Project management · nonprofits · 2026
Best project management
for nonprofits
Nonprofits run lean, often qualify for free/discounted plans, and need tools that volunteers can pick up with zero training.
Trello
Kanban-style boards owned by Atlassian.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and light enough to adopt in a day.
The full shortlist
All 5 picks
- 1Free. Standard $5/user/mo.
Trello
Kanban-style boards owned by Atlassian.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and light enough to adopt in a day.
Pros
- Dead simple
- Affordable
Trade-offs
- Limited beyond boards
- Power-Up limits on free plan
- 2Free. Team $6.99/user/mo.
Height
AI-native project tool with auto-triage.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and light enough to adopt in a day.
Pros
- AI auto-fills metadata
- Flexible views
Trade-offs
- Newer, evolving fast
- 3Free, open source.
Kanboard
Free, open-source kanban.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier.
Pros
- Free forever
- Self-hostable
Trade-offs
- Sparse UI
- 4Free up to 10 users. Standard $7.16/user/mo.
Jira
Issue tracker dominant in enterprise engineering.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and priced for small budgets.
Pros
- Highly configurable
- Strong enterprise features
Trade-offs
- Slow UI
- Heavy to set up
- 5Free up to 250 issues. Standard $8/user/mo.
Linear
Fast, opinionated issue tracker for product teams.
Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and priced for small budgets.
Pros
- Blazing fast
- Strong defaults
- Great keyboard UX
Trade-offs
- Less customizable than Jira
Questions
FAQ
What's the best project management for nonprofits?
Trello. Picked for nonprofits because it has a usable free tier and light enough to adopt in a day.
Is there a free option?
Yes — several picks have free tiers. Start with Trello.
How was this list ranked?
We re-rank each category against the buying criteria of nonprofits: pricing, integrations, simplicity, and privacy. No 50-tool listicles. No fake winners.