Most NGOs are already using some AI, usually ChatGPT, occasionally Canva. But there are a dozen genuinely useful tools sitting unclaimed, either because the application process isn’t obvious or because nobody got around to it. This guide cuts through the noise.
Updated April 2026 Sources linked throughoutFocus: truly free or free-on-application
65%of nonprofits are interested in AI — but only 9% feel ready to adopt it (AI Equity Project, 2025)
76%of organizations have no AI strategy, per the State of AI in Nonprofits 2025 Report
9 in 10nonprofits report positive productivity gains when they actually use AI tools — Google survey, 2025
The gap between interest and action is mostly a discovery problem. Most free AI programs for NGOs require a short application, not a budget conversation. And several tools, Google Workspace for Nonprofits being the obvious one, are worth thousands of dollars a year and genuinely take less than a week to unlock.
A few things to keep in mind before diving in: “free” sometimes means free-on-application (you need to prove nonprofit status), and sometimes means a generous free tier that most small NGOs won’t outgrow. Both are in the table below, labelled clearly. The ones that require an application typically take five to fourteen days to process.
The table: what’s available and where to get it
All links go directly to the tool’s signup or nonprofit application page. The “cost” column describes what the free tier actually includes — not what you’d pay if you upgraded.
| Tool | Cost model | What it does | Best for NGOs when… | Where to apply / sign up |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Workspace for Nonprofits (incl. Gemini + NotebookLM) | Apply | Full Google Workspace suite — Gmail, Drive, Docs, Meet — with 10+ AI features including Gemini AI assistant and NotebookLM, free for up to 2,000 users with HIPAA/GDPR-level data protections | Your team runs on Google tools and needs AI drafting, research summarisation, or grant writing support without a subscription | google.com/nonprofits |
| Google Ad Grants | Apply | Up to $10,000/month in free Google Search advertising, now with AI-optimised Performance Max campaigns and Google Maps placements | You want to drive traffic to your campaigns, donation pages, or volunteer sign-ups without an advertising budget | google.com/grants |
| Canva for Nonprofits | Apply | Full Canva Pro — premium templates, brand kits, background removal, AI image tools, and team collaboration — free for up to 50 users per eligible organisation | You produce regular social content, reports, or fundraising materials and can’t afford a designer or premium subscription | canva.com/canva-for-nonprofits |
| Claude (Anthropic) | Free tier | Long-context AI assistant for grant writing, policy analysis, report drafting, and document review; handles PDFs and complex documents well | You need to draft or review long documents — proposals, briefings, board reports — and want something that can work across an entire document without losing context | claude.ai |
| ChatGPT (OpenAI) | Free tier | General-purpose AI assistant for drafting emails, brainstorming campaigns, writing templates, and answering research questions | Your team needs a general AI assistant that anyone can pick up without training — the free tier is usable for most NGO writing and ideation tasks | chat.openai.com |
| NotebookLM (Google) | Free tier | Upload documents, reports, or research and ask questions; generates cited, accurate summaries without hallucinating facts from outside the uploaded sources | You need to analyse long reports, synthesise multiple documents, or onboard staff to complex background materials quickly | notebooklm.google.com |
| Grantable | Freemium | AI tool built specifically for grant writing — generates and refines proposal content aligned with funder requirements, maintains consistency across applications | Your team writes multiple grant applications per month and spends too much time on repetitive narrative sections | grantable.co |
| Buffer (free plan) | Free tier | Social media scheduling with AI-assisted content suggestions; free plan covers up to three social channels with basic analytics | You manage social media with a small team and need a simple way to schedule posts and understand what’s working | buffer.com |
| Grammarly (free plan) | Free tier | AI writing assistant for grammar, tone, and clarity; free tier covers core editing across emails, documents, and web forms | Staff are producing donor communications, grant proposals, or reports where clarity and professionalism matter and proofreading is inconsistent | grammarly.com |
| AI4NGO | Free | AI tools, training resources, and implementation support specifically for NGOs working on global development and social impact challenges | You want structured AI training for your team rather than just tool access — particularly useful for organisations in lower-income contexts | ai4ngo.org |
| Nonprofit Tech for Good AI Hub | Free | Curated directory of AI tools and resources specifically reviewed for nonprofit use, updated regularly | You want an actively maintained list to check before adopting new tools — good for staying current without doing your own research | nptechforgood.com/ai-for-nonprofits/tools |
| Salesforce Nonprofit Cloud (free tier) | Apply | CRM with AI-powered donor insights and analytics; free for up to 10 licences for qualifying nonprofits through Salesforce.org | You manage donor relationships at scale and need a proper CRM — the free tier is enough for most small to mid-size organisations | salesforce.org/nonprofit |
Where to start if you haven’t started
The advice from practitioners consistently points the same direction: pick one tool, try it on one real task, and give it a month. The organisations that try to adopt everything at once tend to adopt nothing. That said, three tools sit above the rest for most NGOs because of the scale of what’s available at no cost.
