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The Ultimate Guide to Donation Kiosks for Churches

Modernize your Sunday service with a church donation kiosk. Learn how to securely accept tithes, offerings, and mission funds via tap-to-donate.

Givebear Team|
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10 min read

The tradition of passing the offering plate during Sunday service is a powerful moment of worship, but it faces a modern challenge: your congregation rarely carries cash. To bridge the gap between traditional worship and modern convenience, growing ministries are turning to the church donation kiosk.

Implementing a donation kiosk is not about replacing the offering plate. It is about giving a cashless congregation somewhere to give in the moment, before the impulse fades and they are halfway home.

Three things a church kiosk must do

If your finance committee is evaluating options, these three capabilities separate purpose-built church kiosks from generic retail card readers:

  • Ministry Fund Designation: Donors must be able to choose where their money goes (Tithes, Missions, Benevolence) before swiping their card.
  • Lightning-Fast Checkout: Between services, lobby traffic is dense. Look for tap-to-donate technology to ensure giving takes seconds, not minutes.
  • Automated Receipts: The kiosk should send receipts and log donor details, reducing the burden on your administrative staff during tax season. (See how automated tax receipts help nonprofits).

Why Generic Card Readers Fail Churches

Many churches attempt to save money by purchasing a generic retail card swiper (like a basic Square reader attached to an iPad). While this works for selling coffee in the lobby, it fails for ministry giving for several reasons.

1. The "Single Bucket" Problem

A generic Point of Sale (POS) system treats all income as generic revenue. However, if a congregant wants to give $100 to the youth mission trip, your finance team needs to know that immediately. A dedicated church kiosk offers a customized interface where the donor selects the specific fund prior to payment, keeping your accounting clean and transparent.

2. The Missing Donor Relationship

When someone buys a coffee, you don't need their life story. When someone tithes, you want to thank them and provide a tax record. A purpose-built kiosk integrates with your online donation portal, meaning an in-person gift is tied directly to that congregant's existing donor profile.

How Much Does a Church Giving Kiosk Cost?

Budget is usually where the conversation stalls in committee, so here is what the major vendors actually publish. Hardware runs from a few hundred dollars to several thousand, but the larger long-term line is the monthly software subscription most kiosk vendors charge per device. Every competitor figure below was checked against the vendor's own public pricing page in June 2026; the sources are linked directly under the table.

VendorKiosk hardware (one-time)Software subscriptionPer-gift card costs
Givebear$699 wall mount or $899 floor standNone0% platform fee when donors tip (4.9% if a donor declines), plus Stripe processing at cost
SecureGive$1,199 to $5,799 per kiosk (SecureGive pricing, verified Jun 2026)$149/mo Basic or $299/mo Premium (SecureGive pricing, verified Jun 2026); add-on modules run $49 to $300/mo on topKiosk cards 2% + $0.30 (1.5% on Premium) (SecureGive pricing, verified Jun 2026)
Donorbox Live KioskNot published: hardware bundles are quote-gated through sales$80/mo first kiosk ($50/mo on Premium), $15/mo each additional (Donorbox Live Kiosk, verified Jun 2026)1.75% platform fee on kiosk gifts (Donorbox pricing, verified Jun 2026); Stripe in-person 2.7% + $0.05 (4.45% + $0.05 combined) (Donorbox Live Kiosk, verified Jun 2026)
Kind Kiosk$299 to $599 per device (Kind Kiosk pricing, verified Jun 2026)$49/mo Community ($19/mo extra devices) or $149/mo Growth (Kind Kiosk pricing, verified Jun 2026)3% Kind Kiosk platform fee (Kind Kiosk pricing, verified Jun 2026) plus Stripe 2.7% (5.7% combined on cards) (Kind Kiosk pricing, verified Jun 2026)
GivingFire$1,499 per kiosk (GivingFire site, verified Jun 2026)Not publishedNot published

Table sources: SecureGive pricing (verified June 2026); Donorbox Live Kiosk (verified June 2026); Kind Kiosk pricing (verified June 2026); GivingFire site (verified June 2026).

One budgeting note on Donorbox: the software fee is public, but its kiosk hardware bundle prices are not published anywhere, so plan for a sales call before you can compare totals.

Watch the subscription line more than the sticker price. SecureGive's Basic plan at $149/mo adds up to $1,788 a year before a single gift is processed: over a three-year hardware life, that is $5,364 in software on top of $1,199 to $5,799 for the kiosk itself. Kind Kiosk looks affordable at $299 to $599 up front, but the $49/mo plan plus 5.7% combined card costs means a church running $40,000 a year through the kiosk pays about $2,868 annually.

