What You’ll Learn
- Key Differences Between IT Consulting and In-House IT
- Cost Comparison: Real Numbers for Nonprofits
- Pros and Cons of Nonprofit IT Consulting
- Pros and Cons of In-House IT Support
- When to Outsource vs. When to Hire
- The Hybrid Model: Best of Both Worlds
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Your Next Steps
Key Differences Between Nonprofit IT Consulting and In-House IT
Nonprofit IT consulting means partnering with an external IT provider – often called a managed service provider (MSP) – to handle some or all of your technology needs. In-house IT means hiring one or more full-time employees to manage your systems internally.
Both approaches keep your email running, your data protected, and your staff productive. The difference is in how you pay for it, how deep the expertise goes, and how quickly you can scale.
For nonprofits operating on tight budgets with small teams, this decision has a direct impact on how much money stays available for programs and mission delivery. Here is how the two models compare across the factors that matter most.
| Factor | IT Consulting / Outsourced | In-House IT Staff |
|---|---|---|
| Cost structure | Predictable monthly fee | Salary + benefits + training + tools |
| Expertise breadth | Team of specialists across security, cloud, networking | Limited to one person’s knowledge |
| Response time | SLA-based (varies by provider) | Immediate – they are on-site |
| Organizational knowledge | Develops over time; shared across clients | Deep understanding of internal workflows |
| Scalability | Scale up or down as needed | Hiring takes 3-6 months |
| Coverage | 24/7 monitoring available | Limited to business hours (unless you hire shifts) |
| Risk if they leave | Provider continuity; knowledge is documented | Single point of failure if only one IT person |
Cost Comparison: Real Numbers for Nonprofits
Cost is usually the deciding factor for nonprofits. A typical nonprofit spends between 2% and 5% of its operating budget on technology, according to NTEN’s nonprofit technology benchmarks. Here is what each model actually costs.
In-House IT: What You Will Pay
Hiring a full-time IT professional for a nonprofit typically costs:
- Salary: $55,000-$85,000 for a systems administrator; $85,000-$120,000+ for an IT director or manager
- Benefits: Add 25-35% for health insurance, retirement, PTO (approximately $14,000-$42,000)
- Training and certifications: $2,000-$5,000 per year to stay current
- Tools and software: $3,000-$8,000 per year for management and monitoring tools
Total annual cost for one in-house IT person: $74,000-$175,000.
And that one person still cannot cover vacations, sick days, or after-hours emergencies alone.
Outsourced IT Consulting: What You Will Pay
Managed IT services for nonprofits typically cost:
- Per-user pricing: $100-$250 per user per month (most common model)
- Flat monthly fee: $2,000-$10,000 depending on organization size and scope
- Break-fix hourly: $125-$225 per hour (on-demand, no contract)
For a 25-person nonprofit at $150 per user per month, outsourced IT costs approximately $45,000 per year – roughly 40% less than a single in-house hire, with access to an entire team of specialists.
One real-world case study found that a nonprofit saved approximately $50,000 annually by switching from in-house IT to a managed service provider, redirecting those savings directly into program delivery.
Cost Comparison Summary
| Model | 25-Person Org Annual Cost | What’s Included |
|---|---|---|
| In-house (sys admin) | $74,000-$110,000 | One generalist, business hours only |
| In-house (IT director) | $110,000-$175,000 | Strategic + tactical, business hours |
| Outsourced MSP | $36,000-$75,000 | Full team, monitoring, help desk, often 24/7 |
| Hybrid (MSP + fractional CIO) | $48,000-$90,000 | Day-to-day support + strategic leadership |
Pros and Cons of Nonprofit IT Consulting
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Lower total cost for organizations under 75 staff | Less embedded in your day-to-day culture |
| Access to a team with diverse specializations (security, cloud, compliance) | Response times depend on SLA and provider quality |
| Predictable monthly costs simplify grant budgeting | May serve multiple clients simultaneously |
| No single point of failure when a team member leaves | Switching providers can be disruptive |
| 24/7 monitoring and after-hours support available | Requires clear communication and expectations |
| Scales up or down without hiring/firing | Some providers use cookie-cutter solutions |
According to a survey cited by PixelCrayons, 62% of companies that outsource IT services report savings between 10% and 25%, with 38% reporting savings as high as 40%.
