Software roundup

Free volunteer scheduling apps in 2026: 7 honest options for nonprofit coordinators

The biggest difference between free volunteer scheduling apps isn't features but mechanics. Some let volunteers claim shifts themselves, some give admins drag-drop schedule builders, and some are signup sheets dressed up as schedules. These seven options compared on how they actually work.

Free volunteer scheduling apps in 2026: 7 honest options for nonprofit coordinators

Feature comparison

Product Free volunteer countScheduling modelBuilt-in team chatAvailable globally
Zelos Unlimited Self-signup
POINT Unlimited Self-signup or admin assignment No (US and Ukraine only)
Timecounts Unlimited Self-signup or admin assignment No (US and Canada only)
SignUpGenius Unlimited (with ads) Self-signup
Connecteam 10 Self-signup or admin assignment
Sling 30 Self-signup or admin assignment
Findmyshift 5 (per team, up to 10 teams) Self-signup or admin assignment

If you coordinate volunteers, the most useful filter when picking a scheduling tool isn’t the feature list. It’s how the scheduling actually works. Two basic mechanics cover almost every option in this category: self-signup (admin posts shifts, volunteers claim them) and admin assignment (admin chooses who works each shift). Some tools do only one. Most do both. SignUpGenius and similar tools layer signup sheets on top of self-signup. The right tool depends on which model fits how you actually plan.

The seven below all have genuine free plans in 2026, with the current limits and the scheduling mechanic stated upfront so you can pick what fits.

Zelos Team Management

Self-signup scheduling with built-in chat

Zelos is built around self-signup: coordinators post shifts and tasks, volunteers get push notifications, and whoever is available and qualified claims the shift first. There is no admin pre-assignment, no recurring rota template, no “same person every Monday” workflow. Volunteers are matched to shifts one at a time through their own choices. By design.

That mechanic makes Zelos suitable for volunteer programmes with large pools where you can’t predict who will be available. The free plan supports unlimited volunteers and unlimited admins, which is unusual in this category. Built-in chat is part of the product: each task has its own conversation thread, so the meeting point, what to wear, and who to ask on the day stay attached to the shift rather than scattered across email. Volunteer contact information is hidden from other members by default, which keeps the workspace professional without extra configuration.

  • Free plan: Unlimited volunteers and admins, 25 concurrent active tasks, last 100 tasks in the archive, 10,000 chat messages.
  • What’s paid: Bulk CSV upload, dynamic member segments that update automatically as profiles change, full task archive, custom team URL. Pro at $99/month annual ($119/month monthly), flat regardless of roster size.
  • Communication: Built-in team chat (per-task threads plus direct messages), admin-supervised. Volunteer contact information is hidden by default.
  • Best for: Volunteer programmes where the right answer is “whoever can do this, claim it” rather than a coordinator pre-assigning who works when.
  • Watch out for: No admin-driven schedule builder. No recurring rota templates. If your model is “we need the same five people every Tuesday,” Zelos works against you, not with you. No formal hours tracking module (task records exist, but it’s not designed as a time clock).
  • Platforms: Native iOS, Android, and web. EU-built and GDPR-compliant by default.

POINT

Self-signup or admin assignment, US-only volunteer app

POINT leans on self-signup from a dedicated volunteer mobile app: volunteers see a feed of opportunities and claim them with one tap. Admins can also assign volunteers directly to events, so both modes are supported, though the product’s centre of gravity is the volunteer experience. The free Core plan covers unlimited volunteers, unlimited admins, and unlimited events. Waiver collection, background check integration through Checkr, and embeddable widgets for your nonprofit’s website are all included free.

The catch is geography: POINT is only available to organisations in the US and Ukraine, and nonprofits must verify their 501(c)(3) status. Religious congregations have a separate free plan. Some longtime customers on G2 have flagged that features have been moving from free to paid tiers over time, so verify what’s currently in Core before standardising on it.

