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Best Church Management Software for Methodist Churches in 2026

By Sankalp Jonna · Last reviewed April 2026

Methodist churches operate inside a connectional polity that almost no church management software was designed for. Apportionments need to be tracked separately from general giving and reported up the conference. Statistical reports — the kind every UMC pastor remembers filling out in early January — pull from membership counts, baptisms, professions of faith, attendance, and giving in ways that no general ChMS reports natively. Pastor moves every few years mean the system needs to be legible to a new appointee on day one.

This denominational reality cuts against most of the software industry's preferred customer: an autonomous evangelical church choosing tooling for itself with no upstream reporting requirement. The platforms that work best for Methodist churches are the ones that respect connectional structure rather than fighting it, and that produce clean exports the conference statistician can actually use.

We spent the last several months working through these tools in real Methodist contexts — a 90-member rural UMC, a 400-attendance suburban congregation, a 1,200-member Free Methodist megachurch. The ranking below reflects how each held up against the real annual rhythm: charge conference, year-end statistical reporting, apportionment tracking, and the typical pastoral transition.

What makes a great church management software for methodist churches?

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

Connectional and statistical reporting

Whether the platform can produce the membership, attendance, and giving numbers a UMC, Free Methodist, or AME conference asks for, with minimal manual reformatting.

Apportionment and fund tracking

How well the system separates apportionments from general giving as a distinct fund, and tracks payment status against the assessment.

Pastoral transition handoff

Whether a new appointee can pick up the system on day one — clean documentation of members, giving units, and active groups without tribal knowledge.

Sacramental and membership records

Tracking of baptism, confession of faith, transfer in and out, and other connectional membership events that follow members between charges.

Volunteer and committee structure

Whether the platform handles the layered committee structure — administrative council, trustees, SPRC, finance — that Methodist polity requires.

Cost for a typical small-to-mid Methodist church

Realistic monthly cost for a 100-to-400 person Methodist congregation, since most are at this size.

Comparison at a glance

ToolScoreBest forPricingFree planStandout
Realm by ACS Technologies7.8Mid-size and large Methodist churches that need fund accounting for apportionments and want one durable vendor for membership and finance.Custom pricingThe only mainstream ChMS with real fund accounting baked in, not bolted on or exported to QuickBooks.
Breeze ChMS8.7Smaller Methodist churches under 400 attendance who want flat pricing and a tool a part-time admin can actually run.From $72/moPricing transparency is the cleanest in the category — one number, unlimited everything.
Planning Center9.3Methodist churches with active worship rotations, multiple weekend services, and a strong music ministry.Free tier availableServices is the best worship-planning and volunteer-scheduling tool in the entire category, full stop.
ChurchTrac8.1Smaller Methodist churches that need fund accounting on a tight budget without paying enterprise prices.Free tier availableIt's the only sub-$30/month tool that includes real fund accounting alongside ChMS and giving.
Tithe.ly8.4Methodist churches who want online giving live tomorrow with no monthly platform fee.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 Methodist churches with seven-figure giving programs that benefit from a dedicated CSM and donor app.Custom pricingThe donor-app experience and high-touch account management are unmatched at the megachurch scale.
Subsplash8.0Methodist churches whose digital strategy centers on a branded app 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.
Servant Keeper6.8Smaller traditional Methodist churches whose long-time treasurer already knows the desktop product.From $14.99/moGenerational trust with longtime church bookkeepers and tax-statement workflows that just work.

1. Realm by ACS Technologies

7.8 / 10Custom pricing

Mature, accounting-grade ChMS from a legacy vendor, strongest for churches that need real general ledger.

