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Best Nonprofit Accounting Software (2026)

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

The best nonprofit accounting software depends on your budget and fund complexity. RestrictedBooks ($20-$99/month) targets the mid-market with native fund accounting. QuickBooks ($35-$235/month) is the cheapest but lacks fund accounting. Sage Intacct ($1,000-$5,000/month) is the most capable but prohibitively expensive for most organizations.

Best Nonprofit Accounting Software — Quick Comparison
SoftwareStarting PriceFund AccountingForm 990
RestrictedBooks$20/moNativeYes
Aplos$20/moNativePartial
QuickBooks Online$35/moWorkaround onlyNo
Blackbaud Financial Edge NXT$1,000+/moNative (enterprise)Yes
Sage Intacct$1,000+/moNative (enterprise)With add-ons
FundEZ$125/user/moNativeBasic
MoneyMinder$0–$15/moNoNo
01

RestrictedBooks

Purpose-built fund accounting for 501(c)(3) nonprofits with $500K-$10M budgets.

Pros

  • ✓ Native fund accounting with restriction enforcement
  • ✓ Form 990 mapping built in
  • ✓ Flat-tier pricing, no per-user fees
  • ✓ Grant budget tracking

Cons

  • × Recently launched
  • × No donor CRM bundled
  • × Smaller feature set than enterprise tools

Pricing: $20-$99/month (3 tiers)

Verdict: Best for mid-size nonprofits that have outgrown QuickBooks but can't afford Sage Intacct.

02

QuickBooks Online

The most widely used small business accounting software. Not built for nonprofits.

Pros

  • ✓ Affordable ($35-$235/month)
  • ✓ Huge ecosystem of bookkeepers and CPAs
  • ✓ TechSoup discounts available
  • ✓ Familiar interface

Cons

  • × No native fund accounting
  • × Class/Location workaround required
  • × No Form 990 support
  • × For-profit equity structure

Pricing: $35-$235/month

Verdict: Fine for simple nonprofits with no restricted funds. Requires workarounds for anything beyond basic bookkeeping.

03

Aplos

Nonprofit-specific accounting with donor management and online giving bundled.

Pros

  • ✓ Fund-based chart of accounts
  • ✓ Simple onboarding
  • ✓ Donor management included
  • ✓ Nonprofit-focused support

Cons

  • × Limited report customization
  • × Rising prices post-acquisition
  • × Bundled features you may not need
  • × Reporting depth ceiling

Pricing: $79-$229/month

Verdict: Good for small nonprofits under $1M. Organizations with complex fund structures may outgrow it.

04

Sage Intacct

Enterprise-grade nonprofit financial management. AICPA-endorsed.

Pros

  • ✓ Best-in-class dimensional reporting
  • ✓ Multi-entity consolidation
  • ✓ Deep grant management
  • ✓ AICPA endorsement

Cons

  • × $1,000-$5,000/month
  • × $5,000-$25,000+ implementation
  • × Requires certified partner for setup
  • × Overkill for small organizations

Pricing: $1,000-$5,000/month + implementation

Verdict: The gold standard, but only affordable for organizations with $10M+ budgets.

05

FundEZ

Fund accounting specialist with a long track record in the nonprofit market.

Pros

  • ✓ True fund-based accounting
  • ✓ Established product with loyal users
  • ✓ Good for basic fund tracking

Cons

  • × Per-user pricing ($125-$170/user/month)
  • × Report customization limitations
  • × Version upgrades can break workflows

Pricing: $125-$170/user/month

Verdict: Legitimate fund accounting but per-user pricing makes it expensive for teams.

06

MoneyMinder

Simple bookkeeping for PTAs, clubs, and small volunteer-run organizations.

Pros

  • ✓ Very affordable (free-$15/month)
  • ✓ Easy for volunteer treasurers
  • ✓ Minimal learning curve

Cons

  • × Not real fund accounting
  • × No grant tracking
  • × No Form 990 support
  • × Single-entry limitations

Pricing: Free-$15/month

Verdict: Fine for PTAs and small clubs. Not appropriate for organizations with restricted funds or budgets over $500K.

How we evaluated

We assessed each tool on five criteria relevant to nonprofits with $500K-$10M budgets:

  1. Fund accounting support. Does it track restricted and unrestricted funds natively, or require workarounds?
  2. Compliance reporting. Form 990 mapping, FASB ASC 958 compliant financial statements, audit readiness.
  3. Grant tracking. Budget vs. actual tracking, grantor reporting, restriction enforcement.
  4. Total cost. Subscription plus implementation, add-ons, and staff time for workarounds.
  5. Practical usability. Can a 2-person finance team use this without months of training?

No tool scores perfectly on all five. The right choice depends on where your organization falls on the complexity and budget spectrum.

The market gap

The nonprofit accounting market has a structural problem. The affordable options (QuickBooks, MoneyMinder) weren’t built for fund accounting. The purpose-built options are either limited (Aplos) or expensive (Sage Intacct, Blackbaud). Mid-size nonprofits end up stuck in the middle.

We built RestrictedBooks to fill this gap. Fund accounting, grant tracking, and compliance reporting at $20-$99/month. It’s not the cheapest option and it’s not the most powerful. It’s designed for the organizations that currently have no good choice.

Looking for the right nonprofit accounting software?

RestrictedBooks is purpose-built fund accounting at $99–$249/month flat per organization.

Q&A

What is the best accounting software for small nonprofits?

For small nonprofits managing restricted grants, the best options are Aplos ($20/month) and RestrictedBooks ($20/month) — both offer native fund accounting without per-user fees. Avoid QuickBooks Online for fund accounting; it requires Class/Location workarounds that don't meet audit standards. For very small organizations with no restricted funds, MoneyMinder's free tier is adequate.

Q&A

Does nonprofit accounting software need to support fund accounting?

Yes, if your organization receives restricted grants or has designated funds. Fund accounting tracks each fund separately with its own balance, preventing commingling. General-purpose software like QuickBooks uses workarounds (Classes, Locations) that break down under auditor scrutiny. FASB ASC 958 requires nonprofits to present financial statements by net asset class, which native fund accounting software handles automatically.

Q&A

What nonprofit accounting software is FASB ASC 958 compliant?

Software with native fund accounting — Aplos, RestrictedBooks, Blackbaud Financial Edge NXT, Sage Intacct, and FundEZ — produces statements organized by net asset class as required by FASB ASC 958. QuickBooks and other for-profit tools require manual adjustments to meet this standard.

What accounting software do most nonprofits use?
QuickBooks Online is the dominant accounting tool among small nonprofits. Most use Class/Location workarounds to approximate fund accounting rather than using purpose-built nonprofit tools.
Do nonprofits need special accounting software?
Organizations managing restricted funds, grants, or budgets over $500K benefit from fund accounting software. FASB ASC 958 requires nonprofits to track net assets with and without donor restrictions. General-purpose software like QuickBooks doesn't enforce these classifications natively.
How much should a nonprofit spend on accounting software?
For organizations with $500K-$10M budgets, $100-$300/month is a reasonable range. Spending less usually means workarounds and manual processes. Spending significantly more (enterprise tools at $1,000+/month) should be justified by genuinely complex requirements.

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