Givebear takes the opposite approach: the kiosk is a one-time purchase ($699 to $899) with no monthly software fee, and the platform fee is 0% when donors tip. To compare totals at your congregation's actual giving volume, run your numbers through the donation kiosk cost calculator.

Are Giving Kiosks Worth It?

A kiosk earns its keep by capturing gifts that would otherwise never happen: the visitor moved to give after a sermon, the member who stopped carrying cash years ago, the family that wants to add a building fund gift on the way out. If a kiosk captures just three $25 gifts a week that the offering plate would have missed, that is about $3,900 a year in new giving. Against a one-time hardware purchase, the payback period is measured in months.

The "worth it" question really turns on recurring costs. A kiosk carrying a $149/mo subscription must capture $1,788 in incremental giving every year just to cover its own software bill before it contributes a dollar to ministry. A kiosk with no subscription only has to beat its purchase price once. That difference is why we built the church giving kiosk around one-time hardware: after the purchase, every tap goes to the ministry, not a vendor invoice.

Best Practices for Kiosk Placement

A beautiful kiosk hidden in a dark corner will collect dust. Strategic placement is critical for adoption.

  • The Welcome Center: Place the kiosk near your main information desk. This area is already associated with taking next steps.
  • High-Visibility Intersections: Position kiosks where traffic naturally slows down, such as near the main sanctuary doors or the coffee station.
  • Provide Privacy: Do not place the screen where the entire line of people behind the donor can see their giving amount. Angle the screen or provide adequate spacing.

Addressing Security Concerns

Security is paramount when dealing with your congregation's financial data. Modern church donation kiosks should use encrypted payment infrastructure and supported card readers.

  • No Stored Data: The kiosk device itself should never store credit card numbers.
  • Secure Processing: Ensure the vendor uses supported payment infrastructure such as Stripe Terminal and compatible readers.

Integrating with Your Digital Strategy

Your kiosk should not be an island. It must communicate with your broader digital fundraising efforts. When a new family visits and gives via the kiosk, their email address (captured for the receipt) should sync with your database, allowing your pastoral team to send a welcome email.

If you are currently using a fragmented system, it may be time to evaluate Donorbox alternatives that offer a unified approach to physical and digital giving. To see how the kiosk, online giving page, donor records, and year-end statements fit together for a congregation, start with our giving tools for churches.

A church donation kiosk is an investment in your ministry's financial health. The return comes not from the kiosk itself but from connecting it: fund selection before the tap, automated receipts to the donor, and the gift appearing on the same donor record as their online gifts and recurring giving. That connection is what turns a card reader into a fundraising tool.

Before you move on

  • Place kiosks in high-traffic, visible areas like the main lobby or welcome center, not hidden in dark hallways.

  • Use the kiosk to promote recurring giving by capturing emails for automated receipts and follow-up.

  • Choose a system that is simple enough for elderly congregants to use without staff assistance.

Why does a church need a donation kiosk?

Many congregants prefer cards or mobile wallets for everyday payments. A donation kiosk gives them a quick on-site way to give tithes, offerings, or campaign gifts without replacing cash or checks.

Can church kiosks designate funds for specific ministries?

Yes, high-quality church kiosks allow donors to select specific funds such as General Tithes, Youth Ministry, or Building Fund before completing their transaction.

How do we get tax receipts for kiosk donations?

Modern kiosks prompt the donor for an email address or phone number, send a receipt, and log the gift in donor records. U.S. churches should review receipt language against IRS acknowledgement requirements.

How much does a church giving kiosk cost?

Per vendor pricing pages verified June 2026: SecureGive kiosks run $1,199 to $5,799 plus $149 to $299 per month in software, Kind Kiosk hardware is $299 to $599 with plans from $49 per month and roughly $5.70 of every $100 card gift going to platform and processing costs, GivingFire charges $1,499 per kiosk, and Donorbox Live Kiosk software starts at $80 per month with hardware priced only through a sales quote. Givebear kiosks are a one-time hardware purchase with no monthly software subscription.

Are giving kiosks worth it for a church?

The deciding line item is usually the monthly software subscription, not the hardware: a $149 per month plan costs $1,788 every year whether anyone gives or not, while a one-time-purchase kiosk only has to beat its sticker price once. If a kiosk captures just three $25 gifts a week that the offering plate would have missed, that is about $3,900 a year in new giving, so a well-placed kiosk in a cashless congregation typically pays for itself within months.