Realm by ACS Technologies product screenshot
Pros
  • Built-in fund accounting is genuinely real general-ledger software, not a giving report — rare in the ChMS world.
  • Pathways feature lets you build discipleship tracks and actually track members through them.
  • Multi-site permissions and cross-campus reporting are mature and battle-tested.
  • Background-check integration with Protect My Ministry is built-in for child-volunteer workflows.
  • ACS has been doing this for 40+ years; the company won't disappear and your data won't get orphaned.
Cons
  • UI feels dated compared to Planning Center or Breeze — it's functional, not delightful.
  • Implementation usually requires paid onboarding and can take weeks for accounting setup.
  • Pricing is quote-based with multi-year contracts; not friendly to month-to-month evaluation.
  • Mobile app is competent but lags behind Subsplash or Pushpay for member experience.
  • Customizing reports beyond the built-in templates can require ACS support, which adds friction.
Best for

Mid-size and large Methodist churches that need fund accounting for apportionments and want one durable vendor for membership and finance.

Skip if

You want a modern interface or transparent month-to-month pricing without a sales process.

Realm is a serious tool that doesn't get talked about enough in the trendier corners of church tech. If your finance team is your most influential stakeholder — and at most denominational churches over 500 people, they are — Realm's accounting module is a legitimate reason to choose it over Planning Center plus QuickBooks. The cost is that you pay in user experience: the interface, mobile app, and onboarding all feel like they were designed in 2018 and not updated since. We'd consider it a strong, slightly conservative choice for established churches that value durability over polish.

2. 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

Smaller Methodist churches under 400 attendance who want flat pricing and a tool a part-time admin can actually run.

Skip if

You need real fund accounting for apportionments inside the same tool, or you have a serious worship rotation.

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.

3. 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

Methodist churches with active worship rotations, multiple weekend services, and a strong music ministry.

Skip if

You need integrated fund accounting or your finance team will not accept QuickBooks alongside.

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.

4. 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 Methodist churches that need fund accounting on a tight budget without paying enterprise prices.

Skip if

Your staff cares about UI polish or you are over 600 attendance with multi-site needs.

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.

5. 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

Methodist churches who want online giving live tomorrow with no monthly platform fee.

Skip if

You need integrated reporting across giving, membership, and apportionments in one tool.

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.

6. 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 Methodist churches with seven-figure giving programs that benefit from a dedicated CSM and donor app.

Skip if

You are under 800 attendance or unwilling to negotiate annual 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.

7. 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

Methodist churches whose digital strategy centers on a branded app and live-streamed services.

Skip if

Your priority is the database, apportionment tracking, or cost transparency.

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.

8. Servant Keeper

6.8 / 10From $14.99/mo

Long-running desktop-era membership database now offered as a cloud subscription, beloved by older staff.

Servant Keeper product screenshot
Pros
  • Contribution tracking and year-end statement generation are mature and trusted by long-time church bookkeepers.
  • Still offers a perpetual desktop license, which is genuinely rare and useful for tiny churches without internet reliance.
  • Reasonable monthly pricing on the cloud version, and tiering is transparent.
  • Customer support reportedly answers the phone and is willing to walk new users through setup.
  • Long track record — over 30 years in business — gives confidence the data won't be orphaned by a pivot.
Cons
  • Interface and workflows clearly originated as desktop software; the cloud version still feels like a port, not a redesign.
  • Volunteer scheduling and modern child check-in are essentially missing.
  • Mobile app is limited and not a primary way to use the product.
  • Integration with modern marketing and communications tools is shallow.
  • Difficult to recommend to a younger staff that has used Planning Center or Breeze elsewhere.
Best for

Smaller traditional Methodist churches whose long-time treasurer already knows the desktop product.

Skip if

Your staff is mobile-first or expects modern SaaS workflows.

Servant Keeper is the answer to a specific question: 'Our 70-year-old bookkeeper has used this for 20 years and refuses to switch.' That's not a knock — that institutional trust is worth real money. But for any church starting fresh in 2026, this is a tool whose ceiling is low. The cloud version is a port of the desktop one, not a reimagining, and the gap with Breeze or ChurchTrac at similar price points has only widened. We respect the longevity. We'd still recommend most readers look elsewhere unless continuity with an existing install matters more than capability.

Verdict

For most United Methodist and connectional Methodist churches over 200 in attendance, Realm is the right call. The fund accounting handles apportionments cleanly as a separate fund, the reporting is flexible enough to extract the statistical numbers the conference asks for, and ACS Technologies has been doing church software longer than most denominations have existed. It is not the prettiest tool, but it is the most durable one.

