Wisefig

Best Church Management Software for Baptist Churches in 2026

By Sankalp Jonna · Last reviewed April 2026

Baptist churches are an awkward fit for the church-tech category narrative. The autonomy of the local congregation means there is no national mandate to standardize on a particular system, no diocesan reporting requirement, and no central-office software push. Each church chooses its own stack, and the result is one of the most fragmented customer bases in church technology.

What Baptist churches do share is a recognizable shape — a Sunday school structure that needs class-by-class attendance, a deacon or elder rotation that needs scheduling, a strong giving culture that expects clean year-end statements, and a member-care expectation that bleeds into pastoral visits and discipleship. The software that fits well is the software that respects this shape rather than imposing a megachurch-style funnel on top of it.

We spent eight weeks running the platforms most often shortlisted by Baptist churches we work with — from 80-member rural congregations to 2,000-attendance suburban Southern Baptist churches. This is the honest ranking, with notes on where each tool helps and where it gets in the way.

What makes a great church management software for baptist churches?

Here’s what we look for when we evaluate this category. Every tool below was scored against the same criteria.

Sunday school and small-group structure

How well the system handles class-by-class attendance, age-graded groups, and the parallel adult/children/youth tracks Baptist churches typically run.

Member care and follow-up workflows

Whether pastors and deacons can log visits, prayer requests, and pastoral notes against a member record without it feeling like a sales CRM.

Giving and year-end statements

Donor experience for online and text giving, and the quality of automatically generated tax statements that members rely on every January.

Volunteer scheduling for worship and serving teams

Whether the platform handles a real worship rotation, deacon rotation, and Sunday school teacher schedule without forcing staff into spreadsheets.

Total cost for a typical Baptist church

Realistic monthly cost for a 200-to-600 person Baptist congregation, including processing fees and any add-on modules.

Self-serve setup

Whether a church secretary or volunteer admin can stand the system up without hiring an implementation consultant.

Comparison at a glance

ToolScoreBest forPricingFree planStandout
Breeze ChMS8.7Baptist churches under 600 attendance who want one flat monthly bill and a tool a part-time admin can run.From $72/moPricing transparency is the cleanest in the category — one number, unlimited everything.
Planning Center9.3Mid-size and larger Baptist churches with active music ministries, weekly volunteer rotations, and multi-service Sundays.Free tier availableServices is the best worship-planning and volunteer-scheduling tool in the entire category, full stop.
ChurchTrac8.1Smaller Baptist churches who genuinely need fund accounting alongside the database without paying enterprise prices.Free tier availableIt's the only sub-$30/month tool that includes real fund accounting alongside ChMS and giving.
Tithe.ly8.4Churches that want online giving live tomorrow with no monthly fee, or want a single-vendor bundle with a website included.Free tier availableFree giving plan with no monthly fee is the most aggressive pricing in the category by a wide margin.
Pushpay (with Church Community Builder)8.2Larger Southern Baptist and multi-site churches with seven-figure giving programs that benefit from a high-touch CSM.Custom pricingThe donor-app experience and high-touch account management are unmatched at the megachurch scale.
Subsplash8.0Baptist churches whose digital strategy centers on a branded app, sermon library, and live-streamed services.Custom pricingThe custom-branded app is the best in the category and the only one that consistently feels like a real native product.
Fellowship One (FellowshipOne / F1Go)7.0Large institutional Baptist churches already deeply invested in Premier and unable to migrate without major disruption.Custom pricingThe Premier product still handles enterprise multi-campus complexity better than most newer competitors.
Givelify7.6Smaller Baptist churches whose members already use Givelify in other charitable contexts and want zero-setup giving.Free tier availableThe pre-installed donor base — millions of givers already have the Givelify app — is a genuine network effect.

1. Breeze ChMS

8.7 / 10From $72/mo

Flat-fee, simple ChMS that wins on pricing transparency for small and mid-size churches.

Breeze ChMS product screenshot
Pros
  • One flat price means you can plan your budget for the year without worrying about hitting member-count brackets.
  • Setup genuinely takes an afternoon; the data import wizard and contextual help are aimed at non-technical office staff.
  • Free 1-on-1 onboarding calls are included, which is rare at this price point.
  • Tagging system replaces the rigid groups/lists model used by older ChMS and is far more flexible for small staffs.
  • Works as well from a Chromebook in a church office as from a phone, with no separate admin app.
Cons
  • Volunteer scheduling is functional but a tier below Planning Center Services for any church with a band rotation.
  • Reporting is shallow; you can't easily slice attendance against giving over a multi-year window without exports.
  • No general-ledger accounting; you'll still need QuickBooks or Aplos for finance.
  • Acquired by Tithe.ly in 2021 and roadmap velocity has visibly slowed since.
  • No website builder and no native live streaming; very much a back-office tool, not a digital front door.
Best for

Baptist churches under 600 attendance who want one flat monthly bill and a tool a part-time admin can run.

