حوّل ملفات OFX أو QFX أو QBO بنمط OFX إلى QBO Web Connect مناسب لـ QuickBooks.
حوّل ملفات OFX أو QFX أو QBO بنمط OFX إلى QBO Web Connect مناسب لـ QuickBooks. This browser tool keeps the workflow simple for accountants, bookkeepers, and small businesses.
OFX and QBO explained
OFX is a general bank transaction format. QBO is QuickBooks Web Connect format with Intuit-specific fields such as FID, ORG, and INTU.BID.
Why use this converter
Changing the file extension is not enough. This converter writes the Web Connect structure, preserves transaction data, and shows warnings before download.
How to convert OFX to QBO
Check the file before importing into QuickBooks.
Step 1
Upload the OFX, QFX, or OFX-style source file.
Step 2
Review account details, dates, transactions, and warnings.
Step 3
Confirm INTU.BID, FID, and ORG.
Step 4
Choose account type and FITID handling.
Step 5
Download the QBO file and import it into QuickBooks.
Can I import an OFX file directly into QuickBooks Online?
QuickBooks often expects QBO, so conversion is usually safer.
How do I verify the QBO file after conversion?
Compare transaction count, dates, account type, and warnings.
Will the QBO output work with all versions of QuickBooks?
It follows Web Connect style, but QuickBooks support can vary.
Should I regenerate FITIDs?
Keep original FITIDs when possible. Repair only missing IDs.
Can I convert multiple OFX files to QBO in one batch?
Yes. Each upload becomes a separate QBO file.
QBO converter features
The tool prepares Web Connect output, not just a renamed file.
- OFX, QFX, and OFX-style QBO source files are supported.
- The output includes Web Connect headers, FID, ORG, and INTU.BID.
- Each file keeps transaction date, amount, name, memo, check number, and FITID.
- Batch mode creates a separate QBO file for each upload.
- The preview shows transaction count, net change, and import warnings.
- Warnings help you fix missing account ID, missing FITID, or empty bank profile fields.
- Checking, savings, and credit card account types are available.
- Original FITIDs stay in place by default to reduce duplicate imports.
- Repair mode can create IDs only where the bank file has none.
- No signup or desktop software is required.
- The QBO remains a readable Web Connect file.
- It fits bookkeeping, accounting, and small business cleanup work.
When this tool helps
Use it when your bank export and QuickBooks import format do not match.
- Your bank gives OFX but QuickBooks asks for QBO.
- A client sends transaction files that need QuickBooks import.
- You prepare monthly bank history before reconciliation.
- A small business needs older transactions inside QuickBooks.
- QuickBooks Desktop needs a Web Connect import file.
- QuickBooks Online upload is faster than manual entry.
- A bank removed direct QBO download from its portal.
- You need a quick browser converter without installing utilities.
OFX to QBO instead of manual entry
Manual entry is slow. A proper QBO file keeps data and adds QuickBooks Web Connect fields.
Import tips
These checks help prevent rejected imports.
- Keep original FITIDs when the source file includes them.
- Use repair mode only when the preview reports missing FITIDs.
- Check account type before importing.
- Use the bank's known INTU.BID or FID if QuickBooks rejects the file.
- Test with one month before importing a long history.
- Back up the QuickBooks Desktop company file before a large import.
- Compare transaction count and date range after import.
Create a QuickBooks QBO file
Upload the OFX file and download a QuickBooks-ready QBO.
Keep the original OFX for records and use the QBO for import.