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AI Nonprofit Fundraising & Impact Tech 2026 Complete Guide - GoFundMe · Classy (GoFundMe Pro) · GiveButter · Bonterra · Mighty Cause · DonorsChoose · Kakao Gachigachi · NAVER Happybean · Warm Day · READYFOR · CAMPFIRE · JustGiving Deep Dive

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Prologue — The Giving Slump and the AI Counter-attack

The early 2020s were a golden age for nonprofit fundraising. The US Giving USA report showed individual giving at all-time highs in 2020–2021. COVID-19 relief, Black Lives Matter, and the war in Ukraine produced one big fundraising wave after another.

Starting in 2022, the mood shifted. Inflation, a weak stock market, and donor fatigue piled up. In the US, real (inflation-adjusted) giving posted two consecutive years of negative growth. The Community Chest of Korea saw similar stagnation, and the Japanese crowdfunding market slowed.

Two things happened at the same time during this slump.

  • AI-native fundraising platforms — GiveButter, Donorbox, and Funraise streamlined the donation form, payment, and tracking stack.
  • Broad AI assistance — Donor segmentation, grant draft writing, and impact reporting automation. ChatGPT and Claude became daily tools inside nonprofit back offices.

In one sentence, the 2026 nonprofit fundraising stack lines up on seven axes.

  • Personal crowdfunding — GoFundMe, JustGiving, Crowdfunder (UK).
  • AI-native fundraising — GiveButter, Donorbox, Funraise, Snowball, OneCause.
  • Nonprofit CRM + DMS — Bonterra, Blackbaud Raiser's Edge NXT, Salesforce Nonprofit Cloud, Bloomerang, Virtuous, Neon One, DonorPerfect.
  • Corporate giving + matching — Benevity, YourCause, Bright Funds, WeSpire.
  • DAF (Donor-Advised Fund) — DAFgiving360 (Fidelity Charitable), Schwab Charitable, Vanguard Charitable, Daffy, Charityvest.
  • Marketplace / specific cause — DonorsChoose, GlobalGiving, Kiva, Charity: Water.
  • Crypto, social, disaster — The Giving Block, Engiven, Endaoment, Twitch Charity.

Layer the regional ecosystems on top: Korea's Gachigachi, Happybean, and Warm Day; Japan's READYFOR, CAMPFIRE, and Yahoo! Net Donations. This post threads them all together.


1. Why 2026 Nonprofit Fundraising Is Hard

Before the tools, you need the macro picture. Five pressures define 2026 fundraising.

  • Negative real growth — The Giving USA 2024 report showed 2023 total giving up 1.9 percent nominal, down 2.1 percent after inflation. The Community Chest of Korea saw similar stagnation.
  • Donor fatigue — Pandemic, Ukraine, Israel-Gaza, Turkey-Syria earthquakes — donors are hitting "I can't this time" mode.
  • Tax changes — Higher US standard deductions pushed itemized-deduction usage below 10 percent of households. Most families no longer get a tax benefit for giving.
  • Generational handoff — Boomer donors are retiring and dying off. Millennials and Gen Z prefer one-off micro-donations, crowdfunding, and crypto. Direct mail and phone calls don't work on them.
  • Social platform retreat — Meta killed Facebook Fundraisers in the US (August 2024) and globally (March 2025). YouTube Giving is shrinking. Only Twitch Charity stays active.

Inside this pressure, AI delivers value two ways. One is back-office cost reduction (grant draft automation, donor reply automation). The other is donor experience improvement (segmentation, personalized impact reports).

[Nonprofit Fundraising Value Chain — 2026 Model]
  1. Discovery   — Marketplace, SEO, social
  2. First gift  — Payment form, mobile-optimized
  3. Retention   — Monthly recurring, email, impact report
  4. Upgrade     — Major gifts, DAF, legacy
  5. Advocacy    — Peer-to-peer, volunteers, SNS

Each stage has different tools and different people. AI penetrates stages 1, 3, and 5 fastest.


