Nonprofit Tech Access Guide

There are millions of dollars in free and discounted technology available to nonprofits right now. Most small organizations never access it... not because they don't qualify, but because they don't know it exists, don't have time to research it, or hit too many walls trying to apply.

We built this guide from our own experience. The Quietly Working Foundation (QWF) is a 501(c)(3) that runs 48+ tools in production. We've applied to these programs ourselves. We know what the application process actually looks like, how long it takes, and what you really get.

This is not a sponsored list. It's operational truth from a nonprofit that actually uses these tools.


How to Use This Guide

Each program below includes:

Difficulty Scale: Easy (fill a form, done in minutes) | Medium (requires documentation, 1-2 weeks) | Hard (grant application, competitive, weeks to months)


The Gatekeepers: TechSoup & GoodStack

Before diving into individual programs, you need to know about two organizations that serve as verification platforms. Many vendor programs require validation through one of these.

TechSoup

What it is: The largest nonprofit tech intermediary in the world. Founded in 1987. They verify your nonprofit status and unlock access to dozens of vendor discount programs.

Why you need it: Many programs (Microsoft, Google, Adobe, Intuit, and others) require a "TechSoup validation token" before you can access their nonprofit offerings. Getting validated with TechSoup is often Step 0.

How to register:

  1. Go to techsoup.org and create an account
  2. Submit your 501(c)(3) determination letter and EIN
  3. Wait for validation (typically 1-2 weeks)
  4. Once validated, you can request product donations and discounts through their catalog

Our experience: QWF is a verified TechSoup member. The registration process is straightforward but not instant. Don't wait until you need a specific product to register... do it now so you're ready.

Cost: Free to register. Some products have small "administrative fees" ($5-50) but are otherwise donated.

GoodStack

What it is: A newer platform that connects nonprofits with tech company discount programs. Think of it as a curated marketplace for nonprofit tech deals.

Why you need it: Some vendors route their nonprofit programs exclusively through GoodStack (like Zoom's 50% discount). Others offer deals through both TechSoup and GoodStack, sometimes at different discount levels.

Our experience: GoodStack brokered our Zoom 50% nonprofit discount (approved February 2026) and offered us 75% off Claude/Anthropic for nonprofits. Their process was smooth and faster than TechSoup for the programs they cover. Worth registering at both.

Cost: Free to register.

Our Recommendation: Register at BOTH TechSoup and GoodStack. Different vendors use different platforms. Having both accounts ready means you're never blocked when a program requires one or the other.


Communication & Collaboration

What You Get Free Twilio credits + grant funding for mission-driven communications (SMS, voice, video, email)
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits focused on social impact
How to Apply Apply through twilio.org
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience Twilio.org has been EPIC for QWF. Tools AND grant funds... we've never paid a single penny. Their commitment to nonprofits is genuine and generous. Heart Score: 5/5.

Zoom (via GoodStack)

What You Get 50% off Zoom Workplace products
Who Qualifies Verified nonprofits through GoodStack
How to Apply Register at GoodStack, apply for Zoom's programme
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience Applied and approved February 2026. GoodStack handled the verification. Straightforward process.

Slack for Nonprofits

What You Get 85% off Slack Pro plan (or free upgrade for qualifying orgs)
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply Apply through Slack's nonprofit page
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience We use Discord instead, but this is a strong option for nonprofits already on Slack.

Google for Nonprofits

What You Get Free Google Workspace (Business Starter), $10,000/month Google Ad Grants, YouTube Nonprofit features, Google Earth/Maps access
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits, registered with TechSoup
How to Apply google.com/nonprofits — requires TechSoup validation token
Difficulty Medium (TechSoup validation is the bottleneck)
Our Experience The Ad Grant alone ($10,000/month in free Google Ads) is worth the entire registration effort. Many nonprofits leave this on the table because they don't know about it.

Development & Infrastructure

GitHub for Nonprofits

What You Get Free GitHub Team plan (normally $4/user/month)
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply Apply through GitHub's nonprofit page
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience Donated GitHub Team plan — we use it for all QWF repos including this transparency site. Application was simple.

Microsoft for Nonprofits

What You Get Free/discounted Microsoft 365, Azure credits ($3,500/year), Dynamics 365, Power Platform
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits, registered with TechSoup
How to Apply nonprofit.microsoft.com — requires TechSoup validation
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience QWF uses Microsoft 365 and Azure extensively. The Azure credits help offset our VM costs. The process requires TechSoup validation first, which adds time.

Cloudflare Project Galileo

What You Get Free Cloudflare Enterprise-level protection for at-risk organizations
Who Qualifies Nonprofits, human rights organizations, independent media, organizations facing cyber threats
How to Apply Apply through Cloudflare's Project Galileo page
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience We use Cloudflare's free tier (which is already very generous) for all QWF domains. Project Galileo goes further for orgs facing active threats.

AWS (via TechSoup)

What You Get AWS Promotional Credits (amount varies)
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits, registered with TechSoup
How to Apply Apply through TechSoup, reapply annually
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience We apply for AWS credits through TechSoup annually. The amount varies and it's not guaranteed, but when approved it helps with cloud costs. Timing matters... we've had best luck applying in January/February.

