GivingArc Nonprofit accounting Service

TechSoup for Nonprofits: What to Buy, What to Skip

Nonprofit team comparing TechSoup catalog with vendor websites to decide which IT purchases offer real savings

Key Takeaways

  • TechSoup isn’t a discount store — it’s a guest list. The admin fee is the cover charge that gets you into a room where nonprofit pricing actually exists, set by Microsoft, Adobe, Intuit, and Cisco.
  • Best deals: Adobe Creative Cloud for Nonprofits (60% off year 1, 40% off thereafter), QuickBooks Online Plus ($80/year via TechSoup vs $1,380/year retail — ~94% off), QuickBooks Online Advanced ($170/year vs $3,300/year retail), refurbished Cisco/Dell hardware, and Foxit PDF tools.
  • Verification flow: upload your IRS 501(c)(3) Determination Letter — TechSoup validates in about two business days. Status moves from “Pending” to “Validated,” then each vendor program separately checks “Eligible.”
  • Microsoft pulled two items off the menu in July 2025: donated Microsoft 365 Business Premium and donated Office 365 E1 are gone. Donated Microsoft 365 Business Basic remains at 300 licenses per organization. Discounted (paid) versions of Premium, Standard, and E1 still exist.
  • Cover-charge math matters. For single-seat SaaS (Zoom, DocuSign, etc.), always calculate one full year of total cost (admin fee + vendor charge) and compare to the cheapest direct nonprofit alternative before clicking “Request.”

If you run a small nonprofit, you’ve probably heard of TechSoup. Maybe a board member mentioned it. Maybe you stumbled on a forum post saying you can get Adobe Creative Cloud for almost nothing. Maybe you registered, got verified, and then never went back — because the catalog felt overwhelming and the “admin fees” looked confusing.

This is the guide we wished existed when our nonprofit clients first asked us about it. If you’re also looking at hidden software costs more broadly, our companion piece on the hidden cost of “free” fundraising software covers the other side of the same coin.

The thesis up front: TechSoup isn’t a discount store. It’s a guest list — and the admin fee is the cover charge that gets you into a room where nonprofit pricing actually exists. Microsoft, Adobe, Intuit, and Cisco have agreed to give nonprofits steep discounts (or free licenses), but most of those prices aren’t on the public menu. TechSoup runs the door. The admin fee is what you pay to walk in.

Once you see TechSoup that way, two questions get clearer:

  1. Which “drinks” are actually worth ordering? (Some are spectacular. A few are mediocre.)
  2. When is the cover charge worth it? (Cover + tab vs. the cheapest direct nonprofit option.)

Below: how to register, how to read the pricing, what to buy, and the Microsoft change in 2025 that quietly reshaped many nonprofit IT budgets.

What TechSoup Actually Is (and What It Isn’t)

TechSoup Global is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that has spent 30+ years brokering technology donations and discounts for other nonprofits. It runs registration, eligibility verification, and license fulfillment for participating vendors.

What it is:

  • A verification platform — confirms your 501(c)(3) status to vendors on your behalf
  • A discount aggregator — one account unlocks deals from Microsoft, Adobe, Intuit, Cisco, Dell, Lenovo, Foxit, Autodesk, and 100+ others
  • A modest revenue model — small per-product admin fees fund operations and free educational content

What it isn’t:

  • A direct retailer. Your subscription is fulfilled by the vendor — Adobe sends activation, not TechSoup.
  • A free service. Admin fees are real cash, ranging from $5 to $125 per product.
  • The only path. Many vendors run their own nonprofit programs that bypass TechSoup entirely — we’ll cover those in the next post in this series.

The mental model that helps: TechSoup runs the door. The admin fee is the cover charge. Once you’re in, the prices Adobe, Intuit, and Microsoft have already agreed to for nonprofits are on the menu — but only if you came in through the right door.

Eligibility & Verification — Step-by-Step

The 6-minute video below walks through the entire registration and first-purchase flow on real TechSoup screens. If you’re already verified, skip ahead.

For US nonprofits, eligibility is narrower than “any 501(c)(3).” You need:

  • IRS-recognized 501(c)(3) public charity status (some private foundations are excluded from certain partner programs)
  • Operating budget within partner limits — Intuit’s program, for example, requires annual operating budget under $10 million
  • A nonprofit purpose that aligns with each vendor’s specific eligibility (Microsoft and Adobe each maintain exclusion lists)

The verification flow itself is straightforward:

  1. Register an organization account at techsoup.org (free)
  2. Upload your IRS 501(c)(3) Determination Letter as a scan or photo
  3. Wait for validation — TechSoup confirms your status (average about two business days)
  4. Get product-level eligibility — once validated, each partner program (Microsoft, Adobe, etc.) checks separately whether you meet their specific rules

Two status terms confuse people. “Validated” means TechSoup has verified your organization as a legitimate nonprofit. “Eligible” means a specific vendor has approved you for their program. You need both.

