Banks That Support QuickBooks

2936 U.S. financial institutions that connect to QuickBooks Online — searchable directory.

QuickBooks Online connects directly to 2936 U.S. banks, credit unions, and credit-card issuers, from the largest national banks (Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citi, U.S. Bank) to community banks, credit unions, and modern fintechs like Mercury, Bluevine, and Relay. Once connected, transactions flow into QuickBooks automatically — so reconciliations, sales tax, and end-of-month close take minutes instead of hours. The list below is sourced from Intuit's official supported-banks document.

Source: Intuit Supported Banks List (QBO US, dated 2021-01-26). Cross-referenced with 2914 bank profiles already tracked on Open Banking Tracker. Background reading: How QuickBooks bank-feed integrations work (Apideck).
2,936
Banks supported
US
Region covered
Online
QuickBooks product

Search every QuickBooks-supported bank

Showing 500 of 2,936 matches — type to search the full list.
1st Mariner Bank· 2 variants
Access Bank
Adirondack Bank· 2 variants
Andover Bank· 2 variants
Associated Bank· 2 variants
BAC Community Bank· 2 variants
Bank First(WI)· 3 variants
Bank of America· 2 variants
Bank of Bartlett· 2 variants
Bank of Botetourt· 2 variants
Bank of Tampa· 2 variants
Bank of The James· 2 variants
Bank of the West· 2 variants
Bank OZK· 2 variants
Bank Vista· 2 variants
Bank7· 2 variants
Bankcda· 2 variants
BankCherokee· 2 variants
BankLiberty· 2 variants
BlackRidgeBANK· 2 variants
Bruning State Bank· 2 variants
CAPITAL BANK
Capital Bank (MD)· 2 variants
CapitalBank
CB&S Bank (AL)· 2 variants
CenterState Bank· 2 variants
CenTrust Bank· 2 variants
CFBank· 2 variants
CFG Community Bank· 2 variants

Frequently asked questions

Which banks support QuickBooks?

According to Intuit's published list, 2936 U.S. banks, credit unions, and credit-card issuers connect directly to QuickBooks Online — spanning national banks, regional banks, modern fintechs, and thousands of community banks and credit unions. Use the searchable directory below to look up a specific institution.

Does QuickBooks Desktop (Pro, Premier, Enterprise) connect to the same banks as QuickBooks Online?

QuickBooks Desktop connects to most of the same banks but uses a different mechanism. Online uses Direct Connect or Express Web Connect to pull transactions automatically; Desktop typically supports Direct Connect (which sometimes carries a small monthly fee from the bank) and Web Connect, where you log into your bank, download a .QBO/.QFX file, and import it. Coverage is broadly similar — the list below is the closest single source of truth for institutions that work with at least one QuickBooks bank-feed channel.

What should I look for in a business bank account if I use QuickBooks?

Pick a dedicated business checking account at any institution on the list below — they all support QuickBooks Online bank feeds. Beyond that, optimise for the things that matter to your operation: branch access, monthly fees, transaction limits, ACH/wire pricing, multi-user access, and whether you need integrated cards, lending, or international payments. The single most impactful decision is keeping business and personal transactions on separate accounts.

What is the difference between Direct Connect and Express Web Connect in QuickBooks?

Direct Connect lets QuickBooks talk to your bank using credentials you set up specifically for QuickBooks; it is faster, more reliable, and supports two-way features like Bill Pay where the bank offers them. Express Web Connect uses your normal online-banking login and refreshes once or twice a day. Most banks below support at least one of the two; many support both.

How does a QuickBooks bank feed actually help my bookkeeping?

Once your bank account is connected, QuickBooks pulls every transaction automatically and matches it to the right category, customer, vendor, or invoice — including transfers between accounts. That means no manual data entry, fewer typos, and a real-time view of cash position. For day-to-day operations it lets you reconcile in minutes instead of hours and makes month-end close, sales-tax filing, and quarterly tax estimates dramatically faster.

My bank is not on the list — can I still use QuickBooks?

Yes. Even if your bank is not on Intuit's direct-connect list, you can almost always import transactions via Web Connect (download a .QBO/.QFX file from your bank and upload it to QuickBooks) or by exporting CSV statements and using QuickBooks' file import. Third-party connectors like Plaid and Finicity also bridge many banks that are not directly listed by Intuit.

Further reading: Building QuickBooks bank-feed integrations — Apideck (deep dive on Direct Connect, Express Web Connect, and how third-party apps surface QuickBooks-connected accounts).
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