Atlassian Social Impact Licenses (formerly Community Licenses)

What You Get 100% off annual cloud subscriptions (25 seats or less): Jira Standard/Premium, Confluence Standard/Premium, Loom Business/Business+AI, Teamwork Collection Standard/Premium
Who Qualifies Verified social impact organizations (501(c)(3) nonprofits)
How to Apply Visit admin.atlassian.com → Billing → Switch subscriptions to annual billing → 100% discount applied at next renewal
Difficulty Easy (if you're already an Atlassian customer) / Medium (new signup)
Our Experience We use Loom (previously 75% off for nonprofits). As of February 25, 2026, Atlassian upgraded to 100% off for small social impact teams. That's Jira, Confluence, Loom, AND Teamwork Collection... completely free. This is one of the most generous nonprofit programs in tech. Heart Score: 5/5.

AI & Productivity

Anthropic / Claude (via GoodStack)

What You Get 75% off Claude for nonprofits
Who Qualifies Verified nonprofits through GoodStack
How to Apply Register at GoodStack, look for Anthropic's nonprofit program
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience GoodStack offered this deal in January 2026. Claude is our primary AI... we run the entire backoffice on it. A 75% discount on what is already a high-value tool is exceptional.

Canva for Nonprofits

What You Get Free Canva Pro (normally $120/year per person) for up to 10 users
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply canva.com/canva-for-nonprofits
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience One of the easiest programs to access. The free Pro plan includes brand kits, premium templates, and team features. Huge value for nonprofits doing their own marketing.

Notion for Nonprofits

What You Get 50% off Notion Plus/Business plans
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply notion.so/nonprofits
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience We use Obsidian instead, but Notion's nonprofit discount is solid for orgs that prefer a cloud-based workspace.

Design & Creative

Figma for Nonprofits

What You Get Free Figma Organization plan for qualifying nonprofits
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply Apply through Figma's nonprofit page
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience Haven't applied (our design work goes through QWC), but this is a major value for nonprofits with design needs.

Adobe for Nonprofits (via TechSoup)

What You Get Significant discounts on Creative Cloud and other Adobe products
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits, registered with TechSoup
How to Apply Through TechSoup's product catalog
Difficulty Medium
Our Experience Adobe's nonprofit pricing through TechSoup is better than retail but still not cheap. Worth it if you need the full Creative Cloud suite. Compare with Canva for Nonprofits first... many small nonprofits can get by with Canva.

CRM & Donor Management

Salesforce for Nonprofits

What You Get 10 free Salesforce Enterprise licenses (Power of Us program)
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply salesforce.org/power-of-us
Difficulty Hard (the platform itself has a steep learning curve)
Our Experience We use SuiteDash instead (bootstrapped, simpler, lifetime deal). Salesforce is powerful but complex. 10 free Enterprise licenses is genuinely generous... IF you have the capacity to implement and maintain it. For small nonprofits without a dedicated admin, this can become a liability.

HubSpot for Nonprofits

What You Get 40% off HubSpot products
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply Through HubSpot's nonprofit page
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience Haven't used (we run SuiteDash), but 40% off is meaningful given HubSpot's normal pricing.

Security & Passwords

1Password for Nonprofits

What You Get Free 1Password Teams account
Who Qualifies 501(c)(3) nonprofits
How to Apply 1password.com/nonprofits
Difficulty Easy
Our Experience Password management is foundational security. If you're running a nonprofit on shared passwords in a spreadsheet, this should be one of the first things you set up.

The Honest Truth About "Free"

A few things we've learned the hard way:

1. "Free" still costs time. Every tool has a learning curve. Before signing up for 15 free programs, ask: do we have someone who will actually use this? A free tool nobody uses is still a distraction.

2. Verification takes time. TechSoup validation can take 1-2 weeks. Some programs have their own review process on top of that. Start the verification process NOW, even if you don't need anything today.

3. Free tiers can disappear. Companies change their nonprofit programs. What's free today might be "50% off" tomorrow. When you find a good program, lock it in.

4. The real value is in the stack. Individual tools are useful. Connected tools are transformative. Our most powerful systems aren't any single tool... they're the integrations between them (Obsidian + n8n + Supabase + Claude working together).

5. Don't collect tools. Solve problems. Start with the challenge, not the shiny tool. "We need to communicate with families" is a better starting point than "let's get Twilio because it's free."


What's Next: IYSR Tech Access Service

This guide is a start. But reading a list doesn't solve the bandwidth problem.

The International Youth Service Registry (IYSR) — a QWF effort — is building something bigger: a service where youth-serving organizations can register a profile, and based on their size, mission, and needs, get a personalized list of programs they pre-qualify for... with step-by-step guidance to apply for each one.

Because the issue isn't that free tech doesn't exist. The issue is that overworked nonprofit leaders don't have the bandwidth to find it, apply for it, and implement it. IYSR aims to collapse all three barriers into one relationship.

Learn more at iysr.org — and if you're a youth-serving organization that could use a hand, we'd love to hear from you.


Last updated: 2026-02-26
This guide is based on QWF's direct experience as a verified 501(c)(3). Eligibility and offerings may change. Always verify current terms at each vendor's website.
See The QWU Tool Shed for our full tool inventory and QWS Scorecard scores.