2. GoFundMe — The Absolute Leader of Personal Crowdfunding

GoFundMe (gofundme.com) launched in 2010 in San Diego. Medical bills, funerals, tuition, disaster relief — personal-cause crowdfunding kept it growing for over a decade.

  • Cumulative as of 2024 — More than 150 million donors, more than 30 billion USD raised cumulatively.
  • Fee model shift — Since 2017, GoFundMe charges 0 percent platform fees in the US, Canada, UK, and Australia, with an optional tip from donors. Payment processing fees (2.9 percent + 0.30 USD) are separate.
  • 2022 Classy acquisition — Bought the nonprofit SaaS company. Rebranded as GoFundMe Pro in 2024.
  • AI assist — In 2024, added an "AI helper" that drafts campaign descriptions. Powered by the OpenAI API.

GoFundMe's limit is trust. Bad-faith campaigns get caught regularly, and the platform handles them with refunds and takedowns after the fact. Over 250,000 medical-bill campaigns go up in the US every year — a sobering indicator of the US healthcare system's cracks.


3. Classy → GoFundMe Pro — Unified Nonprofit Fundraising

Classy (classy.org) was founded in 2011 in San Diego. A SaaS for 501(c)(3) nonprofits that bundled event registration, peer-to-peer fundraising, and recurring giving.

  • April 2022 acquisition — GoFundMe paid an estimated 500 million USD. Same-city HQs made integration natural.
  • 2024 rebrand to GoFundMe Pro — The nonprofit-side product line moved under the parent brand.
  • Key features — One-time and recurring giving, peer-to-peer, event registration and ticketing, auctions, Salesforce integration.
  • Customers — Make-A-Wish, Boys & Girls Clubs, Heifer International, and other major US nonprofits.

GoFundMe Pro's strength is the data connection with the GoFundMe consumer side. Personal campaigns can flow naturally into nonprofit campaigns.


4. JustGiving — The UK Powerhouse Inside Blackbaud

JustGiving (justgiving.com) launched in 2001 in London. The largest UK fundraising platform, grown on marathon sponsorships and birthday giving — peer-to-peer events.

  • 2017 Blackbaud acquisition — 95 million GBP. Cemented market leadership in UK and Ireland.
  • Fee changes — JustGiving used to charge nonprofits a 5 percent platform fee, then dropped it in 2019. Today only payment processing fees apply (about 1.9 percent).
  • Global expansion — Operates UK, US, and Ireland sites. The Japan entity closed in 2016.

In the UK, an estimated 70 percent of marathon, triathlon, and London Marathon sponsorships flow through JustGiving. Data connects with Blackbaud's Raiser's Edge NXT nonprofit CRM.


5. GiveButter — The New AI-Era Fundraising Form Champion

GiveButter (givebutter.com) launched in 2017 in Washington DC. Same "0 percent platform fee, optional tip" model that GoFundMe applies to consumers, but aimed at nonprofits.

  • Fast growth — Over 40,000 nonprofits use GiveButter as of 2024. Top of the Inc. 5000 list every year.
  • Key features — Donation forms, event registration, auctions, text-to-give, DAFpay integration.
  • AI assist — Launched "AI Email Builder" and "AI Form Builder" in 2024. LLMs draft campaign copy and emails.
  • Free + tip model — 0 percent platform fee, with a voluntary 5–15 percent tip from donors.

GiveButter's success is mobile-first UX and frictionless social sharing. A single nonprofit staffer can spin up a campaign in 30 minutes.


6. Donorbox · Funraise · Snowball · OneCause

Beyond GiveButter, several modern fundraising SaaS players are growing fast.

  • Donorbox (donorbox.org) — Founded 2014 in San Francisco. Embedded donation forms — five lines of HTML drop into any site. About 50,000 nonprofits use it.
  • Funraise (funraise.org) — Founded 2015 in LA. Enterprise fundraising for big nonprofits like Charity: Water and Movember.
  • Snowball (snowballfundraising.com) — Text-to-give and event fundraising. Popular with small schools, churches, and religious organizations.
  • OneCause (onecause.com) — Mobile auctions, events, peer-to-peer — bundled. Started as BidPal.
  • Goalbusters — Fundraising consulting roots.

