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AI for nonprofits: Tools, tips, and where to start

AI for nonprofits can save hours a week on email, grant writing, and meeting follow-ups. Here's what works, what doesn't, and where to begin.

Tassia O'Callaghan
Tassia O'Callaghan

May 1, 2026

AI for nonprofits: Tools, tips, and where to start

People working in nonprofits tend to carry a wide communication load. Donor acknowledgments, funder updates, grant applications, board prep, meeting follow-ups. Most of it lands in the inbox, and most of it needs a personal touch. That leaves less time for the actual program work than anyone would like.

AI tools can help with that, specifically the writing and communication layer that takes up more of the week than it should. A study by MIT researchers Shakked Noy and Whitney Zhang, published in Science, found that professionals using AI for mid-level writing tasks completed them 37% faster and produced higher-quality output. The occupations they tested included grant writers, HR professionals, and managers; roles that map closely to what a nonprofit generalist does across a typical week.

What follows is a practical guide to where AI fits in nonprofit work, what to watch out for, and which tools tend to come up most often. If you're a development manager, grants officer, or the person at a small nonprofit who handles a bit of everything, this is for you.

Where AI saves real time in nonprofit work

Not every part of nonprofit work is a good fit for AI. But the communication layer, the part of the week spent writing, responding, summarizing, and following up, is. That's where the time goes, and that's where the right tools make a measurable difference. The four areas below consistently come up when nonprofit professionals talk about where AI has actually shifted their workload.

Grant writing and proposals

Most people don't start grant applications from a blank page by choice. They start from one because they don't have a draft yet. Give an AI tool the RFP requirements, your program summary, and a few examples of approved language, and you'll get something worth editing in minutes rather than hours.

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For teams where one person writes six applications a cycle, that's a week of recovered capacity.

The draft won't know your organization's voice, your specific impact evidence, or the relationship history with a particular funder. Those things still need to come from you. Editing a draft that's 70% of the way there is faster than writing from nothing, which is the actual advantage.

Donor and stakeholder emails

The average office worker spends around 4.3 hours a day on email, according to Fyxer's 2026 Admin Burden Research. For a development officer managing 200 active donor relationships while also coordinating with program staff and keeping funders updated, that number is easy to believe.

Each email feels like it deserves thought. A major donor's first gift acknowledgment shouldn't read like an auto-reply. A funder checking in on program milestones deserves a response that sounds like you wrote it, because in this context, the personal touch is part of the point.

Fyxer integrates with Gmail and Outlook to organize your inbox by priority and generate draft replies in your own tone. You open the email, review what's already written, and send. 81% of Fyxer users save more than an hour a day on inbox admin.

If managing email volume is already a recognized problem in your organization, that's a reasonable place to start evaluating what AI can do.

Meeting notes and follow-ups

The funder call goes well. Everyone leaves with a clear sense of next steps. Then three urgent things happen, and by the time someone sits down to write up the notes, half the detail is gone and the follow-up email goes out two days late or not at all.

Our research shows that nearly 6 in 10 professionals handle meeting-related admin every single day. For nonprofits, that includes board meetings where minutes matter legally, program review calls where accountability lives in the follow-up, and donor cultivation conversations where the next ask depends on what was said. Fyxer's Notetaker joins the call on Google Meet, Zoom, or Teams and produces a structured summary, transcript, action items, and a draft follow-up email by the time you've closed the window. You review it, send what's right, and the record exists.

That's the part that most often doesn't happen otherwise.

Content and communications

Newsletter copy, event descriptions, social posts, impact updates for the annual report. Most small nonprofit communications teams are one person wearing several hats, and the content queue never empties.

AI handles first drafts of routine communications quickly. The output needs a human pass for accuracy and specificity because AI-generated content defaults to the generic, and what makes a nonprofit's communication land is usually the concrete story, the named person, the real number.

Adding those things to a draft is a different task from building from nothing, and for most people it's a faster one.

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What to consider before you start using AI at your nonprofit

The case for AI tools is straightforward. The implementation, less so. Before you roll anything out across your team, there are two areas that deserve real attention: what data you're putting into these tools, and whether the output is getting proper review before it leaves your organization. Get those right and the rest of the decisions follow.

Beneficiary data

Nonprofit work often involves health information, financial situations, personal histories, and location data for vulnerable populations. None of that belongs in a consumer AI tool. A sensible boundary: don't enter anything into an AI tool that you wouldn't post publicly.

This applies to grant applications that reference specific client cases, program reports with identifying detail, and any communication that involves protected information.

Authentic communication

Donors give to people and missions. A thank-you letter that reads like a template is more noticeable from a charity than from a software company. AI-drafted acknowledgments and stewardship communications need a genuine review pass. The draft saves the time, while the edit maintains the relationship.