Skip if

You have a serious worship rotation that needs Planning Center Services, or you are over 1,000 attendance with multi-site needs.

Breeze is what most small-church administrators actually want: a flat $72/month bill, a database that doesn't fight them, and check-in that works on Sunday morning. It's not the most powerful ChMS — Planning Center will out-feature it on every comparison sheet — but it's the one we'd recommend to a 200-person church without hesitation. The post-acquisition slowdown is the asterisk. Tithe.ly clearly bought Breeze for the customer base, and the product hasn't made a major leap in two years. If you sign up now, you're betting it stays this good rather than gets meaningfully better.

2. Planning Center

9.3 / 10Free tier available

The modular industry standard for service planning, volunteer scheduling, and people management.

Planning Center product screenshot
Pros
  • Modular pricing means you only pay for the products you actually use, instead of bundling features you'll never touch.
  • Services module is genuinely the gold standard for worship planning, with chord charts, rehearsal recordings, and conflict-aware scheduling.
  • Church Center mobile app gives members one polished entry point for giving, groups, events, and check-in.
  • Strong API and webhook coverage make it the easiest ChMS to integrate with custom tooling or third-party reporting.
  • Onboarding is self-serve and well-documented; most churches go live without a paid implementation contract.
Cons
  • Costs add up fast once you adopt 4-5 modules; a 500-person church can easily spend $250+/month before processing fees.
  • No native general-ledger accounting, so finance teams still need QuickBooks or another system alongside it.
  • Reporting across modules is inconsistent; some products have rich filters, others feel like an afterthought.
  • The product suite still feels like separate apps stitched together, which means navigating between Services, People, and Giving has friction.
  • No website builder, so churches needing a CMS have to pair it with Squarespace, Subsplash, or similar.
Best for

Mid-size and larger Baptist churches with active music ministries, weekly volunteer rotations, and multi-service Sundays.

Skip if

You are a small church on a tight budget that needs accounting and a website included.

Planning Center has earned its reputation. Services in particular is the kind of product that ruins you for competitors — once a worship pastor has scheduled bands, sent rehearsal mp3s, and tracked declines from a phone, going back to spreadsheets feels archaic. The trade-off is that PCO has stayed deliberately narrow: no accounting, no website builder, no live streaming. That focus is the reason each module is so good, but it also means you'll be writing checks to two or three other vendors. For churches over ~150 people with a real worship rotation, this is the safe pick. Smaller churches should look at Breeze first.

3. ChurchTrac

8.1 / 10Free tier available

Quietly capable, low-cost ChMS with built-in accounting that punches well above its price.

ChurchTrac product screenshot
Pros
  • Pricing is unbeatable for what you get — full ChMS plus fund accounting for under $25/month at most church sizes.
  • Genuine built-in fund accounting at the small-church price point is essentially unique to ChurchTrac.
  • Free plan is real and not a 14-day trial; small congregations can run it indefinitely.
  • Owner-operator company with real responsiveness on email support, not a tiered ticket queue.
  • Data is exportable and ownership is clear — no lock-in beyond your monthly subscription.
Cons
  • UI is utilitarian; it works, but it doesn't have the polish of Breeze or Planning Center.
  • Mobile experience is web-based primarily; the dedicated mobile app is functional but limited.
  • Volunteer scheduling is basic and won't satisfy a church with a serious worship rotation.
  • Brand recognition is low, so peer learning and tutorials are thinner than for category leaders.
  • Integration ecosystem is shallow; if you live in Zapier, you'll feel constrained.
Best for

Smaller Baptist churches who genuinely need fund accounting alongside the database without paying enterprise prices.

Skip if

Your staff cares about UI polish or you live inside an integrations-heavy stack.

ChurchTrac is a sleeper. It doesn't have the marketing budget of Tithe.ly or the polish of Planning Center, but for small churches that genuinely need fund accounting alongside the database, nothing else at this price point exists. We've seen it run perfectly well at 400-person churches with a part-time bookkeeper. The honest caveat is that it looks and feels like the work of a small team — because it is — and if your staff is younger or comes from polished SaaS tools, the UI will feel dated. Trade design for capability and money saved, and you'll come out ahead.

