Your church deserves better than a Facebook group
Prayer requests that stay private. Potluck sign-ups that work. Ministry duty rotation that’s fair. All in one place your congregation actually owns.
Start Free See a demo → Browse all site types →What this church site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your church works.
Give people one clear place to understand the church, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the modules that make sense for members: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions should fit this site type, so a church is not pushed through a generic form built for a totally different use.
Build the first version around the real work
Start with trust and coordination. These sites often handle sensitive requests, volunteer details, meeting rhythms, and shared resources, so the first version should make privacy, roles, and next steps obvious before adding more advanced ministry or service workflows.
Set up first
- Add service times, ministry rotations, prayer request rules, potluck sign-ups, and the church calendar first.
- Invite trusted admins before opening broader congregation access.
- Keep private prayer or care notes away from public pages.
- Use the homepage to help newcomers understand the next service or small group step.
What the page needs to prove
A first-time visitor should be able to see the mission, meeting pattern, privacy expectations, and volunteer or member next step without reading a long explanation. The public copy should be welcoming, but the private tools should carry the sensitive material behind the scenes.
- Private prayer wall expectations
- Ministry and volunteer rotation examples
- Service and event schedule clarity
- Welcoming public copy with member-only tools behind it
The free path should let a small group or ministry prove the workflow before anyone pays. Upgrade prompts make sense only when the group needs more storage, a custom domain, broader member capacity, or more advanced coordination tools.
Before you share the site, read it like a new visitor would. The public page should explain who this church is for, what someone can do next, and why the selected tools fit the situation. The private side should already have a useful starting place for members so the site does not feel like an empty shell after signup.
That first-pass clarity matters for conversion and search. People are more likely to keep going when the page matches their actual need, and crawlers get cleaner signals when the headings, examples, internal links, and calls to action all point to the same purpose. Start free, make the site useful, then upgrade only when the church needs more capacity or polish. The first version should feel complete enough that someone can understand it, join it, and come back to it.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated church site will help.
The phone tree is broken
Half the congregation doesn’t get the message. The other half gets it three times.
Facebook isn’t private
Prayer requests on Facebook can be seen by employers, strangers, and algorithms. That’s not safe.
Potluck chaos
Everyone brings potato salad. Nobody signed up for drinks. The sign-up sheet got lost.
Everything your church needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Prayer Wall
Private prayer requests and praise reports. Only your congregation sees them.
Ministry Duties
Fair rotation for greeting, nursery, sound booth. Track service points.
Church Calendar
Services, Bible study, youth group, mission trips. Recurring events built in.
Potluck Recipes
Shared recipe collection. Sign-up board so nobody brings three casseroles.
Church Records
Bylaws, minutes, financial reports, directory. Secure and organized.
Fellowship Activities
Bible trivia (KJV), youth games, scavenger hunts. Built-in fellowship.
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your church name.
Add your people
Invite members with a link or email.
Start using it
Calendar, tasks, feed, vault — all ready.
Simple pricing
Because ministry tools shouldn’t break the budget.
Free for Churches
- Up to 25 church members
- Private prayer wall
- Ministry duty rotation
- Shared church calendar
- Potluck recipe collection
- Church records vault
- Fellowship activities
- Needs board for sign-ups
- KJV scripture references
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Is this really free for our church?
Free for congregations up to 25 members. Larger churches can upgrade for a small monthly amount.
Are prayer requests truly private?
Yes. Only members of your church site can see prayer requests. Nothing is public unless you choose to share it.
Can we use Bible verses?
The platform includes KJV (King James Version) references throughout. All scripture is public domain KJV.
What about our church directory?
Store contacts securely in the vault. Members can see the directory but outsiders cannot.
Can we have multiple small groups?
Each small group can have its own site, connected through the network feature for shared announcements.
