How Quickly Prepare and Print Checks in Quicken

Modified on Wed, Jun 30, 2021 at 5:36 PM

This tutorial shows how quickly create transactions or checks to print, convert to QIF file and import into Quicken and print checks. We will use CSV2QIF utility. IMPORTANT: CSV2QIF is now replaced with the Transactions app, which converts from more formats and converts to more formats.

You can use Excel or your favorite spreadsheet software to quickly enter transactions or checks. So the idea is: you use your spreadsheet application to quickly enter data or you have that data already as CSV. Instead of using Quicken as a data entry point, you use Excel or your favorite spreadsheet application as a data entry point. And we can name it as 'Checks'.  What is important: that first line should have the column names, so the converter configures out what is going on, how is your file organized. So we can have: Date, Amount, Payee, Memo, Check number columns. 

 Check number column supposed 'Print' value for all transactions. The first capital 'P' must be at the word 'Print', and the rest should be lowercase letters.  

There are some Dates, Amounts (you can enter amounts as positive numbers, you can easily adjust it in the converter later), Payee names, Memo. Now we have to save a CSV file. If you have Excel, you can save as Excel, it's fine, the converter can open Excel files or CSV files. So we select 'File' - 'Download as' - 'Comma-separated values'. 

Click the 'Save' button. 

Then we have this file saved. Now we're going to ProperSoft CSV2QIF converter and then we use that file 'Checks-sample'. Click the 'Open' button. 

So we have our amounts. And what we have to say that charges are positive. Just click on 'Charges/Withdrawals'. It's all withdrawals because it is the check numbers.  

Then we check that Doc number has 'Print' value for all transactions.  

In this example, we use Quicken 2017 which requires QIF files to have the account name. So we have to set Account Name exactly as you have in Quicken (in this case Checking). 

Click the 'Convert' button to create your QIF file and switch to Quicken. 

If you are using Quicken 2018, or Quicken 2019, or later, you don't have to set the Account Name and for Quicken 2017 or Quicken 2014,  you have to use the Account Name. In Quicken click 'File' - 'File Import' -  'QIF File'. 

Then click the 'Browse' button. 

Look for the 'Checks-sample' file and select it.  

For Quicken 2017 we have to select 'All account', for Quicken 2018, 2019, 2020 we select Account Name here that we want to import transactions. Click the 'Import' button.  

Now data is imported.  

Check number set as 'Print'. Click 'Accept All'. 

Now we are ready to print. So what Quicken does? Whatever is named as 'Print' will be used to print checks. And Quicken will generate numbers instead of this 'Print' value once it prints.  

Click 'File' - 'Print Checks'.  

Then we set the Check Number that we want to start. You have your check number, it will not be shown on 'Print' because the check number is on your actual checkbooks, on those templates you have to print. So you are entering some number (for example, 1100) to match what you have on your checks and then click 'OK'. 

In this case, we don't have like 'Printer setup' here, so we will just print it to the output file.  

What Quicken does: in case if printing directly to printer or something happens, like paper jam - it allows you to reprint certain pages because this print value will be replaced with actual check numbers. So if you say everything is ok - it means you printed your checks so Quicken will change that print value to actual number to match what you have on paper.  

Let's verify quickly that we do have this printed as gas-company, hundred dollars, date, memo. There are no check numbers, as was mention before, so all this the template already for template to be printed. 

Now we click the 'OK' button.  

And then we see the check number is generated and that's it. 

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