Export your full transaction history in seven formats — generated on your device, never sent to a server. One click, any date range.
Download Hunch freeWhether you're handing files to an accountant or migrating to a new app, there's a format for it.
OFX 1.0.2 SGML format, imported directly via Banking → Upload transactions. Each bank account exports as a separate statement block for clean multi-account imports.
Intuit Interchange Format with TRNS/SPL/ENDTRNS transaction blocks. Imports into QuickBooks Pro, Premier, and Enterprise via File → Utilities → Import.
A mapped CSV with Date, Amount, Payee, Description, Reference, and Account columns — matching the bank statement import format both Xero and Wave accept.
The exact four-column format (Date, Payee, Memo, Amount) YNAB's CSV importer expects. Duplicate detection on re-import means you can export and import repeatedly without double-counting.
Matches Monarch's eight-column import format: Date, Merchant, Category, Account, Original Statement, Notes, Amount, Tags. Categories carry over from Hunch.
Matches Mint's nine-column CSV layout: Date, Description, Original Description, Amount, Transaction Type, Category, Account Name, Labels, and Notes. Handy for migrating between tools that understand the Mint format.
A universal comma-separated file with date, merchant, description, category, account, and amount. Opens in Excel, Google Sheets, Numbers, or any tool that accepts CSV.
Sync your accounts through the Hunch desktop app. Transactions are pulled directly from your bank and stored locally on your device — no third-party aggregator involved.
Open Settings → Export data (or hit Export on the Transactions page). Pick the accounting tool you're targeting, then select All time or set a custom From / To date range.
Your file is generated on-device and saved to your Downloads folder. Open QuickBooks, YNAB, Xero, or any other tool and import — most take under 30 seconds.
Your transaction history is always exportable in full, in open formats. You never have to pay to get your own data out — export is available on every plan, free and paid.
Export files are assembled directly in the app from your local data — no upload, no server round-trip. Your financial data never leaves your device during an export.
Export all time or set a From / To range. The export panel shows a live count of transactions in scope before you download, so you know exactly what's going out.
QBO files import directly into QuickBooks Online with accounts auto-matched. IIF files work in QuickBooks Desktop. Xero CSV maps to your chart of accounts on first import.
Hunch supports seven export formats: QuickBooks Online (.qbo / OFX), QuickBooks Desktop (.iif), Xero and Wave CSV, YNAB CSV, Monarch Money CSV, Mint CSV, and plain CSV. Every format is generated directly on your device — no data is sent to a server during export.
In QuickBooks Online, go to Banking → Upload transactions → Upload a file, then select your .qbo file. Map the columns once and QuickBooks will match the OFX data automatically. Each bank account in Hunch exports as a separate STMTRS block, so multi-account files import cleanly.
Yes. In the export panel (Settings → Export data, or the Export button on the Transactions page) you can pick a From and To date, or choose All time to include every transaction Hunch has synced.
No. Hunch runs entirely on your device. When you export, the file is assembled in your browser from your local data and downloaded directly to your machine. Nothing is sent to Hunch's servers or any third party at any point during the export.
Choose the YNAB format in Hunch's export panel to download a .csv file. In YNAB, go to your account → Import transactions → Choose file. YNAB's CSV importer accepts the Date / Payee / Memo / Amount columns Hunch exports, and will detect and skip duplicates on re-import.
Choose the Mint format in the export panel to download a CSV with the nine columns Mint used: Date, Description, Original Description, Amount, Transaction Type, Category, Account Name, Labels, and Notes. This is useful if you're migrating data between tools that understand the Mint CSV layout, or archiving transactions in a format you're already familiar with.
Yes. If your accountant uses QuickBooks, share the .qbo or .iif file. If they use Xero or Wave, use the mapped CSV export. For anything else, plain CSV opens in Excel, Numbers, or Google Sheets and is universally accepted.
Export to QuickBooks, YNAB, Mint, Xero, or plain CSV — whenever you want, however you want.
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