One pattern is consistent across organizations seeing real returns: the 2026 Nonprofit AI Adoption Report found that 81% of nonprofits using AI describe their use as individual and ad hoc. Only 7% report major strategic impact. The organizations seeing real returns have shared systems in place: a short policy about which tools are approved for what, clarity about who reviews the output, and at least one person whose role includes staying current on the landscape.

That's a different thing from one person using ChatGPT on the side.

On AI policies for nonprofits

Three-quarters of nonprofits don't have an AI policy. Usually it's because writing a policy feels like a large project, so it stays on the list indefinitely.

A useful AI policy for a small-to-mid-size nonprofit fits on one page and answers four questions: which tools are approved for use and for which tasks; what information must never be entered into an AI tool; who reviews AI-generated content before it goes out; and how often the policy will be revisited as tools change.

The data boundary question is the most important of those four. If you get that right, most of the other decisions follow from it. A policy that reads as a list of prohibitions tends to push AI use underground, where there's no oversight at all. The goal is to give staff a clear enough framework that your team can use these tools with confidence, not one that makes experimentation feel risky.

The AI tools for nonprofits worth knowing about

No single AI tool covers everything, and actually, most organizations don't need everything. These are the categories and specific tools that come up most often for nonprofit use cases.

Email and meeting admin

Fyxer covers the two parts of nonprofit communication that absorb the most time: inbox management and meeting follow-up. It organizes your inbox by priority, writes draft replies in your tone, joins meetings and produces summaries, action items, and follow-up drafts, and handles scheduling without leaving your inbox. It works inside Gmail and Outlook with nothing new to learn.

Grant writing and drafting

ChatGPT and Claude are both practical for grant drafting, stakeholder communications, and impact narratives. The key is giving them enough input: the RFP, your program description, examples of past language that was approved. A one-line prompt produces a generic draft. A detailed one produces something closer to usable.

Donor research

iWave and DonorSearch analyze publicly available data to identify donor giving capacity, interests, and history. Both are subscription tools built for development teams running major gift programs. They require configuration and reasonably clean data to work well, but for organizations with a serious major donor program, the time savings on prospect research are meaningful.

Research and benchmarking

Perplexity returns sourced answers with citations rather than generating text from training data, which matters when the output will inform a report, proposal, or funding narrative. For policy landscape research, benchmarking against peer organizations, or getting up to speed on an issue area quickly, it's faster and more reliable than a standard web search.

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Getting started on AI without creating more work to manage

The most common mistake when adopting AI in any small organization is treating each tool as a standalone addition. A general model that needs manual context every time. A notetaker that keeps getting forgotten. A drafting tool that lives in a separate tab. Each one is useful individually, but together they can become another set of things to manage.

Start with the part of the workload that costs the most time and produces a clear, verifiable output. Meeting follow-ups might work well for this: either the follow-up went out the same day or it didn't, either it captured the right action items or it didn't. Get one thing running reliably before adding anything else.

AI for nonprofits FAQs

Is it ethical for nonprofits to use AI?

Yes, with appropriate care. The ethical concerns around data privacy, authentic communication, and potential bias are real and worth taking seriously. Used thoughtfully, AI tools reduce the administrative burden on staff who are already stretched, which directly supports mission delivery.

The useful question is how to use AI in a way that's consistent with your organization's values: protecting beneficiary data, reviewing AI-generated content before it goes out, and being transparent with donors about how communications are produced when that matters.

Our team has no budget for new tools. Where do we start?

ChatGPT's free tier is a reasonable starting point for grant drafting, donor communications, and general writing tasks. It won't learn your tone and every use requires copying context in manually, but for a team that hasn't used AI before it's the lowest-friction way to build familiarity with what's actually possible. Once you've identified which tasks it genuinely helps with, evaluating purpose-built tools becomes a more grounded decision.

What should a nonprofit AI policy actually include?

The single most important element is a clear rule about what information must never go into an AI tool: beneficiary personal data, donor financial details, anything confidential or protected. After that, naming which tools are approved for which purposes, and naming who reviews AI output before it's used externally, covers most of what staff need to make good decisions day to day. Keep it short. A policy that takes twenty minutes to read tends not to get read.

Will AI reduce the need for nonprofit staff?

The sector's staffing challenges (burnout, wage competition, high turnover) are overwhelmingly driven by funding constraints. AI tools save time on specific, defined tasks. They don't replace the judgment, relationships, and contextual knowledge that define most nonprofit roles. The more useful near-term question is whether the time saved gets redirected toward higher-value work, or just absorbed by the next task on the pile. That depends on how organizations choose to use what gets freed up.