The common thread is they assume nonprofit back offices have near-zero IT staff and push no-code UX to the extreme.


7. Bonterra — The Apricot · CyberGrants · Network for Good Consolidation

Bonterra (bonterratech.com) emerged as a brand in 2022, but its roots run deep. Private equity firms (notably Apax Partners) rolled up several pieces.

  • Apricot 360 (case management for social services nonprofits).
  • CyberGrants (corporate giving + matching, used by many Fortune 500s).
  • Network for Good (small-to-mid nonprofit fundraising SaaS).
  • EveryAction (advocacy + political campaigns).
  • Salsa Labs (SMB nonprofit CRM + fundraising).

This roll-up made Bonterra one of the largest nonprofit SaaS groups in the US. Since 2024, Bonterra has invested in an "AI Impact" module to automate impact measurement and donor segmentation.

That said, integration cost, interface confusion, and customer churn (especially among Network for Good users) are common post-merger complaints.


8. Blackbaud Raiser's Edge NXT + AI

Blackbaud (blackbaud.com) was founded in 1981 — the original nonprofit SaaS. Raiser's Edge defined the donor database category back in the 1990s.

  • Raiser's Edge NXT — Cloud version (2014+). Deeply entrenched in large nonprofits (hospitals, universities, museums).
  • Financial Edge NXT — Nonprofit accounting.
  • eTapestry (acquired 2003) — For smaller nonprofits.
  • YourCause (acquired 2019) — Corporate giving.
  • Convio · Kintera — Past acquisitions, absorbed.

In May 2023, the SEC fined Blackbaud 3 million USD for misleading disclosures about a 2020 ransomware incident. The case put nonprofit data security back in the spotlight.

Since 2024, Blackbaud has been embedding AI under the "Intelligence for Good" brand. Donor predictions, prospect identification for major gifts, campaign copy generation.


9. Salesforce Nonprofit Cloud + Einstein

Salesforce Nonprofit Cloud (salesforce.org/nonprofit) is Salesforce's nonprofit-focused package.

  • Nonprofit Success Pack (NPSP) — Free for the first 10 licenses. Provides a donor data model.
  • Nonprofit Cloud (2023 new version) — A new architecture integrated with Education Cloud. NPSP user migration is a major topic.
  • Einstein for Nonprofits — AI-driven donation prediction, segmentation, next-best-action recommendations.
  • Tableau integration — Impact dashboards.

Salesforce is Blackbaud's biggest rival for large organizations — international NGOs, universities, religious bodies. License costs and implementation difficulty keep it out of reach for small nonprofits.


10. Bloomerang · Virtuous · Neon One · DonorPerfect · Little Green Light

The mid-market and SMB nonprofit CRM cluster is broad.

  • Bloomerang (bloomerang.co) — Founded 2012 in Indianapolis. UI focused on donor retention. Pricing about 99–499 USD per month.
  • Virtuous (virtuous.org) — Founded 2016 in Phoenix. Modern UI, strong automation workflows.
  • Neon One (neonone.com) — Merger of Z2 Systems and Salsa CRM (2020). Fundraising + membership management.
  • DonorPerfect (donorperfect.com) — Operated by SofterWare since 1983. One of the oldest US nonprofit CRMs.
  • Little Green Light (littlegreenlight.com) — For small organizations. Affordable at 39–99 USD per month.

Each product wraps a similar data model (contacts, gift records, campaigns, tags, email) in a different UI. Nonprofits choose by price, data migration cost, and quality of support services.


11. Corporate Giving + Employee Matching — Benevity · YourCause · Bright Funds · WeSpire

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs have their own SaaS ecosystem.