4. Tithe.ly

8.4 / 10Free tier available

Aggressively priced giving platform with a growing ChMS, app, and website stack underneath it.

Tithe.ly product screenshot
Pros
  • Free giving plan with no monthly fee genuinely removes the financial barrier for churches launching online giving.
  • All-Access bundle is the cheapest path to website + app + giving + ChMS in a single bill.
  • Sites builder produces clean, mobile-first church websites without needing a developer.
  • Active acquisition strategy (Breeze, Elvanto) means the platform footprint keeps expanding.
  • Migrating donors from another platform is smooth — Tithe.ly will actively help move recurring gifts.
Cons
  • Multiple acquired products under one brand creates a confusing UX; ChMS, Sites, and Giving all feel like different apps.
  • Customer support has slipped in 2024-2025 reviews; ticket times stretched to days during peak season.
  • Reporting is functional but can't match Pushpay or Planning Center for cohort analysis.
  • Volunteer scheduling exists but most churches still use Planning Center Services alongside it.
  • Roadmap priorities are unclear — it's hard to tell which acquired product is actually getting investment.
Best for

Churches that want online giving live tomorrow with no monthly fee, or want a single-vendor bundle with a website included.

Skip if

You need deeply integrated reporting across giving, attendance, and discipleship.

Tithe.ly's bet on free giving was the right one, and it's how they got footholds in tens of thousands of churches. The harder bet is whether they can stitch Breeze, Elvanto, Sites, and the original Giving app into something that feels like one product. Right now it doesn't — it feels like a holding company. For a 150-person church just trying to take their first online gift, that doesn't matter and you should sign up today. For a 600-person church evaluating an all-in-one, the seams are visible enough that we'd seriously look at Planning Center plus a separate website tool instead.

5. Pushpay (with Church Community Builder)

8.2 / 10Custom pricing

Enterprise-grade giving and ChMS suite aimed squarely at large multi-campus churches.

Pushpay (with Church Community Builder) product screenshot
Pros
  • Donor experience is genuinely best-in-class: text-to-give, recurring setup, and digital wallet flows have very low friction.
  • Branded app product is mature and used by many of the largest churches in the US, with solid sermon and live-stream playback.
  • Reporting on giving is deep — donor retention cohorts, lapsed-giver flagging, and pledge tracking are first-class.
  • Account management is high-touch; your CSM actually knows your campus structure and giving patterns.
  • CCB integration lets you tie giving back to small-group attendance and discipleship paths in one record.
Cons
  • Pricing is opaque and quote-only; smaller churches routinely get pushed out of the funnel by sales gating.
  • Transaction fees are higher than Stripe-direct competitors like Tithe.ly or Planning Center Giving.
  • Contracts are typically annual and often multi-year, with auto-renewal clauses that catch staff off guard.
  • CCB feels like the older product in the pairing; UI hasn't kept pace with Planning Center or newer entrants.
  • Switching off Pushpay is meaningfully painful — donor data export and recurring-gift migration both require manual coordination.
Best for

Larger Southern Baptist and multi-site churches with seven-figure giving programs that benefit from a high-touch CSM.

Skip if

You are under 1,000 attendance or unwilling to sign multi-year contracts.

Pushpay is the enterprise pick. If you're a 5,000-person multi-site church, you almost certainly already use it or have considered it, and the reasons are real: the donor app converts, the CSM relationship matters when you're processing seven figures of giving annually, and the CCB pairing covers most of what you need. The catch is that you pay for that polish, and the contract structure makes it hard to leave. We'd push back hard on any church under 500 people who's been pitched this — you're paying for a tier of service you won't use.

6. Subsplash

8.0 / 10Custom pricing

Custom church mobile apps and media platform that has grown into a full giving and ChMS suite.