  • Free plan: Unlimited volunteers, unlimited admins, unlimited events, mobile apps for volunteers, hours tracking, waiver collection, embeddable widgets.
  • Paid plans: Pro at $80/month adds document storage, program management, ongoing events, and more advanced features. Networks plan for multi-organisation networks (custom pricing).
  • Communication: Volunteer notifications and reminders are strong. Two-way communication exists but is more announcement-style than conversational chat.
  • Best for: US-based community nonprofits (food pantries, shelters, mentoring organisations) where a dedicated volunteer mobile app is worth the 501(c)(3) verification and the volunteer-first signup workflow fits.
  • Watch out for: US and Ukraine only. Free plan features have shifted toward Pro over time according to longtime customers. Recurring multi-day shifts are harder to set up than they should be (a frequent reviewer complaint).
  • Platforms: Native iOS, Android, web.

Timecounts

Self-signup or admin assignment, US/Canada-only volunteer hub

Timecounts supports both scheduling models on the free plan: volunteers can self-schedule from a customisable hub, or admins can assign them directly to events and shifts on a colour-coded timetable. The free plan includes unlimited volunteers, the volunteer hub, signup opportunities, hour tracking, and onboarding workflows with checklists for qualifications and training completion. Used by Habitat for Humanity, charity: water, and the AFI Documentary Film Festival, with consistently positive reviews on G2 and Capterra for customer support and the volunteer-facing UX.

Like POINT, Timecounts has a charity eligibility requirement: organisations need US 501(c)(3) status or Canadian Registered Charity status to use the free plan. The inclusion of Canada makes it the strongest free option for Canadian nonprofits, who can’t use POINT.

  • Free plan: Unlimited volunteers, customisable volunteer hub, signup opportunities, scheduling (self-signup and admin assignment), hours tracking, checklists for onboarding, automated reminder emails.
  • Paid plans: Pro at less than $2/day (~$59/month) adds advanced reporting, more emails per month, more admins, and additional integrations. Enterprise for networked or chaptered organisations (custom pricing).
  • Communication: Built-in team inbox for coordinating emails, SMS support, and automatic scheduled reminders. Volunteers can request or confirm shifts via mobile.
  • Best for: A US or Canadian charity wanting a modern volunteer hub with both self-signup and admin assignment, and where features like checklists and onboarding flows matter.
  • Watch out for: US and Canada only (with charity verification). Reviewers note limitations in scheduling flexibility, particularly with recurring shifts. No Salesforce integration yet.
  • Platforms: Web with mobile-friendly volunteer-facing pages.

SignUpGenius

Self-signup via signup sheets, free with ads

SignUpGenius is the most widely used signup tool in this category, used by millions of PTAs, faith communities, sports teams, schools, and nonprofits. The mechanic is signup sheets: admins create a sheet with time slots, share a link, and volunteers click and pick a slot without needing an account. With multiple signups stacked together, you can effectively fill a schedule, even if the underlying model is sheets rather than a calendar-style scheduler. The free plan has no expiration, no signup count cap, and includes automated email and text reminders, basic volunteer hour reporting, and calendar sync.

The trade-offs are ads and a mature interface. The free plan displays advertisements on the signup pages your volunteers see, which several reviewers flag as off-brand for nonprofits. The product is functional rather than visually polished, though for occasional use this matters less than the core mechanic working reliably.

  • Free plan: Unlimited signups, no expiration, automated reminders, basic hour reports, calendar sync, design themes.
  • Paid plans: Starter at $8.99/month, Essentials at $22.49/month, Premium at $44.99/month. Each removes ads, adds custom branding, increases reporting depth, and unlocks payment collection. Enterprise pricing is custom.
  • Communication: Automated reminders via email and text. One-way (organiser to participants), no in-app chat.
  • Best for: One-off events, recurring potlucks, classroom volunteer rotations, fundraiser shifts, and any situation where volunteers should be able to claim a slot from a link without downloading an app or creating an account.
  • Watch out for: Ads on the free plan are visible to your volunteers. The product is sheets rather than schedules, so if you need a calendar-style view with drag-and-drop assignment, this isn’t that.
  • Platforms: Web (works on mobile browsers), basic mobile apps for organisers.