  • Benevity (benevity.com) — Founded 2008 in Calgary, Canada. Used by many Fortune 1000 companies. Employee giving, matching, volunteer time tracking.
  • YourCause (yourcause.com) — Under Blackbaud (acquired 2019). Direct competitor to Benevity.
  • Bright Funds (brightfunds.org) — Founded 2012 in San Francisco. Themed fund (giving bundle) model.
  • WeSpire (wespire.com) — Heavier on employee engagement.
  • Submittable (submittable.com) — Closer to grant application management, but has some matching features.

Employee matching programs are "free 2x money" for nonprofits, yet 50–80 percent of matches go unclaimed in practice. Tools like Double the Donation try to close that gap.


12. DAF (Donor-Advised Funds) — Fidelity · Schwab · Vanguard · Daffy

DAFs are the fastest-growing charitable tool in the US. As of 2024, US DAF assets total roughly 251 billion USD.

  • DAFgiving360 (Fidelity Charitable) — Rebranded from Fidelity Charitable in 2024. The largest US DAF operator. Cumulative grants exceed 100 billion USD.
  • Schwab Charitable (schwabcharitable.org) — Second-largest operator.
  • Vanguard Charitable (vanguardcharitable.org) — Index-fund philosophy applied to giving.
  • Daffy (daffy.org) — Founded 2021. Mobile-first, starts at 3 USD per month. Founded by Adam Nash (formerly Wealthfront).
  • Charityvest (charityvest.org) — Smaller DAF entrant. No minimum balance.

DAFs work as "donors fund the account first, then later direct distributions to nonprofits." The tax benefit (capital gains exemption on direct stock or crypto gifts) is large. AI-driven distribution recommendations (Daffy) are gradually being adopted.


13. DonorsChoose — Teacher + Classroom Marketplace

DonorsChoose (donorschoose.org) was started in 2000 by Charles Best, a teacher in the Bronx. K-12 teachers post requests for classroom supplies and materials, and the public funds them piece by piece.

  • Cumulative giving — Over 1.4 billion USD as of 2024. More than 2.5 million projects funded.
  • Operating model — DonorsChoose buys the items and ships them to teachers directly. Transparency is built in.
  • AI use — Since 2024, AI assistants help teachers draft project descriptions.

DonorsChoose is the gold standard for "specific cause, clear impact." Every 1 USD is traceable to a classroom and a book. It tackles the "donation black box" problem head-on.


14. GlobalGiving · Kiva · Charity: Water

International development and microfinance have their own marketplaces.

  • GlobalGiving (globalgiving.org) — Founded 2002 in Washington DC. Connects US donors to nonprofits across 170 countries. Cumulative giving over 800 million USD. Operates a Disaster Recovery fund.
  • Kiva (kiva.org) — Founded 2005 in San Francisco. Microloan model — lenders fund from 25 USD, get repaid, and re-lend. Cumulative loans exceed 2 billion USD.
  • Charity: Water (charitywater.org) — Founded 2006 in New York. Water and sanitation nonprofit. Known for the "100 % model" (separate donors cover operating costs; general donations go fully to the field).
  • Khan Academy donations (khanacademy.org/donate) — Registered as a nonprofit. Supports free education.

Each operates its own payment, CRM, and impact reporting stack. Kiva's mobile app is the most polished.


15. Crypto Donations — The Giving Block · Engiven · Endaoment

Crypto giving emerged with the 2017 bitcoin price surge and re-emerged with the 2021 NFT and DeFi boom.

  • The Giving Block (thegivingblock.com) — Founded 2018 in Washington DC. Acquired by Shift4 Payments in 2022. Largest crypto donation gateway in the US. Supports BTC, ETH, USDC, and over 100 tokens.
  • Engiven (engiven.com) — Founded 2018 in California. Auto-liquidation (USD conversion) is a strength.
  • Endaoment (endaoment.org) — Founded 2020 in San Francisco. On-chain DAF. Receives crypto and routes to nonprofits.
  • Giveth (giveth.io) — Ethereum-based fundraising DApp.

Tax incentives are the core driver. In the US, gifting crypto held over one year skips capital gains tax and allows itemized deductions. Bitcoin's 2025 price recovery brought crypto giving volume back up.


