Bank Statement Converter does one job well: converting bank statement PDFs to spreadsheets. DocInterpreter does that too, but it isn't limited to bank statements — it uses AI to pull structured data from invoices, receipts and any document, and lets you define a custom JSON schema so you get exactly the fields you need, exported to Excel, CSV or JSON.
| Feature | DocInterpreter | Bank Statement Converter |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | ||
| Free credits to start | ||
| Model | Subscription | Subscription |
| Starting price | $15/mo (500 credits/pages) | $15/mo (400 credits/pages) |
| OCR | ||
| Document Type | Any Document | Only Bank Statements |
| Supported File Types | PDF, JPG, PNG | Only PDF |
| Support For Scanned PDFs | First Class | Limited |
| Agentic Document Extraction | ||
| Agentic Document Extraction | ||
| Custom fields (define your own JSON schema) | ||
| Supported File Types | PDF, JPG, PNG | |
Yes. Upload a bank statement (PDF or image) and DocInterpreter extracts the transactions into a clean Excel or CSV file — and you can also export JSON.
DocInterpreter isn't limited to bank statements. It extracts data from any documents you put into it, and lets you define a custom schema so the AI returns exactly the fields you need.
No. You get free starter credits when you sign up, so you can test extraction before subscribing.
Excel (XLSX), CSV and JSON.
If bank statements are the only documents you ever convert, Bank Statement Converter is a fine single-purpose pick. But if you also handle other types of documents, want to choose your own fields, or need JSON output, DocInterpreter is the better long-term choice — and you can try it free.