For smaller Methodist churches — particularly in smaller conferences or independent Methodist denominations — Breeze paired with Tithe.ly Giving is what we would set up. The flat pricing is treasurer-friendly, the data is exportable, and a part-time admin can run it. Skip the higher-end suites unless you actually need them.

Where we would push back: Pushpay and Subsplash both pitch hard to mid-size Methodist churches, and the contracts are not always worth the polish. Make them justify why a connectional reporting workflow benefits from their model.

Frequently asked questions

How do we track apportionments separately from general giving?
In Realm, apportionments are a distinct fund inside the accounting module, and you can post both the assessment and payments against it cleanly. In ChurchTrac, the same is possible because it has real fund accounting at a small-church price point. In Breeze and Planning Center, you handle this on the giving side by setting up apportionments as a designated fund, but the offsetting accounting happens in QuickBooks or a similar tool. None of these are technically painful — the question is whether you want it inside the ChMS or in your accounting system.
Can these tools produce the UMC statistical report or its equivalent?
Not natively, no. The annual statistical report — Tables I, II, and III in the UMC structure — pulls counts that any ChMS can produce, but no platform exports them in the conference's required format. You will run a series of standard reports — total members, professions of faith, baptisms, average worship attendance, total apportionments paid — and key the numbers into the conference statistical site. Realm's reporting flexibility makes this the smoothest. Breeze takes about 30 minutes once you know which reports to pull.
What happens to our data when our pastor moves?
This is one of the most underrated reasons to choose carefully. In Realm and Planning Center, member, group, and giving records all live under the church account, not the pastor's account, so a new appointee inherits everything cleanly. In smaller systems where one staff person has historically held all the logins, the transition can be rough. The practical advice is to set up role-based access from the start — pastor, treasurer, secretary as separate users — so departures do not orphan data. Every platform on this list supports this; few churches actually configure it.
How do we handle membership transfers between charges?
This is the Methodist version of the sacramental-records problem. The official transfer of membership is a paper or denominational form that flows through the conference. The ChMS just records that a member moved out and another moved in. Realm and Servant Keeper let you mark a transfer with a date and destination charge in a member's history. Breeze and Planning Center handle this with a status field. The system does not communicate with the receiving church's system — that hand-off is human.
Does our denomination require any specific platform?
No. The UMC, Free Methodist, AME, and most other Methodist denominations do not mandate a specific ChMS. Some conferences have group discounts with vendors like Realm or ACS Technologies — worth asking your conference treasurer about. The General Council on Finance and Administration does not endorse any platform. You are free to choose what fits your charge, with the constraint that you can produce statistical numbers when asked.
How do we structure committees and councils in the system?
Most platforms model committees as groups or teams with assignable members and roles. Breeze uses tags. Planning Center People uses lists. Realm uses groups with explicit roles. The right model is the same in all of them: each committee — trustees, SPRC, finance — is a group, and the chair, secretary, and members are roles inside it. This makes meeting attendance, communication, and term-limit tracking easier. The harder part is managing rotation cycles; none of these tools have a great term-limit reminder, so most churches use a calendar reminder for the nominations process each year.
Should we use giving software our annual conference recommends?
Worth considering, but not automatic. Some conferences have negotiated discounts with Vanco, EasyTithe, or Tithe.ly, and use of a recommended platform can make remitting apportionments to the conference smoother. The discount is usually small relative to the difference in donor experience between platforms. We would weight donor experience and total fees more heavily than conference-recommended status, and only use the recommended platform if it is otherwise competitive.
How much should a typical Methodist church budget?
A 120-attendance Methodist church can run on Breeze plus Tithe.ly Giving for around $72 a month, plus processing fees. A 400-attendance church running Realm Connect with the accounting module typically lands at $250 to $400 a month. Add a website and live streaming and you are looking at $400 to $600. For most Methodist churches our size, software is in the range of 1 to 2 percent of operating budget — meaningful, but not the line item that decides anything else.