16. AI Grant Writing + Research — Instrumentl · Candid · GrantStation

Inside nonprofit back offices, grant applications eat the most staff hours. AI is moving in fast.

  • Instrumentl (instrumentl.com) — Founded 2017 in San Francisco. Grant search + matching + deadline tracking. About 195–595 USD per month.
  • GrantStation (grantstation.com) — Operating since the 1990s. US, Canada, and international grant directory.
  • Candid (candid.org) — Merger of Foundation Center (1956) and GuideStar (1994) in 2019. Massive 990 tax filings and grant database.
  • GrantSeeker AI — New AI grant-writing tool.
  • Direct ChatGPT/Claude — Nonprofit staff increasingly draft grant applications directly with LLMs. The "hallucination + fake data" risk is real.

The good pattern is to use LLMs as draft generators while a human verifies every number and sentence.


17. Korean Nonprofit Fundraising 1 — Kakao Gachigachi

Kakao Gachigachi (together.kakao.com) launched in 2007 under Daum. After the Kakao merger, it became Kakao Impact's dedicated unit.

  • Cumulative giving — Over 150 billion KRW cumulative as of 2024.
  • Micro donations — Possible in 100 KRW and 500 KRW increments. Exposed across the KakaoTalk Channel, Daum News comments, and the broader Kakao ecosystem.
  • Cheer-comment giving — A unique model where a single comment triggers an automatic 100 KRW donation matched by Kakao.
  • KakaoTalk Gift integration — Donations can be sent as gifts to friends.

Gachigachi's strength is the inbound traffic from the portal and messenger. In Korea it forms a duopoly with NAVER Happybean.


18. Korean Nonprofit Fundraising 2 — NAVER Happybean

NAVER Happybean (happybean.naver.com) launched in 2005 as NAVER's social-good platform.

  • Cumulative giving — Over 180 billion KRW cumulative as of 2024.
  • "Kong" virtual currency — 1 Kong = 100 KRW. Users earn Kongs through NAVER Search, news, and blog activity, then donate them.
  • NAVER Pay integration — Cash donations work too.
  • Funding mode — Per-campaign target and time-bound mode.

Both Gachigachi and Happybean require nonprofits to submit financial reports and project plans and pass a review before listing. That's distinctly different from GoFundMe-style personal crowdfunding.


19. Korea — Warm Day · Empty Hands · Community Chest

Beyond Gachigachi and Happybean, Korea has many fundraising channels.

  • Warm Day (onday.or.kr) — Launched 2008. One-to-one sponsorship around small personal stories. Distributed via KakaoTalk and email newsletters.
  • Empty Hands (beensonhanggi.or.kr) — Nonprofit supporting meals for hungry children and the elderly.
  • Community Chest of Korea (chest.or.kr) — Founded 1998. Brand: "Love Fruit" (Sarang-ui Yeol-mae). Korea's largest public-interest fundraising organization. Raises about 1 trillion KRW per year.
  • Good Neighbors (goodneighbors.kr) — Founded 1991 in Korea. International NGO. Child sponsorships are the primary product.
  • World Vision Korea (worldvision.or.kr) — Born from the Korean War in 1950. Child sponsorships and international relief.
  • Save the Children Korea (sc.or.kr) — UK origin 1919, Korea chapter 1953.

A Korea-specific trait is the heavy weight on child sponsorship — monthly auto-debits of 30,000–50,000 KRW matched with a specific child. Good Neighbors, World Vision, and Compassion lead this model.


20. Japan Fundraising 1 — READYFOR · CAMPFIRE

Japanese crowdfunding took off after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.

  • READYFOR (readyfor.jp) — Founded 2011 in Tokyo. Japan's first-generation crowdfunding platform. Social cause-centric. Over 35 billion JPY cumulative. Strong with nonprofits and social welfare corporations.
  • CAMPFIRE (camp-fire.jp) — Founded 2011 in Tokyo. The largest general crowdfunding platform. Accepts product, art, and social causes. Over 70 billion JPY cumulative.
  • Makuake (makuake.com) — A CyberAgent subsidiary. Strong for new product launches — appliances, furniture, food. More of a product launch channel than a charitable platform.