5. Connecteam

Self-signup or admin assignment, full ops and comms hubs

Connecteam gives admins a drag-and-drop schedule builder with three workflows on the free plan: pre-assign specific volunteers to specific shifts, post open shifts that volunteers claim themselves, or use recurring shift templates for the “same person every Tuesday” pattern. The free Small Business plan covers up to 10 users with full access to all three Hubs (Operations, Communication, HR), which is one of the most feature-rich free plans in any category.

The product is mobile-first and designed for deskless and frontline teams. Volunteers can claim open shifts from their phones, clock in with GPS verification at events, and access training materials before showing up. AI-assisted auto-scheduling is on paid plans.

  • Free plan: Up to 10 users (volunteers + admins combined), full access to Operations, Communication, and HR Hubs.
  • Paid plans: Basic Operations Hub at $29/month for up to 30 users, then $0.50/user/month per additional user. Bundle multiple Hubs from there.
  • Communication: Full Communication Hub on free including team chat, direct messages, announcements, surveys, and knowledge base.
  • Best for: Small volunteer programmes (under 10 people) where a coordinator wants real schedule control plus team chat, training delivery, and recognition in one app.
  • Watch out for: The 10-user cap covers volunteers plus admins, so a coordinator and 9 volunteers fills it. Most nonprofits with 30+ rotating volunteers won’t fit, and the jump past 10 puts you on Basic at $29/month minimum.
  • Platforms: iOS, Android, web.

Sling

Self-signup or admin assignment, scheduling-focused

Sling is a focused shift scheduling app owned by Toast. Admins build the schedule with a drag-and-drop calendar, use schedule templates for recurring patterns, and can post open shifts that volunteers claim themselves. The free plan covers up to 30 users with no time limit and includes the core scheduling toolkit: shift creation, templates, open shifts, shift swaps, time-off requests, availability tracking, and private messaging.

The free plan was wrongly described as unlimited in many older articles, which isn’t accurate in 2026. The 30-user cap is hard, and exceeding it pushes you onto Premium at $1.70/user/month with same-day prorated charges.

  • Free plan: 30 users, full scheduling functionality, shift swaps, open shifts, schedule templates, private messaging, time-off requests.
  • Paid plans: Premium at $1.70/user/month annual adds mobile time tracking and labour cost tools. Business at $3.40/user/month annual adds kiosk time tracking and PTO management.
  • Communication: Built-in private messaging (direct and group) on the free plan.
  • Best for: A volunteer programme with a stable team of up to 30 people that wants admin-driven scheduling with templates for recurring rotations.
  • Watch out for: Hard 30-user cap. Sling is built for paid hourly staff, so terminology and workflows lean toward employees rather than volunteers (no native concept of “volunteer hours” vs paid hours).
  • Platforms: iOS, Android, web.

Findmyshift

Self-signup or admin assignment, micro-teams up to 5

Findmyshift has been running since 2004 and explicitly welcomes “charities and volunteer organisations” alongside paid teams. Admins build the schedule manually, and volunteers can self-signup for shifts pending admin approval. The free plan is restricted to 5 employees but you can have up to 10 separate teams on free, which is unusual and useful if your nonprofit runs distinct programmes with separate volunteer pools.

The free plan trade-offs are scope. Scheduling is limited to one week forward and one week backward. There are no templates on free (so the “same person every Tuesday” pattern requires manual setup each week), no real-time reporting, and no payroll calculations.

  • Free plan: Up to 5 staff per team, up to 10 teams, drag-and-drop scheduling, shift swaps and requests, notifications via email/SMS/push. One week forward, one week back.
  • Paid plans: From $27/month for teams of 6 or more, with templates (so recurring rota becomes possible), payroll calculations, real-time reporting, and longer scheduling horizons.
  • Communication: Notifications via email, SMS, and push. No in-app team chat.
  • Best for: A small community group, neighbourhood charity, or recurring volunteer crew where 5 active volunteers is the actual size, not a constraint to plan around.
  • Watch out for: 5-person cap is firm. No templates on free means recurring rota patterns need manual reentry each week. One-week scheduling horizon makes it unsuitable for programmes planning further out.
  • Platforms: iOS, Android, web.

Still narrowing down? Our volunteer management app overview covers what to look for when coordinating temporary rosters. For broader scheduling needs beyond volunteer work, see free staff scheduling software.