards the rest automatically.

**Does this work with Chase credit-card exports too?**
Yes. Chase card CSVs use a slightly different header set (Transaction Date, Post Date, Description, Category, Type, Amount). QBO Maker detects the card layout and converts it to a .QBO the same way. See importing CSV into QuickBooks Online for the upload steps.

**Is the Chase file uploaded to a server?**
No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your Chase transactions stay on your machine, nothing is transmitted or stored by QBO Maker.

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Convert free at https://qbomaker.com/#tool, runs entirely in your browser.
