Formats & exportsUpdated 12 July 2026

How currencies are handled

Statements arrive in every currency, and the exports need to say so — here's exactly what happens.

Detection

During conversion, the statement's currency is read from its own symbols and text — £, €, $, ₹, ISO codes, bank names — and stored with the conversion. European formats like 1.234,56 € are normalised to standard decimals using the statement's own convention.

One currency per statement

A statement is one account in one currency, and so is the export. Multi-currency accounts (Revolut, Wise) produce one statement per currency balance — convert each PDF separately and each export carries its own currency, ready to import into the matching account in your accounting tool.

What the exports contain

CSV and Excel exports contain the amounts exactly as extracted — no symbols, no conversion, just clean decimals. OFX and QFX embed the detected currency code in the file's metadata, which is how Xero and Quicken know which account the transactions belong to.

When detection fails

If a statement genuinely carries no currency clues, OFX and QFX exports fall back to GBP. If that's wrong for your statement, reply to any support email or write to support@norekey.com — statements that defeat detection are exactly the ones we want to see.

No conversion, ever

Amounts are never converted between currencies — what the statement says is what the export says.

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