READYFOR and CAMPFIRE differ on fee models. READYFOR is strong on the "all-or-nothing" option, while CAMPFIRE supports a wider range of campaign types. Both adopted AI-assisted copy generation in 2024–2025.


21. Japan Fundraising 2 — Yahoo! Net Donations · GiveOne · Red Feather

Channels beyond crowdfunding.

  • Yahoo! Net Donations (donation.yahoo.co.jp) — Operated by Yahoo! Japan. Allows donations in T Points or PayPay Points. Over 9 billion JPY cumulative.
  • GiveOne (giveone.jp) — Operated by Japan's Center for Social Reform (社会変革推進機構). Vets and lists nonprofits with payment integration.
  • JustGiving Japan — Closed in 2016. Currently inactive.
  • Red Feather Community Chest (akaihane.or.jp) — Active since 1947. "Red Feather" brand. Street fundraising and corporate sponsorship. About 17 billion JPY annually.
  • Japan Fundraising Association (jfra.jp) — Trade body for fundraising professionals. Operates certifications.

Japan's individual giving share of GDP is lower than the US or Korea — about 0.1 percent (vs. about 2 percent in the US, about 0.6 percent in Korea). But disaster-driven short-term giving can be very strong.


22. Disaster Relief Fundraising + AI — GlobalGiving · CrisisRelief Compass

Disaster fundraising hinges on time compression and trust. AI is used for fake-campaign detection and donor matching.

  • GlobalGiving Disaster Recovery — Responds to natural disasters, war, and humanitarian crises. Careful follow-on use-of-funds reporting.
  • CrisisRelief Compass — A newer tool. AI-driven campaign verification.
  • Direct Relief (directrelief.org) — 100-year medical relief history. Big fundraising during COVID-19.
  • GOAL Japan, Peace Winds Japan, Civic Force — Japan's three major disaster-relief NGOs.
  • Korea NGOs — Good Neighbors, World Vision, Hope Bridge Korea Disaster Relief Association.

The Giving Block reported routing about 70 million USD in crypto donations right after the Ukraine invasion in 2022. Immediacy, borderless transfer, and censorship resistance were crypto's value props.


23. Social Platforms + Fundraising — Facebook Shutdown · YouTube · Twitch

Social platform fundraising has been turbulent.

  • Facebook Fundraisers — Started 2015. Birthday fundraisers created massive impact. Discontinued in the US in August 2024, globally in March 2025. Meta cited unprofitability and overlap with existing tools. The nonprofit world was rattled and migrated to GiveButter, GoFundMe, and others.
  • Instagram Donation Stickers — Wound down alongside Facebook by Meta.
  • YouTube Giving — Outside of Super Chat for Good, not a major fundraising channel. Only verified nonprofit channels can use it.
  • Twitch Charity (charity.twitch.tv) — Gamer fundraising is alive and well. Big streams like "GuardianCon" and France's "Z Event" raise millions of USD each year.
  • TikTok Donation Stickers — Piloting with select verified nonprofits.

Meta's shutdown re-exposed the risk of leaning on someone else's platform. A self-owned domain and form is the safer base layer.


24. Impact Measurement + AI Reporting — Bonterra Impact · Sopact · Apparency

Donors increasingly ask, "What did my money change, quantitatively?"

  • Bonterra Impact — Evolved from Apricot case management. Outcome tracking for social-service nonprofits.
  • Salesforce Nonprofit Outcomes — Outcome Management module.
  • Sopact (sopact.com) — Impact-as-a-Service. Survey, outcome, and report automation.
  • Apparency (apparency.io) — Fundraising + reporting automation.
  • GuideStar / Candid Profiles — Nonprofit 990 data plus mission and outcomes disclosure.

AI delivers value in two ways.

  • Data cleaning — Cluster unstructured survey responses by theme.
  • Auto-generated reports — Quarterly and annual impact report drafts produced by LLMs, then human-verified.

The risk is "impact washing" — AI-generated reports that look better than the actual outcomes.


