Does your church really need an app?
Over the past few years, church apps seem to be everywhere. Calendars, push notifications, sermons, donations — all wrapped into a single app. But let’s be honest: does your church actually need an app? Or is it mainly a nice idea that ends up barely being used?
Simon Vreman
January 30, 2026

Collaborating on fixing church IT problems
Why churches start thinking about an app
The reasons are usually very recognizable:
- WhatsApp groups become too large and chaotic
- Emails are no longer being read
- The website feels static and rarely visited
- Volunteers work with many disconnected tools
A church app can seem like the perfect solution: one place for communication, events, news, and engagement. But… an app should never be the goal in itself.
When a church app does make sense
A church app can add real value when:
1. You need to communicate regularly
Think of news updates, activities, changes, or volunteer requests. Push notifications can be powerful — if they’re used thoughtfully.
2. Your congregation is growing
In small churches, personal contact often works well. As a church grows, structure becomes more important.
3. You serve multiple groups
Families, youth, small groups, ministry teams — an app can help share information more intentionally.
4. You want everything in one place
Events, sermons, news, contact details — not spread across five different systems.
When a church app is not a good idea
Just as important: when not.
1. If no one maintains it
An empty or outdated app works against you. In that case, a clear and up-to-date website is far better.
2. If volunteers get overwhelmed
If the app is too technical or time-consuming, it simply won’t be used.
3. If members don’t install it
No matter how good the app looks — without adoption, it has no value.
4. If it exists just “because it’s possible”
Technology should solve problems, not create new ones.
Website, WhatsApp, or app?
More and more churches discover that the real question isn’t which channel, but how everything fits together.
A separate website, countless WhatsApp groups, and an additional app for calendars or member administration often create more confusion and work.
That’s why many churches no longer choose another standalone church app, but instead opt for one central platform where website, member area, and administration come together.
In practice, a combination usually works best:
- Website → clear information and first impression
- Email / WhatsApp → personal and direct communication
- Platform (with optional app) → a central place for engaged members
The goal isn’t more tools — it’s smarter simplicity.
The real question to ask
Not:
Which app should we choose?
But:
What does our church need to keep people connected?
Sometimes that’s an app. Sometimes it’s a better website. And sometimes it’s simply clearer communication.
Final thoughts
A church app can be a great addition — if it truly fits your church. But often, the real impact lies not in a standalone app, but in clarity, simplicity, and cohesion.
Churches that are growing (or want to grow) usually need:
- one central place for information
- clear communication with members
- fewer disconnected tools for volunteers
An all-in-one solution with website, member area, and administration can make a real difference — especially when it’s built around how churches actually work.