OCR built in

Convert scanned bank statements to CSV, Excel, OFX & QFX

Scanned PDFs and photographed paper statements convert through OCR — then every row is verified against the statement's own balances, so a misread digit gets flagged instead of reaching your books.

Scans & phone photos · password-protected PDFs too
No sign-up to try · originals deleted the moment conversion finishes
norekey.com/convert
PDF
Drop your statements here
or browse files · PDFs up to 50 MB each
.csv.xlsx.ofx.qfx.json
New here?
01
Drop the scan or photo
A scanned PDF, a photographed statement — one file or a whole folder.
02
OCR reads it, we verify it
The pages are read by OCR, then every row is reconciled against the statement totals.
03
Export anywhere
CSV, Excel, OFX, QFX or JSON — signed amounts, import-ready.

OCR that has to prove itself

Most OCR tools hand you a transcript and wish you luck. Here, the arithmetic is the acceptance test.

Reads the layout, not a template

Two-column statements, single signed amounts, overdraft notation, wrapped descriptions — the OCR reads your statement the way a person would, so old and unusual layouts work too.

Balance-checked, misreads flagged

OCR on paper can misread a digit — so every conversion is reconciled against the statement's own opening and closing balances. Anything that doesn't tie out is flagged for review instead of exported silently. You get numbers you can trust, or a clear warning.

Automatic second pass

If the first read doesn't reconcile, it's re-read automatically and the attempt that balances wins — most hard scans come out clean without you doing anything.

Scanned pages use 3 pages of allowance each.

OCR takes more work to run, so a scanned page draws three from your monthly allowance — shown to you at upload, before anything converts. The free plan's 10 monthly pages cover a 3-page scanned statement, no card required.

See pricing →

Scanned statements — questions