The Best Deals — Where TechSoup Really Wins

This is where TechSoup justifies its existence. A few categories deliver savings that are hard to beat anywhere — particularly the Adobe nonprofit program and the Intuit QuickBooks Online for Nonprofits deal.

Comparison chart showing retail price versus TechSoup nonprofit price for Adobe Creative Cloud, QuickBooks Online, and Cisco hardware

Adobe

Creative Cloud for Nonprofits

60% off Y1
40% off Y2+

retail subscription

~$700/yr saved (2-designer team)

Admin fee paid to TechSoup, then discounted Adobe subscription continues annually.

Intuit

QuickBooks Online Plus

$80/year

$1,380/year retail

~94% off · 5 users included

Often pays for an entire year of TechSoup admin fees on its own.

Intuit

QuickBooks Online Advanced

$170/year

$3,300/year retail

~95% off · 25 users included

Best fit for nonprofits with multiple bookkeepers or program managers in the books.

Cisco / Dell / Lenovo

Hardware

Heavy discounts

refurbished & current-gen

Catalog rotates — check before buying

Laptops, desktops, networking gear. Don’t browse for inspiration; buy when you have a specific need.

Foxit

PDF Editor

~$50–80/yr

60–90% off retail

Solid Acrobat alternative

Right fit for 5–10 person staff that doesn’t need full Acrobat.

Intuit (legacy)

QuickBooks Desktop

$20/year admin fee

legacy users only

Keeps Pro/Premier alive

Useful for bookkeepers who can’t or won’t migrate to Online.

How to Read TechSoup Pricing (the Cover Charge Math)

Worked numerical example showing a $40 admin fee on a $50 annual SaaS subscription erases nonprofit savings

Think of every product as having a cover charge (the admin fee, paid to TechSoup) and a tab (the vendor cost, paid to Adobe, Intuit, etc., if any). Some products are donations — you only pay the cover. Others are discounted — you pay both.

The simple rule we give CPA clients: calculate one full year of total cost (cover + tab), then compare to the cheapest direct nonprofit alternative.

Worked Example #1

QuickBooks Online Plus (5 users)

TechSoup admin fee (cover)$80/yr
Vendor cost (tab)included
Direct retail (Intuit)$1,380/yr
Savings~$1,300/yr ✓

Easy yes. The cover pays for itself before the first board meeting.

Worked Example #2

Single Zoom Pro license

TechSoup admin fee (cover)~$25/yr
Direct Zoom nonprofit price~$135/yr
Free Zoom (no Pro features)$0
Savings vs Zoom direct~$110/yr

Depends. Worth it if you actually drink at this bar — many small nonprofits live on free Zoom.

The trap to avoid: buying through TechSoup just because it’s TechSoup, without checking the direct nonprofit price. Most major vendors (Microsoft, Google, Zoom, Slack, Asana) run their own nonprofit programs — sometimes better, sometimes worse than TechSoup. TechSoup wins big on Adobe, Intuit, and certain hardware. It’s neutral or slightly worse on a handful of single-seat SaaS where the admin fee approaches the discounted annual cost.

We’ll cover when to skip TechSoup entirely in the next post in this series.

Microsoft After 2025 — What’s Still on TechSoup

Before-and-after diagram showing Microsoft 365 Business Premium and Office 365 E1 donated licenses discontinued July 2025 and Microsoft 365 Business Basic donated still available in 2026

In May 2025, Microsoft pulled two of its most popular items off the nonprofit menu. Starting July 1, 2025, these donated licenses were discontinued:

  • Microsoft 365 Business Premium (donated) — discontinued
  • Office 365 E1 (donated) — discontinued

Many small nonprofits had built their entire stack on these donated plans. The change forced a decision: pay for the discounted (not free) version, switch to a smaller donated plan, or move to a different productivity suite.

What’s still available through TechSoup in 2026:

  • Microsoft 365 Business Basic — donated: 300 licenses per organization, free. Web Office apps, Teams, OneDrive, Exchange. Good fit for staff who live in the browser.
  • Microsoft 365 Business Standard — discounted: $3.00/user/month (annual nonprofit price) vs $12.50 retail
  • Microsoft 365 Business Premium — discounted: $5.50/user/month (annual nonprofit price) vs $22 retail — still includes Intune and Defender
  • Office 365 E1 — discounted: ~$2.50/user/month (annual). Heads-up: Microsoft is actively winding down E1 for nonprofits and recommending transition to Microsoft 365 Business Basic or another eligible plan. Don’t build new long-term commitments on E1.

