Here’s a lightly improved version with repetition trimmed and flow tightened, while keeping the original voice and structure intact:
# Best Website Builder for Churches and Nonprofits
Picking a website builder for a church or nonprofit sounds easy until you actually have to live with it.
At first, most platforms look similar: templates, donation buttons, event calendars, drag-and-drop editing, maybe some email tools. Then real life shows up. A volunteer updates the homepage and breaks the layout. Online giving fees start adding up. The sermon archive gets messy. Nobody can figure out where the event signup form lives. And suddenly the “easy” website builder is eating time your team does not have.
The reality is this: the best website builder for churches and nonprofits is not the one with the longest feature list. It’s the one your team can keep running without drama.
If you want the short version, here it is.
Quick answer
Best overall for most churches and nonprofits: SquarespaceIt has the best balance of:
- clean design
- easy editing
- solid donation and event options
- low maintenance
- enough flexibility without becoming a project
- more app flexibility
- stronger built-in business tools
- better if you need lots of forms, campaigns, and integrations
- better for sermons, ministries, giving, and church apps
- less polished as pure website builders
- stronger if your website is part of a larger church tech stack
- still the most customizable
- also the easiest to overcomplicate
- best if you have a real web person, not just a willing volunteer
- cheap, easy, limited
- fine for a basic local nonprofit or church plant
- not ideal if you expect to grow
If you’re wondering which should you choose, the honest answer is:
- choose Squarespace if you want the safest default
- choose Wix if operations and fundraising matter more than design purity
- choose WordPress if you have technical help
- choose Tithely/Subsplash if church-specific tools matter more than website flexibility
What actually matters
A lot of comparison articles get lost in feature lists. That’s usually not how churches and nonprofits make this decision.
What matters in practice is simpler.
1. Who will update the site?
This is the biggest question, and people often skip it.
If the site will be updated by:
- a church admin
- a communications volunteer
- a nonprofit operations manager
- a rotating team of people with mixed skills
then ease of editing matters more than almost anything else.
A platform can be “powerful,” but if nobody wants to touch it, it’s a bad fit.
This is why WordPress is both great and risky. It can do almost anything. It can also become fragile fast if too many plugins and too many helpers are involved.
2. Is the website mainly informational, or is it operational?
Some churches mostly need:
- service times
- location
- ministries
- sermon archive
- giving
- events
Some nonprofits need the site to do real work:
- collect donations
- handle campaigns
- process registrations
- manage volunteers
- connect to CRM and email tools
- publish impact stories regularly
Those are different jobs.
For some organizations, a nice-looking site is enough. Others need a system.
3. How important are donations?
Donation tools are one of the key differences between platforms.
A lot of builders let you “accept donations,” but that doesn’t mean the workflow is good.
Things that matter:
- recurring giving
- donor experience on mobile
- processing fees
- campaign pages
- donor data sync
- tax receipt workflows
- whether donations feel native or bolted on
For churches especially, giving needs to be frictionless. If members have to click through a clunky third-party page that looks unrelated to your site, conversions drop. Not always dramatically, but enough to notice.
4. Do you need church-specific features?
This is where generic website builders and church platforms start to split.
Churches often need:
- sermon audio/video libraries
- ministry pages
- campus locations
- event registrations
- prayer request forms
- volunteer signups
- online giving
- livestream embedding
- app integration
A standard builder like Squarespace or Wix can handle most of that. But church-specific platforms usually handle it more naturally.
The trade-off: church platforms often have weaker design flexibility and less polished editing.
5. How much maintenance can you tolerate?
This matters more than people admit.
Some platforms are mostly “set it and update content.”
Others require:
- plugin updates
- security checks
- backups
- troubleshooting conflicts
- layout fixes after updates
Most small churches and nonprofits do not want to maintain a website. They want to use one.
That’s why all-in-one builders win so often.
Comparison table
| Platform | Best for | Main strength | Main weakness | Ease of use | Flexibility | Donations/Church tools |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Squarespace | Most churches and nonprofits | Best balance of design + simplicity | Less deep customization | High | Medium | Good, but not church-native |
| Wix | Fundraising-heavy nonprofits, flexible small teams | Lots of apps and built-in tools | Can get cluttered fast | Medium-High | High | Good donation options, less church-specific |
| WordPress | Teams with tech help | Maximum control | Maintenance and complexity | Medium-Low | Very High | Excellent with plugins, setup varies |
| Tithely Sites | Churches already using Tithely | Church-focused ecosystem | Design feels more limited | Medium | Medium | Strong church/giving features |
| Subsplash | Larger churches with app/media focus | Strong media, sermons, app ecosystem | Website builder less flexible | Medium | Medium | Very strong church-specific tools |
| Weebly | Very small budgets | Simple and cheap | Feels dated, limited growth | High | Low | Basic |
| Carrd | One-page microsites, campaigns | Fast and inexpensive | Too limited for most orgs | Very High | Low | Very basic |
Detailed comparison
Squarespace
Squarespace is the one I end up recommending most often, even when it’s not the most exciting option.
