ANZ · Categorised export

Categorise ANZ Statements by Spending Type

ANZ statement PDFs go in, a CSV with a Category column for every transaction comes out. No AI reads your statement to do it.

Supports PDF files up to 10MB

What comes out

Description (from statement)Category
UBER *EATS MELBOURNE AUDining & Takeaway
UBER TRIP HELP.UBER.COMTransport
SPOTIFY AUSubscriptions & Software
MEDIBANK PRIVATEInsurance

Real examples from ANZ statements used during testing.

The ANZ-specific pattern that needed fixing

Uber trips and Uber Eats orders look almost identical in raw statement text, and on ANZ statements a plain "uber" keyword for Transport was matching before the more specific "Uber Eats" pattern for Dining, because it came earlier in the rule list. Every Uber Eats order was being logged as a taxi fare. The fix was to check the food delivery pattern first and to widen it to catch the asterisk and spacing ANZ statements use, things like "UBER * EATS" and "UBER *EATS", which a simple word match doesn't pick up by default.

ANZ also runs statements for ANZ Plus, which has a different transaction layout to standard ANZ Internet Banking. Both are parsed and categorised through the same converter.

Categories used

GroceriesDining & TakeawayEntertainmentTransportInsuranceLoan & MortgageBills & UtilitiesSubscriptions & SoftwareHealth & FitnessShoppingTaxesIncomeInvestmentTravelFees & InterestTransfers+ more

Every category comes from a fixed list of keyword and pattern rules, not a model guessing at intent. Anything that doesn't match a rule is left as Uncategorised rather than assigned incorrectly, so you can see exactly what still needs a manual look.

Built without AI

Categorisation runs as static pattern matching in the same request that already parses your PDF. Your ANZ statement is never sent to an AI model to work out what your transactions mean, and nothing about your spending is stored afterwards to train one. It's a fixed set of rules, applied the same way every time.

What Our Customers Say

Banks like Westpac only let you download CSV files for the past 18–24 months. If you need older data, you're stuck downloading PDFs and manually extracting transactions from pages of formatting and bank jargon. That job is a real slog. Your product handled it instantly and gave me clean data.

Mark

Manufacturing, former HR/Finance Systems Consultant

As someone preparing tax returns, going through PDF bank statements manually is a real hassle. This tool dumps everything into Excel format instantly. Huge time-saver.

David

Director, Tax & Accounting Firm

Great tool for dealing with PDF statements from clients. The data comes out clean and ready to import, which saves a lot of repetitive work. I had one client with statements going back several years, and this handled them all without a hitch. Highly recommend for accountants and bookkeepers.

Tamara

Bookkeeper, Self-Employed

Converted several years of bank statements in minutes and saved me a lot of effort. I initially wasn’t sure if it would handle my older statement formats, but once I tried it, it worked well. Would recommend if you’re dealing with PDFs.

James

Owner, Construction Company

Questions

Does this use AI to categorise my ANZ statement?

No. Categories are assigned with static keyword and pattern matching, not a language model. Nothing in your statement is sent to an AI provider, and nothing is stored to improve a model over time.

How accurate is the categorisation?

On real ANZ statements tested during development, coverage sits around ~93% of transactions, depending on account type and how many one-off, unpredictable merchant names appear. Anything not matched is labelled Uncategorised rather than guessed at.

Can I edit the categories afterwards?

Yes. The CSV is a normal spreadsheet column, open it in Excel or Google Sheets and adjust anything that isn't quite right before you file it or hand it to your accountant.

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