AI is no longer just an experiment for non-profits. For a lot of them, AI is now a new tool they use every day. In many areas, AI can do most of what your team can: writing grant proposals; prepping reports; sorting info; or even drafting emails to donors. But for many, AI just hasn’t gone to that extra gear yet.
The 2026 NonProfit AI Adoption Report by Fundraising.AI and Virtuous reports that 92% of nonprofits are currently leveraging AI to some degree, while only 7% claim it has had an ‘unbelievably large impact’.
It says a lot that many of our non-profits are embracing this new technology, but that many of us have not yet figured out how to leverage the technology effectively.
AI Is Becoming Part of Everyday Work
Not that long ago, nonprofits were debating whether they should invest in AI. Today, that debate has settled. Nonprofits are now using AI for the following tasks:
Drafting grants and reports
- Summarizing meeting notes, research papers, and long documents
- Crafting donor communications and email copy
- Organizing and categorizing documents and data
- Taking on the boring and repetitive administrative duties.
While none of these tasks on their own would add up to hours per week, when all is said and done, using AI for them all adds up!
The challenge is no longer how to gain access to AI. The challenge is how to use it. How to make sure everyone in your organization, not just an individual, will benefit from using it.
Why Many NGOs Aren’t Seeing Bigger Results
Today, the majority of nonprofits consider AI an application used by some employees rather than an organizational tool for the entire team. In many cases, AI can make an individual email-writing process or summarization task more efficient but won’t impact how the entire organization operates. If there aren’t defined approaches for AI integration, and even just basic training and a few policies in place, AI’s advantages will likely be restricted to individual tasks. For this reason, many nonprofits are accelerating operations but still lagging in significant advancements in fundraising, project management, or strategic planning.
What Successful Organizations Are Doing Differently
Nonprofits leveraging AI most effectively don’t necessarily have access to more technology – they simply have clearer guidelines and practices for it. Typically they can: Teach employees to use AI in ways that are informed, ethical and empowering Align on how and where AI is appropriately deployed Integrate AI in existing workflows rather than letting individual teams decide their own use case Review and edit AI-generated output before it’s disseminated Assess if AI usage improves efficiency and outcomes They use AI less like a silver bullet and more like another method for enabling their work.
What This Means for NGOs
AI is not coming to take away from nonprofit work. The purpose of AI is to help staff to work a bit more efficiently. That work might involve writing up documents, creating summaries, cataloging contents, etc.
This will enable nonprofits to concentrate on what is most valuable: engaging with people, managing partners, fundraising, and service delivery.
It will have its best effect when organizations invest in this type of planning, set expectations, and train individuals to take on the right skills.
Final Thoughts
AI is an everyday part of the nonprofit workplace. But simply getting access to these tools isn’t enough. The organizations with the greatest impact are not the ones using AI on all their processes, but those who are using AI for all its worth on the right things. Over time, as these new technologies develop, the nonprofits that invest in their people as well as their systems will be the ones who most effectively save time, work harder, and get better outcomes for their mission.

