![]() ![]() If after doing the conversion of your main Quicken Mac file, you find it's going to be too big a project to get it cleaned up and correct, you can always decide to start a new file (starting with 1/1/22 is a good starting point) - but you'll lose all your existing data when you kill off your old Mac. (And a bigger learning curve going from macOS to Windows, if you aren't an experienced Windows user.) You'll have a bit of a learning curve to get familiar with Quicken Windows. You'd repeat the process for each separate Quicken Mac file, creating a New file each time in Quicken Windows before importing, in order to keep the files separate. If all your non-investment accounts come in fairly cleanly, then you can tackle what you want to do to re-create your investment accounts in Quicken Windows. Quicken has simple instructions for how to do that here. There's no harm in trying an export from your Quicken 2017 and importing it into Quicken Windows. My guess is that while there are a lot of Windows-to-Mac converters, there are relatively few people who want to do what you're doing to convert Mac to Windows. O In the migration from Quicken Mac to Quicken Windows, investment accounts not transfer. It works in the opposite direction, but the developers on the Quicken Windows team have never gone back to update the converter they created more than a dozen years ago (before investment accounts were added to the old 2010 Quicken Essentials code to form the core of the modern Quicken Mac program in 2014). ![]()
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