Why? Because it usually causes the fewest problems.
It looks polished out of the box. Pages are hard to make truly ugly. Editing is structured enough that volunteers can update content without wrecking everything. For churches and nonprofits that need a clean, trustworthy online presence, that matters.
It’s especially good for:
- mid-sized churches
- local nonprofits
- community organizations
- teams without a designer or developer
- organizations that care about presentation
The donation setup is good enough for many nonprofits, especially if you’re using Stripe and keeping things simple. Event pages, forms, blogs, and basic content management are all solid.
For churches, Squarespace handles:
- service info
- staff pages
- ministries
- events
- sermons via blog or summary pages
- embedded livestreams
- giving links or donation pages
That said, there are trade-offs.
It’s not the best for advanced workflows. If you need deep CRM integration, custom donor journeys, volunteer systems, or complicated multi-step registrations, you’ll start feeling the limits. You can work around them, but it stops being elegant.
A contrarian point here: people often overrate Squarespace’s “ease of use.” It’s easy once the structure is set. Building a good site from scratch still takes thought. The editor is clean, but not magical.
Still, for most churches and nonprofits, it’s the safest recommendation.
Wix
Wix is more flexible than Squarespace, and sometimes that’s exactly what a nonprofit needs.
If your organization runs lots of programs, campaigns, forms, registrations, and landing pages, Wix can make more sense. It has a bigger ecosystem of apps and business tools, and it gives non-technical teams more room to build operational pages.
This is why Wix often works well for:
- active nonprofits with multiple programs
- fundraising teams
- organizations running frequent events
- teams that want one platform to do a lot
Its donation features are generally stronger in practical use than people expect, and the form/event ecosystem is more useful than Squarespace’s when your site is handling real activity.
For example, if you need:
- volunteer forms
- event registration
- donation campaigns
- email capture
- landing pages for seasonal fundraising
- member or participant areas
Wix is often easier to stretch.
The downside is that Wix can become messy.
That’s the real trade-off. Because it allows more freedom, teams often create inconsistent pages, overlapping apps, and cluttered navigation. I’ve seen Wix sites that worked really well, and I’ve seen some that felt like a storage closet.
Another contrarian point: Wix gets dismissed by some people as amateur. That’s outdated. It’s more capable than it used to be. The bigger issue isn’t credibility. It’s governance. If too many people edit without a plan, things drift fast.
If your nonprofit is operations-heavy and doesn’t need perfect design restraint, Wix is a very strong option.
WordPress
WordPress is still the most flexible choice by a mile.
If you want total control over:
- design
- content structure
- donations
- membership
- SEO
- sermon archives
- multilingual content
- accessibility customization
- integrations
WordPress can do it.
For churches and nonprofits with a developer, a reliable freelancer, or an in-house technical lead, it can absolutely be the best long-term platform.
It’s especially strong for:
- larger nonprofits
- churches with complex content needs
- organizations with custom workflows
- teams that plan to scale
- sites that need lots of integrations
You can build a very strong setup with WordPress plus tools like:
- Elementor or Block Editor
- GiveWP for donations
- The Events Calendar
- church-specific sermon plugins
- SEO plugins
- CRM integrations
The problem is not capability. The problem is maintenance.
In practice, many churches and nonprofits choose WordPress because someone on the board says it’s “the professional option.” Then six months later, the person who built it disappears, plugin renewals are confusing, and nobody wants to touch the homepage.
That story is common.
WordPress is best for organizations that can answer yes to at least one of these:
- we have ongoing technical support
- we need custom functionality badly enough to justify complexity
- we are willing to manage updates and security
If that’s not you, WordPress can become expensive in invisible ways.
I like WordPress. I just don’t think it’s the default answer anymore.
Tithely Sites
Tithely Sites makes the most sense if you’re already in the Tithely ecosystem.
That’s the headline.