Subsplash product screenshot
Pros
  • App quality is genuinely high — fast launch times, polished sermon player, native feel on iOS and Android.
  • Bundled live streaming and media hosting saves churches from paying separately for Resi or Vimeo OTT.
  • Custom-branded app distribution under your church's name on the app stores is included, not an upcharge.
  • Subsplash One bundle is one of the few real all-in-ones if you want app, web, giving, and CRM from one vendor.
  • Customer success is responsive and includes app store submission/maintenance, which removes a real burden.
Cons
  • Pricing is sales-gated and aggressive; sticker shock is the most common complaint in third-party reviews.
  • Multi-year contracts are standard and difficult to exit early.
  • ChMS module is the weakest part of the suite and feels bolted on compared to Planning Center or Breeze.
  • Volunteer scheduling is essentially absent — churches keep Planning Center Services alongside.
  • Renewal pricing tends to climb meaningfully year over year unless you actively renegotiate.
Best for

Baptist churches whose digital strategy centers on a branded app, sermon library, and live-streamed services.

Skip if

Your priority is the database, scheduling, or transparent month-to-month pricing.

Subsplash is what you buy when you want your church to feel like a media company. The app is excellent and it's the reason most customers stay. The rest of the suite ranges from competent to noticeably weaker than category leaders, and the pricing model is firmly enterprise — expect a sales call, expect a contract, and expect renewal bumps. We'd recommend it without reservation to churches whose digital strategy is media-heavy. For churches whose primary problem is 'we need a database that works,' there are better and cheaper answers.

7. Fellowship One (FellowshipOne / F1Go)

7.0 / 10Custom pricing

Legacy enterprise ChMS with a newer F1Go cloud product, still common at large institutional churches.

Fellowship One (FellowshipOne / F1Go) product screenshot
Pros
  • F1 Premier has decades of enterprise deployments; data model handles unusually complex multi-campus structures.
  • F1Go is a meaningful step forward in UI compared to the legacy product, with a real mobile-first design.
  • Background checks and child-protection workflows are mature and well-understood by long-time admins.
  • Reporting is deep on the Premier product, especially for attendance and assimilation pipelines.
  • Large user community means peer learning and consultants are easy to find.
Cons
  • Premier UI is dated and was clearly designed pre-mobile; staff often complain about training burden.
  • Two products (Premier and F1Go) running in parallel creates roadmap and migration confusion.
  • Sales-gated pricing with multi-year contracts is the norm.
  • Customer support quality has reportedly slipped since the Ministry Brands consolidation.
  • Migrating from Premier to F1Go or off the platform entirely is painful and rarely cheap.
Best for

Large institutional Baptist churches already deeply invested in Premier and unable to migrate without major disruption.

Skip if

You are starting fresh in {year} — newer products are clearly better choices for a new buyer.

Fellowship One has institutional gravity. Hundreds of large churches have run on Premier for over a decade, and the cost of leaving is real — that's the main reason they stay. F1Go is a credible attempt to modernize, but it's been in market long enough that the lack of decisive momentum is itself a signal. We'd recommend it almost exclusively to churches already deeply embedded. For everyone else, this is a category where the newer cohort — Planning Center, Breeze, even Rock — has genuinely lapped the legacy players.

8. Givelify

7.6 / 10Free tier available

Donor-app-first giving platform that prioritizes ease of one-time mobile gifts over deep ChMS reporting.

Givelify product screenshot
Pros
  • The donor app has unusually high install volume across Black church and historically Black denomination contexts.
  • Donor experience is genuinely two taps to give; setup friction for new givers is among the lowest in the category.
  • No monthly fee means even tiny churches can adopt it without a budget conversation.
  • Onboarding for the church side is fast — most accounts go live the same day.
  • Strong brand presence in specific denominational communities (AME, Pentecostal, Baptist) creates donor familiarity.
Cons
  • Transaction fees are flat at 2.9% + $0.30 with no break for ACH or high volume — expensive at scale.
  • It's a giving app only, not a ChMS; you'll need a separate tool for membership and check-in.
  • Reporting is shallow compared to Pushpay or Planning Center Giving.
  • Limited donor segmentation, lapsed-giver alerts, or pledge tracking.
  • Branded-app experience is Givelify's app, not your church's; some staff feel that dilutes their brand.
Best for

Smaller Baptist churches whose members already use Givelify in other charitable contexts and want zero-setup giving.

Skip if

You want one platform for membership and giving with deep integrated reporting.

Givelify is one of the few church tools whose primary moat is consumer-side network effects. In specific denominational communities — particularly Black churches — the app is already on members' phones, and that genuinely matters. The giving experience is excellent for one-time gifts. Where it falls short is anything beyond giving: there's no ChMS, reporting is thin, and the 2.9% fee at higher volumes adds up versus Stripe-direct competitors. Use it as a giving rail, not a platform.

