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  1. 998 votes

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    Thanks for your continued feedback and patience on this long-standing request. Our team has started to build this out, and we’re looking forward to sharing more as development and testing progresses.

    This release will support ingestion of bank statement data via the Bank Feeds API for accounts where a bank feed has not been established and allow customers to automate the current manual file upload process.

    As part of this work, we’ll be running a beta with a small group first (from mid June) so we can test the experience and gather feedback before broader availability. We’ll continue to post updates here as we reach key milestones.

    Adam Terrey supported this idea  · 
  2. 279 votes

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    Thank you for the continued feedback and for your patience on this long‑running request. We know that programmatic bank reconciliation and AI‑driven workflows are increasingly important to many of you, and we understand the frustration that this capability is not available via the Xero API.


    After reviewing this again with our legal, risk and banking teams, we have confirmed that we will not be adding the ability to reconcile bank statement lines via the API or to expose unreconciled bank statement data via the public API.


    There are a few key reasons for this decision:

    1. Regulatory and contractual obligations on raw bank data. Unreconciled bank statement lines are “raw” banking data – unmodified information that comes directly from banks. In markets such as Australia, this data is treated as banking data under consumer data rights regimes. Sharing it on to third parties (including via an open API) would require us…
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    Adam Terrey commented  · 

    "We know that reconciling would be a valuable API feature, but reconciling requires fine grained access to bank statement data and unfortunately we’re not able to share that data via the API for commercial reasons."
    Really? A timestamp, a description, a credit/debit is hardly fine grain transaction data and is all viewable for the user through the web interfaces - there is nothing sacred about an API that should limit you from exposing this. Additionally, commercially, I would think a bank would not be granted ownership over that data because they are not the author of transactions and the records generally belong to the user.

    Additionally 2018 is some time ago, can you re-investigate this as a possibility?