Pushpay (ChurchStaq) Review (2026)
Enterprise giving and ChMS, quote-only pricing
Last checked: July 2026 · Visit Pushpay (ChurchStaq) →
Pros
- Giving infrastructure built for scale — this is the platform behind a lot of the largest churches and multi-site networks in the US
- ChurchStaq bundles giving and ChMS under one roof for churches that want a single enterprise vendor
- Dedicated onboarding and account support that smaller vendors don't offer
Cons
- No public pricing at all — every quote requires a sales call, and contracts commonly run 1-3 years
- Built for scale most small churches don't need — likely overkill under a few hundred members
- Harder to compare against the rest of this list without actually starting a sales conversation
Best for
Larger and multi-site churches with budget for a managed rollout
Pricing
Custom quote only — no published self-serve pricing
The full picture
Pushpay (now selling its bundled giving + ChMS product as ChurchStaq) is aimed at large and multi-site churches, and it's priced and sold that way — no self-serve signup, no published rate card, a demo call before you learn anything about cost. For a 60-member congregation, this is very likely the wrong tier of tool.
Where it earns its keep is at scale: multi-site giving reconciliation, dedicated account management, and the kind of onboarding support a 40-person megachurch finance team actually wants. If that's your church, it's worth the sales call. If it isn't, everything else on this page will get you further for less money and less friction.