25. Trust + Evaluation — Charity Navigator · GuideStar · GiveWell · CharityWatch

Trust in nonprofits leans heavily on external audit and evaluation bodies.

  • Charity Navigator (charitynavigator.org) — Founded 2001. US nonprofit rater. 4-star system.
  • GuideStar/Candid Seals (candid.org) — Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum seals based on how much info a nonprofit discloses.
  • CharityWatch (charitywatch.org) — Operating since 1992. Tougher grading (A+ through F).
  • GiveWell (givewell.org) — The effective altruism camp. Recommends nonprofits based on lives saved per dollar. Against Malaria Foundation and Helen Keller are top picks.
  • The Life You Can Save — Stemming from Peter Singer's book. A lighter recommendation list than GiveWell.
  • Korea GuideStar (guidestar.or.kr) — Operating since 2008. Independent of US GuideStar. Public-interest corporation information disclosure.

For donors, "finding a trustworthy nonprofit" is shifting toward data-driven. Experiments are underway to have AI auto-analyze 990 filings and surface inefficiencies.


26. Nonprofit + AI Comparison Table + Decision Guide

[Nonprofit Fundraising Tools Quick Comparison — 2026]

A. Personal crowdfunding
   GoFundMe          Consumer, medical, disaster, education — US #1
   JustGiving        UK #1, owned by Blackbaud
   Crowdfunder UK    Various UK causes

B. Nonprofit fundraising SaaS
   GoFundMe Pro      Classy rebrand, mid-to-large
   GiveButter        Free + tip, 0% platform fee
   Donorbox          Embedded form, 5 lines of HTML
   Funraise          Enterprise
   OneCause          Events, auctions, P2P

C. Nonprofit CRM
   Blackbaud RE NXT  Large orgs (hospitals, universities)
   Salesforce NPC    Large orgs, international NGOs
   Bonterra          Social services + corporate giving
   Bloomerang        SMB, retention UX
   Virtuous          Modern automation
   Neon One          SMB unified
   DonorPerfect      SMB long-history

D. Corporate giving + matching
   Benevity          Fortune 1000
   YourCause         Owned by Blackbaud
   Bright Funds      Themed funds
   Double the Donation Matching automation

E. DAF
   DAFgiving360      Fidelity rebrand
   Schwab Charit.    Existing Schwab clients
   Vanguard Char.    Index philosophy
   Daffy             Mobile + 3 USD/month
   Charityvest       Low-balance entry

F. Marketplace
   DonorsChoose      Teachers and classrooms
   GlobalGiving      International NGOs
   Kiva              Microloans

G. Korea
   Kakao Gachigachi  Portal traffic
   NAVER Happybean   Kong + Pay
   Warm Day          Email and newsletter
   Community Chest   Large public-interest fundraising
   Good Neighbors / World Vision Child sponsorship

H. Japan
   READYFOR          First-gen social-cause
   CAMPFIRE          General crowdfunding
   Makuake           Product crowdfunding
   Yahoo! Net Donations  Portal + points
   Red Feather       Street fundraising

I. Crypto
   The Giving Block  Shift4-owned, 100+ tokens
   Engiven           Auto-liquidation
   Endaoment         On-chain DAF

J. Evaluation + trust
   Charity Navigator 4-star
   GuideStar/Candid  Seals
   CharityWatch      A+ ~ F
   GiveWell          Effective altruism

When a nonprofit back office picks a tool, the order is roughly this.

  • Org size — Under 5 staff: Bloomerang, DonorPerfect, Little Green Light. 5–50 staff: Virtuous, Neon One. 50+: Salesforce or Blackbaud.
  • Fundraising channel — Event-centric: OneCause, GiveButter. Embedded-form-centric: Donorbox. Peer-to-peer: GoFundMe Pro, Classy.
  • Country — Korea: Gachigachi, Happybean first. Japan: READYFOR, CAMPFIRE.
  • Major gifts + DAF — Bonterra Impact or Salesforce + DAFwidget.
  • Crypto — The Giving Block (largest gateway as of 2024).