If your church already uses Tithely for giving, church management, messaging, or apps, adding the website can simplify things. Sermons, ministries, giving, and church communication fit together more naturally than they do on generic builders.
This makes Tithely appealing for:
- churches that want one vendor
- teams that prioritize giving and church workflows
- churches without technical staff
- admins who want less duct-tape integration
The church-specific features are the main reason to use it. A generic builder can imitate church pages. Tithely is actually built around church use cases.
But the design experience is more limited. That’s the trade-off you need to accept upfront.
Compared with Squarespace, Tithely Sites usually feels:
- less polished visually
- less flexible in layout
- more practical for church operations
If your church website is mostly a front door plus a hub for giving, sermons, and ministries, Tithely can be a smart choice.
If your church cares deeply about branding, storytelling, custom page design, or a more modern editorial look, Squarespace or WordPress will usually feel better.
Subsplash
Subsplash is strong, but it’s not for every church.
Where it shines is media, mobile app integration, and a connected church digital ecosystem. If your church publishes a lot of sermons, pushes content through an app, and treats digital engagement seriously, Subsplash is compelling.
It’s often a good fit for:
- medium to large churches
- multi-campus churches
- churches with strong sermon/media strategy
- churches that want a branded app plus website experience
Its sermon and media handling is better than what you’ll cobble together on most generic builders. That’s the real value.
The downside is that as a pure website builder, it’s not always the most flexible or intuitive. Some churches end up with a site that works well operationally but feels a little constrained creatively.
So which should you choose between Subsplash and a normal website builder?
Choose Subsplash if:
- your sermons and app matter a lot
- your church already thinks in terms of a digital platform
- you want a more unified church media ecosystem
Choose Squarespace or WordPress if:
- your website itself is the main priority
- custom design matters
- you don’t need the larger church media stack
Weebly
Weebly is still around, and for tiny organizations, it can still work.
I wouldn’t call it the top choice for most churches or nonprofits in 2026, but if you have:
- almost no budget
- very simple needs
- a tiny local team
- a basic brochure-style site
then it can be enough.
The issue is growth. Weebly tends to feel fine right up until you want the site to do more. Then it starts feeling cramped and dated.
I’d only recommend it for:
- very small churches
- temporary nonprofit sites
- local outreach projects with basic information needs
It’s easy. It’s cheap. It’s not where I’d build if you expect momentum.
Carrd
Carrd is not a full church or nonprofit website builder, but it deserves a mention because sometimes people overbuild.
If you’re launching:
- a fundraising microsite
- a campaign page
- a church plant landing page
- an event registration page
- a one-page ministry site
Carrd is fantastic.
It’s fast, inexpensive, and almost impossible to overcomplicate.
Would I use Carrd for a full church website with sermons, ministries, giving, and events? No.
Would I use it for a nonprofit campaign page that needs to go live this afternoon? Absolutely.
That’s the contrarian point: not every organization needs a “real” website first. Sometimes a simple page that clearly explains the mission and collects donations is the better move.
Real example
Let’s make this practical.
Say you’re helping a mid-sized church with:
- 350 weekly attendance
- one admin
- one part-time communications person
- lots of volunteers
- online giving already in place
- weekly sermons on YouTube
- events every month
- no in-house developer
They’re deciding between Squarespace, WordPress, and Tithely Sites.
Here’s how I’d think about it.
If they choose Squarespace
They’ll probably get the best-looking site fastest.
The communications person can manage pages, update events, post sermon recaps, and keep the homepage fresh without needing outside help. Giving can link out cleanly or run through a simple donation setup. YouTube sermons can be embedded easily.
This is the low-drama option.
The downside is that church-specific workflows may feel a bit manual. Sermon organization, ministry filtering, and advanced forms won’t feel as native as they would on a church platform.
If they choose WordPress
They can build exactly what they want.
A great WordPress build could include:
- custom sermon library
- advanced event filtering
- staff-managed content workflows
- integrated giving tools
- better long-term SEO structure
But unless they have a dependable web person, they’re taking on more than they think. The first year might be fine. Year two is usually where things get weird.
If they choose Tithely Sites
They’ll get a more church-native setup.
Giving, ministries, sermons, and church communication will make more sense in one system. The admin may actually prefer it because it matches the way the church operates.
But the site may not look as custom or polished. If the church is trying to improve first impressions with new visitors, that matters.
My recommendation for that church? Squarespace, unless they are already deeply invested in Tithely and value ecosystem simplicity more than design flexibility.
That’s how these decisions usually go: not by feature count, but by what the team can sustain.
