How Far Back Can You Download Bank Transactions? Statement Archive vs Download Window, Bank by Bank

Jul 11, 2026

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Short answer: Most large US banks keep roughly seven years of statement PDFs online, but they let you download only a fraction of that as transaction data. U.S. Bank publishes 18 months of transaction history online and six months on mobile, while its statements go back seven years. Wells Fargo's activity screen shows the past 60 to 90 days, while deposit-account statements stay online for seven years. The statement archive is the long record. The download is the short one. Anything older than the download window has to come from the PDF.

This gap is the single most underappreciated fact in bookkeeping, and it is where most catch-up jobs quietly fail. Someone agrees to clean up two years of books, logs into the bank, clicks Download, and discovers the button only reaches back to last spring. The data exists. The bank has it. It is sitting in the statement archive in a format accounting software refuses to read.

Statement archive vs download window at the major US banks

Every figure below comes from the bank's own published help material, checked in July 2026. Windows differ by account type and change without much announcement, so treat this as the starting point and confirm against your own account.

BankStatement PDFs onlineTransaction download / activity window
ChaseUp to 7 years, depending on account typeThe Activity page download covers the recent activity shown there, not the full statement archive
Bank of AmericaStatement copies retained about 7 years; older ones may need to be orderedActivity export covers the transaction history shown online, commonly a year to 18 months
Wells Fargo7 years for deposit accounts, home mortgage, trust and managed investment; 2 years for credit cards, HELOCs, personal loans; 12 months for auto loansThe Account Activity screen shows recent and pending transactions for the past 60 to 90 days
U.S. BankUp to 7 years of statementsThe last 18 months of transaction history online, 6 months on mobile
PNC7 years for checking, savings, auto loans and unsecured installment loans; 4 years for credit cards; 5 years for mortgage and home equity; 10 years for investment accounts24 months of check images in transaction history
Capital OneUp to 7 years of statements for active accountsRecent activity only; older periods come from statements
CitiUp to 7 years, with the most recent 12 to 24 months immediately viewable and older statements available on requestRecent activity only; requested statements stay available for a limited number of days
Ally7 years, including after all accounts are closedRecent activity only; the archive is the statement list

The pattern is consistent enough to state as a rule: seven years of statements, and somewhere between 90 days and 18 months of downloadable transactions. Banks are not being difficult. Statements are a compliance artifact they are obliged to keep. The transaction feed is a convenience feature built for people managing this month, not last year.

Why the download window is so short

Three reasons, and none of them are going to change in your favor. Online activity tables are optimized for speed, so banks trim what they keep hot. Search and export against years of rows is expensive at the scale of a national bank. And the bank considers the statement to be the authoritative record, so anything older gets pushed there deliberately.

There is a fourth reason that has started to bite this year. The connection methods that used to pull history into accounting software are being retired: Eastern Bank switches Direct Connect off on July 31, 2026, the Zions Bancorporation banks on October 30, 2026, and more will follow as Intuit retires its desktop products. Even when those feeds were healthy they only pulled activity forward from the day you set them up. See which banks are discontinuing QuickBooks Direct Connect for the dates.

How much history do you actually need?

More than the download gives you, in almost every case that matters commercially:

  • Catch-up bookkeeping: whatever period was never bookkept, routinely 12 to 24 months, sometimes several years.
  • A bank statement loan or SBA package: lenders commonly average deposits over 12 or 24 months.
  • An IRS audit: the agency generally looks back three years, and up to six when substantial income is underreported.
  • A mortgage: only the two most recent statements, but every page of them, including the ones that look blank.
  • A dispute or a forensic review: as far back as the argument goes.

Line those up against a 90-day export window and the mismatch is obvious. The download solves the smallest problem on the list.

What to do about the years the download cannot reach

Download the statement PDFs before you need them, and convert them. The PDF holds exactly what the export holds, date, description, amount, and usually a running balance the CSV export drops, in a layout built for a human rather than a spreadsheet. Converting it turns those rows back into data: Excel or CSV for analysis, or a QBO file for QuickBooks, which is the same Web Connect format the bank's own download produces. Nothing about that path depends on a live connection, an open account, or a window the bank chose.

Three practical habits follow from the table above:

  1. Pull the archive on your way out. Before closing an account or leaving a bank, download every statement you are entitled to. Ally keeps them for seven years after closure, most banks are less generous, and the request process for a closed account takes days and often carries a per-statement fee.
  2. Convert at intake, not at deadline. If you take on a client with two years of unrecorded activity, get the statements in the first week. Discovering the export window mid-close is how a job slips.
  3. Keep both. Store the PDF as the record and the converted file as the working data. The PDF is what an auditor, lender, or underwriter will accept; see how lenders verify bank statements for why the document itself carries weight the spreadsheet does not.

The credit card exception

Card accounts are stingier, and the table shows it. Wells Fargo keeps credit card statements online for two years against seven for deposit accounts. PNC keeps card statements four years against seven. If you are reconstructing business card spending for a tax year that is already two or three years old, check the card archive first, because it may already be gone while the checking archive is still fine. The card statement PDFs you saved at the time may be the only copy that exists.

What about the other documents in the file?

The same trap catches everything else in a loan or audit package. Pay stubs, tax returns, invoices, and closing documents all arrive as PDFs and all need to become data before anyone can work with them, which is why teams that handle these at volume extract the fields from the documents automatically rather than re-keying them. The principle is the same as with statements: the document is the record, the structured version is the working copy, and you need both.

Last updated July 2026. Statement retention and download windows are set by each bank and change; the figures above come from the banks' own published help material and should be confirmed against your account.

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