A web-based membership management software for nonprofits and small organizations.
Wild Apricot is a membership management software designed primarily for small nonprofits, associations, and clubs. The platform includes an automated member registration process, website-building capabilities, payment processing, and a range of management functionalities for admins and managers.
A mobile app is available for iOS and Android devices, allowing remote accessibility when attending events or visiting multiple chapters or branches.
Wild Apricot offers 7 plans that are based on contact count. Each plan comes with a free trial.
Plan | Price | Contacts |
---|---|---|
Personal | $60/month | 100 |
Group | $75/month | 250 |
Community | $140/month | 500 |
Professional | $240/month | 2,000 |
Network | $440/month | 5,000 |
Enterprise | $530/month | 15,000 |
Global | $900/month | 50,000 |
We use Wild Apricot for three foster parent associations. Wild Apricot has the best mix of performance and price compared to competitor software I’ve used. Non-technical people can use most functionality. Wild Apricot can still be customized if you know HTML and CSS. We recommend this software for small to medium-sized non-profits to consolidate donor, member, and event databases into one solution.
With Wild Apricot, setting up our nonprofit’s website, events, and membership pages has been easy. Although there’s a learning curve, the solution is pretty intuitive. The support team has been wonderful at responding to my questions. The Wild Apricot team also makes improvements to their software based on user input.
We use Wild Apricot for membership management. Wild Apricot is an easy site-building tool with lots of features. Wild Apricot is also constantly improving and updating their software solution.
We use WildApricot for managing our membership platform. Wild Apricot is easy to use and has been well received by our membership base. The customer service was fast when I needed the help.
Only let you have 1 invoice template, need multiple templates - their click ratio is way too high to send out emails, system is overly complicated, financial pieces don’t report well.