Verdict

If we had to pick one tool for a typical Baptist church under 600 attendance, it is Breeze. The flat $72 a month is the kind of pricing transparency Baptist treasurers actually want, the tagging system maps cleanly to Sunday school classes and committees, and onboarding takes an afternoon. Almost every Baptist church we have helped land somewhere productive has landed on Breeze.

For larger and more program-heavy churches — particularly Southern Baptist congregations with active worship rotations and multiple weekend services — Planning Center is the better answer. The Services module alone is worth the higher cost once you have a real band and tech rotation. Pair it with Tithe.ly for free giving and you have a strong stack.

We would push back on Pushpay for most Baptist churches under 1,500 in attendance. The pricing model and contract structure are not built for autonomous-congregation budgeting, and the polish is wasted on a smaller giving program.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best church management software for a small Baptist church?
For a Baptist church under 200 attendance, Breeze is the easiest call. The flat $72 a month covers unlimited members, the tagging system replaces the rigid groups model older platforms use, and you can run the entire church from it on the secretary's laptop. ChurchTrac is the alternative if you also need real fund accounting in the same tool — it costs less but the interface is more utilitarian. Tithe.ly Giving is what we would pair with either one if you want online giving with no monthly fee.
How do we handle Sunday school attendance across multiple classes?
Breeze, Planning Center, and ChurchTrac all handle this well, though the model is slightly different in each. Breeze uses tags to group people into classes and an attendance grid to mark off rolls each week. Planning Center has a dedicated Check-Ins module that produces parent-receipt labels and tracks attendance against a child's record. For a traditional Baptist Sunday school structure with paper rolls being entered later, Breeze and ChurchTrac are faster. For a modern children's-ministry workflow with check-in stations, Planning Center is better.
Do Baptist churches need separate giving software?
Not necessarily. Breeze and Planning Center both have native giving integrations that are competent for most Baptist churches. The reason to add a separate platform like Tithe.ly or Pushpay is either pricing — Tithe.ly's free monthly fee can save a small church a meaningful amount — or features, like Pushpay's text-to-give and donor app for a larger congregation. If you already collect a strong offertory and use envelopes well, the bundled giving inside your ChMS is usually fine.
How do we track member care and pastoral visits?
Breeze, Planning Center, and Realm all support pastoral-care notes against member records, with permissions so only pastors and deacons see them. Breeze's notes feature is the simplest and is what we recommend for most Baptist churches. The honest gap in the entire category is that none of these tools feel like real pastoral-care CRMs — most pastors we know still keep a separate notebook or use a personal note app for sensitive content. The software is best used for tracking that visits happened, not for the substance of the visit.
Can we migrate off our old ChMS without losing historical giving records?
Yes, but expect some friction. Breeze, Planning Center, and ChurchTrac all import contribution histories from CSVs, which most legacy systems can produce. The tricky part is recurring gifts — those usually have to be re-set up by donors, since the old processor's tokenized cards do not transfer. Tithe.ly will actively help you migrate recurring gifts from another platform, which makes them an unusually friendly target. If you have ten or more years of giving history, plan a long weekend, do a test import on a sandbox, and reconcile a few sample donors before going live.
What about churches in cooperative associations like the SBC?
Cooperative reporting — like the Annual Church Profile for SBC churches — is not handled natively by any major ChMS. You will pull the relevant counts (membership, baptisms, average attendance) out of the system manually each year. None of the platforms ranked here have a one-click ACP report. The good news is that the data is always exportable, and Breeze and Planning Center both make these queries straightforward. Plan an hour or two each year for the report; that is the realistic state of the tooling.
Should our church get a dedicated mobile app?
For most Baptist churches under 800 attendance, no. Planning Center's Church Center app and Breeze's mobile experience cover the basics — giving, groups, events — well enough that members do not need a separate branded app. Subsplash and Pushpay's branded-app products start to make sense at around 1,000 attendance, where the marginal cost of a custom app is small relative to the giving and engagement upside. Be honest about whether your members will actually install another app, especially if you already publish sermons on YouTube.
How much does it really cost?
A 250-attendance Baptist church can run a credible stack — Breeze plus Tithe.ly Giving — for around $72 per month plus 2.9 percent of online giving in processing. A 600-attendance church running Planning Center with three modules plus their giving is typically $200 to $300 per month. Add a website builder and you are at $250 to $400. The number that surprises new buyers is processing fees: at $30,000 a month in online giving, you are paying close to $900 a month in processing alone. That number matters more than the software bill.