Designed for statements
Generic PDF converters often preserve layout. StatementForge focuses on transaction rows.
If your bank gives you a PDF statement instead of a spreadsheet, StatementForge extracts the transaction rows and exports a clean CSV.
Generic PDF converters often preserve layout. StatementForge focuses on transaction rows.
Rows are split into useful money columns instead of a copied PDF table.
The PDF is parsed in your browser so the statement contents stay local.

Choose a text-based bank statement PDF, add a batch on bulk plans, or paste statement text when a PDF is locked.

StatementForge looks for dates, descriptions, withdrawals, deposits, net amounts, and balances.

Check and edit the transaction table before exporting, especially for unusual layouts or rows that need manual review.

Download CSV, XLSX, JSON, QBO, OFX, or QIF depending on the workflow you need.

StatementForge works best with text-based PDF statements and can try local image-to-text for the first 8 scanned pages.
The export is generated from extracted rows. Review dates, amounts, and balances before using it for accounting.
Yes. StatementForge separates withdrawals, deposits, net amounts, and balances when those values can be read.
Yes. It is built around bank statement transaction rows instead of preserving general PDF layout.
Start with the format, privacy setup, or statement type that matches the file in front of you. Each guide opens the same converter with a more focused workflow.
Use these when you want clean rows for spreadsheets, bookkeeping cleanup, or analysis.
Create reviewed files for accounting tools that accept QBO, QIF, OFX, or CSV imports.
Parse, review, analyze, and batch-convert sensitive statement files in the browser.
Start from a bank-specific or statement-review workflow, then convert the downloaded PDF.