Google for Nonprofits is the obvious first stop. The application process runs through google.com/nonprofits and is handled by Goodstack, Google’s verification partner. Most applications are processed within three to five days. Once approved, you unlock Workspace (email, docs, Drive), Gemini, NotebookLM, Ad Grants, and YouTube nonprofit features — all in one application. Organisations that don’t apply are, as one practitioner noted, leaving the equivalent of a free grant on the table every month.
Canva for Nonprofits takes a separate application through Goodstack as well. You’ll need your registration documents — a 501(c)(3) letter in the US, or equivalent in your country — and the decision usually comes within seven to ten days. What you get is full Canva Pro for up to 50 users. For organisations that produce any regular external communications, that’s a meaningful upgrade.
NotebookLM is worth singling out because it solves a specific problem that generic AI assistants don’t handle well: working with your actual documents rather than its training data. Upload a grant report, a policy document, or a stack of research papers, and it will answer questions about them with citations to the source. It doesn’t hallucinate facts from outside what you’ve given it, which matters when accuracy is non-negotiable. There’s no application — it’s free at notebooklm.google.com.
A few honest caveats
On data and privacy: Before putting beneficiary data or sensitive organisational information into any AI tool, check the platform’s data retention policy. Google Workspace for Nonprofits includes enterprise-grade HIPAA and GDPR compliance protections — most free-tier tools do not. When in doubt, use AI for drafting and synthesis, not for processing personally identifiable information.
Free tiers have limits. Google Ad Grants requires active management — accounts that go untouched for weeks tend to underperform, and there are compliance rules around click-through rates that can get accounts suspended. Buffer’s free plan covers three channels, which is enough for most small NGOs but won’t scale. And Salesforce’s free ten-user tier is genuinely useful, but the platform has a learning curve that shouldn’t be underestimated.
The “apply” tools also require that your organisation be properly registered. In the US that means 501(c)(3) status. In the EU and UK, equivalent registration documents are accepted. Government agencies, political organisations, and for-profit entities don’t qualify — eligibility guidelines vary by country and are spelled out on each application page.
Finally: 76% of nonprofits have no AI strategy. You don’t need a strategy to start using a tool. But if you’re making decisions about which tools your organisation will standardise on — especially for communications or donor data — it’s worth spending a few hours on an informal policy: what you’ll use, who can use it, and what data shouldn’t go into it. That’s a conversation worth having before rather than after something goes sideways.
Further reading
These resources go deeper on implementation, not just discovery:
- Nonprofit Tech for Good — AI Hub: Actively curated tool directory, articles, and webinars. One of the more reliable places to check what’s actually being used in the sector.
- Whole Whale — Google Workspace for Nonprofits guide: Detailed walkthrough of what each Workspace AI tool does in practice, with nonprofit-specific examples.
- DonorSearch — AI for Nonprofits guide: Covers generative vs predictive AI and how to think about which type fits which problem. Good introduction for teams starting from scratch.
- Bloomerang — AI tools for nonprofits 2026: Practical breakdown with emphasis on fundraising and communications use cases.
- Google for Nonprofits Help — Workspace AI features: Official documentation on the ten AI features added to the no-cost Workspace plan in 2025.
Compiled April 2026. Links verified at time of publication — tool eligibility and features change; always check the official program page before applying. Statistics cited from the 2025 AI Equity Project, the State of AI in Nonprofits 2025 Report, and Google’s nonprofit survey (June 2025). This guide focuses on tools that are free or free-on-application for registered nonprofits — paid-only tools are excluded even if they offer nonprofit discounts.