Common mistakes
1. Choosing for launch day instead of year two
A lot of teams pick the platform that looks easiest during setup.
Wrong question.
Ask: who will update this site every month for the next two years?
That answer changes everything.
2. Overvaluing customization
This is a big one.
Churches and nonprofits often choose WordPress because they want freedom. Then they use 20% of that freedom and inherit 100% of the maintenance.
If your site mostly needs clear information and reliable donations, you probably do not need maximum flexibility.
3. Ignoring donation workflow
A donation button is not a donation strategy.
Test the process on mobile. Check recurring giving. See how receipts work. Look at fees. Make sure the donor experience feels trustworthy.
This is one of the key differences that actually affects results.
4. Letting too many people edit without rules
Wix and WordPress are especially vulnerable here, but it can happen anywhere.
If everyone can create pages however they want, the site gets inconsistent fast. Fonts drift, buttons change, menus get weird.
A simple content policy helps more than people think.
5. Buying church-specific software when you really just need a better website
This is the other side of it.
Some churches buy a whole church platform when what they really need is:
- a modern homepage
- clear visitor info
- better giving access
- cleaner events
- sermon links that make sense
If that’s your situation, a normal builder may be the smarter and cheaper move.
Who should choose what
Here’s the clearest version.
Choose Squarespace if…
- you want the best overall balance
- your team is non-technical
- design and trust matter
- you want something easy to maintain
- your church or nonprofit mostly needs a strong, clear public-facing site
This is the best default for most.
Choose Wix if…
- your nonprofit runs lots of campaigns, forms, and events
- you need more built-in flexibility
- your team can manage a slightly messier platform
- operations matter as much as appearance
Wix is often best for active nonprofits.
Choose WordPress if…
- you have technical help
- you need custom workflows
- your content structure is complex
- you want maximum control
- you’re willing to maintain it properly
Do not choose WordPress just because it sounds professional.
Choose Tithely Sites if…
- you’re a church already using Tithely
- giving and church workflows matter most
- you want fewer disconnected tools
- you can live with more limited design freedom
Choose Subsplash if…
- sermons and media are central
- you want app + website alignment
- you’re a larger or more digitally mature church
- your website is part of a broader content ecosystem
Choose Weebly if…
- budget is your main constraint
- your site is very simple
- you do not expect major growth
Choose Carrd if…
- you need a campaign page or microsite
- speed matters more than scale
- you’re testing an idea before building a full site
Final opinion
If a church or nonprofit asks me for one answer, I’d say Squarespace.
Not because it wins every category. It doesn’t.
But it wins the category that usually matters most: being good enough at almost everything while staying manageable for real teams.
Wix is a close second, and for some nonprofits it’s actually the better choice. If your site is more operational than editorial, I’d look hard at Wix.
WordPress is still the power option, but I would only recommend it when there’s actual technical ownership. Otherwise, it’s too easy to build yourself a maintenance problem.
For churches specifically, Tithely Sites and Subsplash deserve serious consideration if you want church-native tools more than design freedom. That’s the main fork in the road.
So, which should you choose?
- Most churches: Squarespace
- Most nonprofits: Squarespace or Wix
- Tech-capable teams: WordPress
- Church ecosystem users: Tithely Sites
- Media-heavy churches: Subsplash
If you want the least regrettable choice, go with Squarespace.
FAQ
What is the best website builder for churches?
For most churches, Squarespace is the best overall choice because it’s easy to manage, looks professional, and handles the basics well. If you need more church-specific tools, Tithely Sites or Subsplash may be a better fit.
What is the best website builder for nonprofits?
For many nonprofits, it comes down to Squarespace vs Wix. Squarespace is better for clean presentation and simplicity. Wix is better for organizations running lots of campaigns, forms, and events.
Is WordPress still a good option for churches and nonprofits?
Yes, but only if you have technical support. WordPress is powerful and flexible, but it takes more maintenance than all-in-one builders. For small teams, that trade-off is often not worth it.
Which should you choose: Squarespace or Wix?
Choose Squarespace if you want a cleaner, more controlled website experience. Choose Wix if you need more functionality and flexibility for operations, fundraising, or program management.
Are church-specific website builders better than general ones?
Sometimes. Church-specific builders are better for sermons, giving, and ministry workflows. General builders are often better for design, ease of use, and a cleaner public-facing website. The right answer depends on whether your main need is church operations or website quality.
If you want, I can also do a second-pass edit that keeps everything intact but tightens it another 10–15% for readability.