27. Five-Year Outlook — Where Is This Going

The 2026–2030 currents in nonprofit fundraising tech.

  • AI nonprofit back office (NPO Agent) — LLM-based agents automate grant draft writing, donor reply handling, and impact reports. Anthropic and OpenAI are likely to ship nonprofit-tailored bundles.
  • DAF goes mainstream — Korea and Japan may see DAF-style models, possibly launched by Kakao Gachigachi or NAVER Happybean.
  • Crypto donation maturity — Given price volatility, immediate-liquidation models (Engiven-style) will become the default.
  • Stronger impact measurement — Modules like Bonterra Impact may converge on standardized data formats for nonprofit ratings. AI will auto-parse 990 filings into comparable metrics.
  • Filling the Facebook Fundraisers gap — GiveButter and GoFundMe look best-positioned, but TikTok or LinkedIn may step in.
  • Legacy giving — Over the next 20 years, an estimated 84 trillion USD will transfer from Boomers to the next generation in the US (University of Chicago estimate). Tools and SaaS aimed at raising the charitable share of this pool will multiply.

The core change is that donor management gets automated, freeing back-office staff for human relationship building. AI is a labor-saver, not a replacement.


28. Self-Checklist — Picking the Right Tool for Your Org

What a nonprofit operator should check before picking a SaaS.

  • What is your annual fundraising scale (budget drives SaaS cost).
  • What is your staff IT capability (no-code vs. custom).
  • Migration cost from existing data sources (Excel, Access, another CRM).
  • Is donor retention your biggest problem, or is new-donor acquisition.
  • How much can you absorb in platform fees on top of payment processing.
  • Do grants and corporate matching make up a large share of your fundraising.
  • Do you partner with international organizations (multi-country payments and FX).
  • Are you under data-protection requirements (K-PIPA, Japan APPI, GDPR).
  • Do you have an internal ethics guide for AI automation (email drafts, grant writing).
  • Do you have a crisis protocol for data breaches and campaign controversies.

Pass all 10 questions and almost any nonprofit SaaS becomes a reasonable candidate.


Epilogue — Fundraising Is, in the End, a Trust Business

Nonprofit fundraising technology started with the 1970s mailing list, became Raiser's Edge on the desktop in the 1990s, moved through GoFundMe and DonorsChoose marketplaces in the 2000s, and arrived at GiveButter, Donorbox, and Bonterra modern SaaS in the 2020s — with AI embedding kicking off in 2025.

The technology shifted fast. The nature of giving did not. "I saw a need, and my small money can make a difference." Keeping that belief intact is the job of nonprofit SaaS, platforms, and rating agencies.

In May 2026, nonprofits in Korea, Japan, and the US must do more with fewer staff. AI is a tool that makes that possible. The trust with donors and beneficiaries — that is still human work.

May the 50-plus tools introduced here lighten that work, even a little.


Appendix · Nonprofit + Crisis Response Quick Reference

[Korea]
  Community Chest of Korea   chest.or.kr        02-6262-3000
  Kakao Gachigachi           together.kakao.com
  NAVER Happybean            happybean.naver.com
  Good Neighbors             goodneighbors.kr   02-6717-4000
  World Vision Korea         worldvision.or.kr  02-784-2118
  Hope Bridge Korea Disaster Relief Association relief.or.kr  02-3272-0123

[United States]
  GoFundMe                   gofundme.com
  DonorsChoose               donorschoose.org
  Charity Navigator          charitynavigator.org
  Candid (GuideStar)         candid.org
  988 Suicide & Crisis       988 (crisis response)

[Japan]
  READYFOR                   readyfor.jp
  CAMPFIRE                   camp-fire.jp
  Yahoo! Net Donations       donation.yahoo.co.jp
  Red Feather Community Chest akaihane.or.jp
  Civic Force                civic-force.org

[International]
  GlobalGiving               globalgiving.org
  Kiva                       kiva.org
  Direct Relief              directrelief.org
  GiveWell                   givewell.org

References