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To see all your online purchases in one place you need to either manually download order history from each platform separately, use a browser extension that pulls data from multiple platforms simultaneously, or paste your existing export files into a visualisation tool. Most platforms do not talk to each other natively, so consolidation requires a deliberate step.
If you shop on Amazon, Walmart, Temu, eBay, and AliExpress, you already know the feeling. The boxes arrive on different days, the confirmation emails sit in five different inbox folders, and the monthly credit card statement just shows a wall of retailer charges that does not really tell you what you bought. You have a rough number in your head for what you spend online, and you have a quieter suspicion that the rough number is too low. This guide is for the version of you that wants to see the real number once, without spending a Saturday rebuilding it from screenshots.
There is no universal online purchase history because retailers have no incentive to share data with each other. Each platform keeps its own records, accessible only through its own account interface, in its own format, with its own rules about how far back you can look. Amazon does not want to make it easy for you to compare your spend to Walmart. Walmart does not want to make it easy for you to compare to Temu. The fragmentation is the business model.
The average American online shopper used 4.2 retail platforms in 2024, and a meaningful share of households used 6 or more once delivery apps and marketplaces are included. That means the typical person now has at least four separate, walled order histories with completely different export capabilities. Amazon, Walmart, Temu, eBay, and AliExpress each store their own version of the truth in formats that were never designed to be combined.
That is why your spending feels invisible. It is not that the data does not exist. It is that the data exists in 5 places at once and no single account ever shows you the total. To see all your online purchases in one place you have to pull each platform's history out and put the pieces together yourself, or use a tool built to do it for you.
Each retailer hands you a different slice of your own history. Knowing which platform gives you what is the first step toward a full picture.
Order history goes back to the date you created your account. The standard view inside Your Orders only filters easily for the last 3 months. A native CSV download exists, but it is buried, and it historically capped at recent ranges. To get your full history you have to submit a data request through Amazon's data privacy page, which can take up to 30 days to fulfil and arrives as a zip file of nested CSVs that most people never open.
Order history sits in your account dashboard and shows everything you have purchased online and in store under your linked account. There is no native CSV export. The information is visible on screen but cannot be downloaded directly, which means you either screenshot orders one by one or use a browser tool that scrapes the page for you.
Order history is visible in the app and on the web, but Temu offers no export functionality at all. Orders must be viewed one by one or screenshotted manually, which gets impractical fast for anyone who places more than a handful of orders. Heavy Temu shoppers placing 30 or more orders a year cannot realistically review their own spending without a tool that pulls the data out.
Purchase history is available in your account under Purchase History, with date filters going back several years. There is some export capability through the resolution centre and seller tools, but it is not a comprehensive buyer-side export. For a complete buyer history you usually need a third party tool.
Order history is available under My Orders with filters for status and rough date ranges. There is no native export. Manual viewing is the only built-in option, which is workable if you have 5 orders and impossible if you have 200.
Each shows full order history inside the account dashboard with reorder and reprint receipt features. None of them offer an export to CSV or Excel on the buyer side. The pattern is consistent across major US retailers, which is why getting all your online purchases in one place ends up being a tooling problem rather than a settings problem.
There are 4 realistic methods, ordered from slowest and most manual to fastest and most automated. The right one depends on how many orders you place and how much of your time you are willing to spend on the project.
The fastest end-to-end workflow takes about 15 minutes for 5 platforms. Here is the exact sequence.
The single view is not just a tidier list. It surfaces 4 specific patterns that single-platform views hide.
A real example from a recent OrderPro user: she thought she spent about $800 a year on Amazon, which felt like a lot. Once she pulled Walmart, Temu, and eBay into the same view, her actual cross-platform total was $2,340. The Amazon number was right. The mental model of her total online spend was off by nearly 3 times. She had not been spending more than she could afford. She had simply never seen all your online purchases in one place before and the missing $1,540 lived in 4 separate accounts she rarely opened together.
The Spending Breakdown Tool is free, runs entirely in your browser, and never sends your purchase data anywhere. Upload your OrderPro export files or paste any CSV with a date and amount column, and it shows you spending by platform, by category, and by month within seconds. It works with any purchase data, not just OrderPro exports, so if you already have a CSV from Amazon's data request or any other source, you can drop it in and see your numbers immediately. All processing happens on your device.
The fastest way to see all your online purchases in one place is to export your order history from each platform and visualise it together. OrderPro Analytics exports your complete purchase history from Amazon, Walmart, Temu, and 22 more platforms in minutes, then upload the files to our free Spending Breakdown Tool to see exactly where your money went. Try the free export, or jump straight to the Spending Breakdown Tool to upload data you already have.
Yes. The fastest way is to use a browser extension like OrderPro Analytics that exports your order history from each platform into a single CSV, then combine those files in a visualisation tool. No retailer offers a native cross-platform view, so consolidation always requires either manual export or an extension that talks to multiple sites.
The OrderPro Analytics Chrome extension exports your full Amazon order history to CSV in under 2 minutes while you are signed in to Amazon.com. You can also use Amazon's native data request through Account, Request My Data, Order History, but that route can take up to 30 days to fulfil.
Walmart does not offer a native CSV export, only an in-account view. To get your Walmart purchase history into a spreadsheet you need a browser extension that scrapes the order page for you, which OrderPro Analytics does in 2 to 3 minutes.
Export your order history from each platform you use, then upload the CSV files to a free tool like the OrderPro Spending Breakdown Tool. It combines the files and shows your total spend by platform, by category, and by month so you can finally see the real number.
No. Temu only lets you scroll through orders one at a time in the app or web interface, with no built-in export. A Chrome extension is the only practical way to pull a full Temu purchase history into a spreadsheet without manually screenshotting each order.