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PowerChurch vs QuickBooks for Churches and Nonprofits (2026)

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

PowerChurch Plus is the better choice for churches that want membership, attendance, and accounting in one place. QuickBooks is the better choice if your bookkeeper or CPA is already using it and you have minimal fund tracking needs. Neither tool provides genuine nonprofit fund accounting compliance for organizations managing restricted grants.

Feature PowerChurch Plus QuickBooks Online RestrictedBooks
Monthly cost (small team) from $35/mo (Online) $35-$235/mo $20–$99/mo
Built for Large nonprofits Mid-size nonprofits Small-to-mid nonprofits ($500K-$10M)

Two familiar tools, two different approaches

PowerChurch Plus and QuickBooks Online are both common choices for church accounting, but they got there differently.

QuickBooks arrived in most churches through bookkeepers and CPAs who already knew it from business clients. It’s general-purpose accounting software that nonprofits and churches use out of familiarity. Its fund accounting limitations are worked around with Class and Location assignments, which most small churches manage well enough until complexity increases.

PowerChurch arrived through church administrators who wanted membership, attendance, check-in, and pledge records in the same system as their accounting. It was purpose-built for churches from the start. The accounting module handles church-typical fund categories but was designed to support the management suite, not stand on its own.

The ecosystem difference

QuickBooks has a large practical advantage: the people who handle your books probably know it. Thousands of CPAs, bookkeepers, and accounting professionals use QuickBooks as their standard tool. Finding a bookkeeper proficient in QuickBooks takes days. Finding one proficient in PowerChurch takes longer, and outside CPA firms are less likely to be familiar with it.

This matters more than the feature list for many churches. If your finance committee treasurer is a retired accountant who knows QuickBooks, or if your CPA firm uses QuickBooks for your annual review, staying on that platform has real operational value.

PowerChurch’s ecosystem is smaller and largely limited to church administrators rather than CPAs. That’s appropriate for the product’s primary use case but means outside accounting support is harder to find.

Fund accounting limitations of both

Neither tool provides what nonprofit compliance standards require for restricted fund accounting.

QuickBooks uses a for-profit chart of accounts. Tracking multiple restricted funds requires assigning Classes and Locations on every transaction. One missed tag creates an inaccurate fund balance. QuickBooks cannot prevent spending from restricted funds beyond their balance, and it produces no native Form 990 output.

PowerChurch handles standard church fund designations (general fund, building fund, mission fund) reasonably well within its accounting module. Those funds map to the typical church structure. But PowerChurch wasn’t designed for institutional grant reporting: tracking a multi-year government grant with specific budget categories, allocating indirect costs across funds, or producing the grantor-required budget vs. actual reports that 501(c)(3) organizations face.

For a church with one or two general funds and no formal grant obligations, both tools are workable. For an organization that receives restricted grants, faces annual independent audits, or needs to demonstrate fund restriction compliance to a grantor, the workarounds in both tools create real exposure.

What to do when you’ve outgrown both

The organizations we built RestrictedBooks for are the ones sitting in this gap. They’ve been on QuickBooks with Class workarounds for years, or they’re on PowerChurch and running into accounting limitations as their grant portfolio grows. They need native fund accounting without paying $1,000+/month for an enterprise platform.

RestrictedBooks handles fund restriction enforcement, grant budget tracking, and Form 990 mapping at $20-$99/month flat-rate, unlimited users. It’s not a church management suite — if membership and attendance are the priority, PowerChurch still handles those better. But if compliance-ready fund accounting is the requirement, it’s what we built.

Verdict

PowerChurch wins for churches that need management features bundled with their accounting. QuickBooks wins on ecosystem: if your CPA or bookkeeper is proficient in QuickBooks, that practical advantage often outweighs PowerChurch's church-specific features. For nonprofits that need genuine fund accounting compliance — not workarounds — neither tool is the right long-term answer.

Comparing PowerChurch Plus vs QuickBooks Online? See how RestrictedBooks compares.

Purpose-built fund accounting for 501(c)(3) organizations at $99–$249/month.

PowerChurch vs QuickBooks — Feature Comparison
FeaturePowerChurch PlusQuickBooks Online
Fund accountingBasic church fundsWorkaround (Classes)
Church management (attendance, pledges)Yes (full suite)No
Bookkeeper/CPA ecosystemLimitedVery large
Form 990 supportNoNo
Starting pricefrom $35/mo (Online)$35/mo

PROS & CONS

PowerChurch Plus

Pros

  • Church management bundled (attendance, pledges, membership)
  • Desktop perpetual license option
  • Church-specific fund categories built in

Cons

  • Smaller ecosystem of CPAs who know it
  • Limited report customization
  • Not built for 501(c)(3) compliance reporting

PROS & CONS

QuickBooks Online

Pros

  • Huge ecosystem of CPAs and bookkeepers
  • Strong bank reconciliation
  • TechSoup discounts for nonprofits
  • Strong integrations

Cons

  • No church management features
  • No native fund accounting
  • No Form 990 support
  • Class workarounds fail under audit
Should a church use PowerChurch or QuickBooks?
If your church needs attendance tracking, membership management, and pledge records alongside accounting, PowerChurch is the more integrated option. If your bookkeeper or CPA already uses QuickBooks and your fund accounting needs are simple, the ecosystem advantage often wins. For 501(c)(3) churches with restricted grants or formal audit requirements, neither tool fully solves the fund accounting problem.
Can QuickBooks handle church fund accounting?
QuickBooks can approximate church fund tracking using Classes and Locations, but these are workarounds, not native fund accounting. QuickBooks cannot enforce fund restrictions, doesn't produce fund-level balance sheets natively, and has no Form 990 support. Organizations that receive grants or face annual audits will find these limitations create real compliance exposure.
Does PowerChurch work with outside CPAs?
PowerChurch has a smaller ecosystem of CPAs and bookkeepers who know the platform compared to QuickBooks. If you use an outside accounting firm, check whether they're comfortable with PowerChurch before committing. Many smaller CPA firms with church clients will know QuickBooks but may not work with PowerChurch.

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