The transition path most affected nonprofits chose: downgrade to Business Basic donated (free) for staff who only need email + web apps, then pay the discounted Business Standard or Premium for staff who need installed desktop apps and advanced security.

One ongoing rule worth knowing: Microsoft requires that at least 85% of assigned donated licenses be actively used. Underused donated licenses can be reclaimed. The Microsoft Admin Center shows usage reports — assign quarterly review of this to whoever owns IT, or you can quietly lose your free licenses.

Pro Tips — From Working with Nonprofit Clients

A few things that don’t show up on the TechSoup help pages but save real time:

01

Have your IRS Determination Letter scanned before you start

Verification stalls when nonprofits scramble to find this document mid-application. If you can’t find yours, request a copy via IRS Form 4506-A.

02

Validate before you shop

Browsing the catalog before validation is fine, but the real “go” decision belongs to validated organizations — what looks available may not be once eligibility is checked at checkout.

03

Re-shop in Q1 every year

Vendor offerings change. Two recent examples: Adobe Acrobat Pro is no longer sold through TechSoup — instead, Adobe launched a direct nonprofit offer in November 2024 at $15/year per license (capped at 10 licenses per organization). And Adobe Creative Cloud for Education (Teams) is being discontinued after March 2026, replaced by Creative Cloud Pro for Teams at a new price point. Set a January calendar reminder.

04

Don’t request more donated licenses than you’ll actually use

Microsoft’s 85% utilization rule plus the general principle that “donated does not mean abandoned” — vendors do reclaim underused licenses.

05

Treat the admin fee as a budget line

A typical small nonprofit using TechSoup spends $200–500/year across all admin fees combined. Add this to your IT budget category — don’t surprise yourself at year-end. See our companion piece on running a lean nonprofit on AI tools for related budget-line thinking.

Working with GivingArc

For most $250K–$2M nonprofits we work with, the TechSoup IT-budget question is one piece of a bigger picture: how does software spending sit alongside payroll, occupancy, fundraising, and program costs in your overall financial position?

When we do bookkeeping or 990 prep, we routinely see organizations either over-spending on software (paying retail when TechSoup or direct nonprofit pricing exists) or under-utilizing donated licenses they’re paying admin fees on. Both show up in functional expense allocation and can affect what your board sees on monthly financials. (For the broader picture on stewardship infrastructure, see our piece on why small nonprofits lose 80% of first-time donors.)

You can read more about our team and approach or browse the rest of our blog for nonprofit accounting and operations guides.

TechSoup isn’t the only guest list nonprofits qualify for. Google, Microsoft, and a handful of others run their own doors — sometimes with no cover charge at all. In the next post in this series, we’ll cover when to skip TechSoup entirely and walk in directly.

Want a CPA’s eye on your full nonprofit financial setup?

Reviewed by Min Kim, CPA. Get a free 30-minute review — we’ll walk through bookkeeping, 990 prep, and where IT and software spend fit your overall position.

Talk to Our Team →

Coming next in this series:

  • Part 2 — Google Workspace for Nonprofits: Free vs Paid (and When to Use What)
  • Part 3 — Microsoft 365 for Nonprofits in 2026: Building a Stack After the Premium Discontinuation

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from small-team executive directors and bookkeepers shopping TechSoup for the first time.

TechSoup membership and registration are free. Each product purchase carries a small admin fee — typically $5 to $125 depending on the product — that supports TechSoup’s operations. So while it’s not technically “free,” the admin fees are usually a fraction of the discount you receive.

On average, about two business days from the time you upload your IRS 501(c)(3) Determination Letter. Some applications take longer if documentation is incomplete or your organization type requires additional review.

Yes, but only the Microsoft 365 Business Basic plan is still available as a donation — up to 300 licenses per qualifying organization. The previously donated Business Premium and Office 365 E1 plans were discontinued July 1, 2025. The discounted (paid) versions of Premium, Standard, and E1 are still offered.

Through TechSoup. QuickBooks Online Plus is $80/year via TechSoup (5 users) versus $1,380/year at retail — roughly 94% off. QuickBooks Online Advanced is $170/year via TechSoup (25 users) versus $3,300/year retail. Direct Intuit nonprofit programs exist but typically cap at smaller percentages, making TechSoup the better path for most small nonprofits.

The admin fee is real cash, not refundable, and it can erode the value on small single-user SaaS purchases where the discount is modest. The simple test: calculate one full year of total cost (admin fee + any vendor charge), then compare to the cheapest direct nonprofit alternative. If savings are under 30%, the convenience may not be worth the admin fee.