# QBO Maker vs DocuClipper: An Honest Comparison

_Canonical: https://qbomaker.com/blog/qbomaker-vs-docuclipper.html_

Both tools turn bank statements into QuickBooks .QBO files, but they solve different problems. QBO Maker is free, runs entirely in your browser, and never uploads your files, which makes it ideal for clean CSV and Excel exports. DocuClipper is a paid cloud service with strong OCR, which makes it the better pick when you only have scanned or image based PDF statements.

## The short answer
If your bank already gives you a CSV or Excel download, QBO Maker converts it to .QBO for free, with no signup and no file ever leaving your computer. If your only option is a scanned PDF or a photographed statement, DocuClipper's optical character recognition (OCR) is built exactly for that job and will likely save you time.In other words: QBO Maker wins on privacy, price, and zero install. DocuClipper wins on scanned PDF OCR and high volume processing. Many people will only ever need the free option.

## How each tool works
The core difference is where your data goes.QBO Maker is 100 percent client side. The conversion runs in your browser using JavaScript, so your transactions never touch a server. There is nothing to upload, nothing to install, and no account required to use the converter. It reads CSV and Excel files, plus clean text based statements, and outputs QuickBooks .QBO, Quicken .QFX, and generic .OFX.DocuClipper is a cloud service. You create an account, upload your PDF statements, and their system extracts the data on isolated AWS infrastructure before letting you export. According to DocuClipper, files are processed on their servers and you can delete them at any time. This server side approach is what enables its OCR on scanned documents, which is genuinely hard to do well in a browser alone.

## Feature and price comparison
FeatureQBO MakerDocuClipperPriceFree for the core converter. Pro from $29/moPaid only. Published plans start around $20 to $39/mo billed annually, scaling up with page volume. No free planFiles uploaded to a serverNo. Runs in your browserYes. Files are uploaded and processed in the cloudSignup requiredNo, for the core toolYes, account requiredInstallNone. Web basedNone. Web basedBest inputCSV, Excel, clean text statementsScanned and digital PDF statementsScanned PDF OCRNoYes, a core strengthOutput formatsQBO, QFX, OFXQBO, CSV, Excel, Xero, JSON via APIPage or document limitsNoneMonthly page limits per plan, with overage feesBalance reconciliation checkYesYesPricing for DocuClipper varies by billing cadence and plan tier, and the company publishes annual discounts, so check their site for the figure that applies to you. The headline difference is simple: QBO Maker's core converter is free, and DocuClipper requires a paid plan.

## Where DocuClipper is the better choice
We want to be fair, because DocuClipper does some things QBO Maker does not.Scanned and image based PDFs. If your statement is a scan or a phone photo, you need OCR. DocuClipper specializes in this and supports both scanned and digital PDFs.Many bank formats out of the box. DocuClipper advertises support for a large number of institutions without manual template setup.High volume and team workflows. If you process hundreds or thousands of pages a month across a firm, a paid cloud tool with per plan page allowances and an API may fit better.Categorization and accounting integrations. DocuClipper offers extraction and export options aimed at bookkeeping firms.If any of those describe you, DocuClipper is worth a trial.

## Where QBO Maker is the better choice
For a large share of people converting their own bank data, the free option is the right one.Privacy. Your statements never leave your device. Nothing is uploaded. This matters if you are uncomfortable sending financial records to a third party server.Price. The core converter is free, with no per page limits and no overage fees.No signup and no install. Open the page, drop in your file, download your .QBO. The basics need no account.Clean CSV and Excel. If your bank already exports structured data, you do not need OCR at all, and you should not pay for it.QBO Maker also adds a balance reconciliation check so you can confirm the converted totals match your statement before importing into QuickBooks.Try the free QBO Maker converter now. No upload, no signup, no install.

**Is QBO Maker really free?**
Yes. The core converter that turns CSV, Excel, and clean text statements into QBO, QFX, and OFX is free with no signup. Paid Pro plans add batch multi file conversion, saved per bank templates, and payee cleanup rules, but you do not need them for basic conversions.

**Does DocuClipper upload my files to a server?**
Yes. DocuClipper is a cloud tool, so your PDF statements are uploaded and processed on its servers. The company says files run on isolated AWS infrastructure and can be deleted at any time. By contrast, QBO Maker runs entirely in your browser and never uploads your files.

**Can QBO Maker read scanned PDF statements?**
No. QBO Maker works best with CSV, Excel, and clean text based statements. For scanned or photographed PDFs you need OCR, which is where DocuClipper is genuinely strong. If you can download a CSV or Excel file from your bank, QBO Maker will handle it for free.

**Which one should I pick?**
If your bank gives you CSV or Excel, or clean text statements, start with the free QBO Maker. If your only statements are scanned or image based PDFs, or you process high volumes across a firm, DocuClipper's OCR and team features are likely worth the paid plan.

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