PayPal export → dashboard

Your PayPal Activity, your money dashboard.

Download your Activity from PayPal, drop the CSV, and see net income, the trend over time, what fees took, your top payment types and where money came from — without opening a spreadsheet.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

PayPal's Activity page is fine for hunting one transaction, painful for a quick income read. Download the Activity CSV and this builds the view you actually want: net collected, the trend, what fees ate, and which payment types pay the bills.

i. export

Download from PayPal

Activity → Download → CSV. The default columns (Date, Type, Status, Gross, Fee, Net, Country) are all we need.

ii. detect

Net becomes income

The Net column is recognized as currency and used as the primary metric. Date becomes the time axis, with Fee broken out separately.

iii. read

Net, fees, types

Net collected, daily/weekly trend, fees taken, top payment types, and a country breakdown — click any bar to filter.

02 · The views

The income read PayPal scatters.

Everything you check before deciding what you actually earned, arranged automatically from the raw export.

  • 01

    Gross, fees & net

    Net up top, with Fee broken out so you can see exactly what PayPal kept versus what landed.

  • 02

    Income by type

    The Type column becomes a breakdown — see whether checkout, subscriptions or donations drive your income.

  • 03

    Where money comes from

    Country splits show your buyer mix without writing a single formula.

  • 04

    Private by default

    Your activity data is parsed locally. It never leaves your browser — verify in DevTools → Network.

"I drop the PayPal CSV and the month is just there — net, fees, the lot. No more rebuilding a sheet every time."
— a freelancer
03 · FAQ

PayPal dashboard questions.

Which PayPal export works?
The standard Activity download (Activity → Download → CSV). Any export with a Date, a Net or Gross amount, and a Status works. Monthly and custom date ranges both load fine.
Net is the headline metric — Gross plus the negative Fee — so the trend reflects what actually landed. Fees are broken out separately so you can see what PayPal took.
Yes — click any bar or slice (type, status, country) and the whole dashboard recomputes against that filter, fees and net included.
No. Parsing and aggregation happen entirely in your browser. The file never touches a server.
Refunds come through as negative Gross and Net with a Refunded status, so they net against income automatically — or click to filter them out.