Pros and Cons of In-House IT Support
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Immediate, on-site response to issues | Significantly higher total cost (salary + benefits + tools) |
| Deep understanding of your systems and workflows | One person cannot be an expert in everything |
| Fully dedicated to your organization | Vacations and sick days create coverage gaps |
| Easier to align with organizational culture | Hiring takes 3-6 months; turnover is costly |
| Direct accountability and oversight | Risk of becoming a single point of failure |
The biggest risk with a single in-house IT person is what happens when they leave. If their knowledge is not documented, your organization may face weeks or months of disruption rebuilding institutional knowledge.
When to Outsource vs. When to Hire In-House
There is no one-size-fits-all answer, but the decision usually comes down to organization size, budget, and complexity. Here are the clearest signals for each approach.
Outsourced IT consulting is typically better when:
- Your organization has fewer than 75 staff members
- You need expertise across multiple areas (security, cloud, compliance) but cannot afford three specialists
- Your budget is grant-funded and you need predictable monthly costs
- You want 24/7 monitoring without paying for multiple shifts
- You are growing and need IT that scales without the lag of hiring
In-house IT is typically better when:
- You have more than 100 staff and the volume justifies a dedicated team
- Your technology environment is highly specialized or custom-built
- Compliance requirements demand on-site data handling (rare, but it happens)
- You have the budget for a full IT department (not just one person)
Use Case: A 40-Person Social Services Nonprofit
A social services nonprofit with 40 staff across two offices was spending $95,000 per year on a single IT coordinator. That person handled help desk tickets, managed Office 365, maintained the server, and was supposed to lead technology strategy. In practice, strategy never happened because reactive support consumed all their time.
By switching to a managed IT provider at $140 per user per month ($67,200/year), the organization gained a full help desk team, proactive monitoring, cybersecurity tools, and quarterly strategic reviews. They saved $28,000 annually and got better outcomes across the board.
The Hybrid Model: Best of Both Worlds
Many nonprofits find that the best approach is not choosing one model over the other. The hybrid model combines outsourced IT for daily operations with a fractional CIO for strategic leadership.
Here is how it works:
- Managed service provider: Handles help desk, monitoring, patching, backups, and security on a monthly retainer
- Fractional CIO: Provides 10-20 hours per month of strategic guidance – technology roadmap, vendor evaluation, budget planning, board reporting
This gives you the cost efficiency of outsourced IT with the strategic depth that most MSPs do not provide. At Scottship Solutions, this is the model we recommend for most nonprofits between 15 and 100 staff.
“Successful nonprofits usually need both operational IT support and strategic technology leadership. The organizations that invest in both – even on a fractional basis – make better technology decisions and stretch their budgets further.”
– Cortavo, Best IT Support for Non-Profits (2026 Guide)
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better, nonprofit IT consulting or in-house IT support?
For most nonprofits with fewer than 75 staff, IT consulting through a managed service provider is the better choice. It costs 30-50% less than an in-house hire, provides access to a team of specialists instead of one generalist, and includes 24/7 monitoring. Organizations with more than 100 staff or highly specialized systems may benefit from in-house IT.
What are the pros and cons of nonprofit IT consulting?
The main pros are lower cost, broader expertise, predictable budgeting, and scalability. The main cons are less cultural integration, dependence on provider quality, and response times that vary based on your service level agreement. The right provider mitigates most cons through strong communication and dedicated account management.
How much does outsourced IT cost for a nonprofit?
Most managed IT providers charge $100-$250 per user per month for nonprofits. For a 25-person organization, that works out to $30,000-$75,000 per year. This typically includes help desk support, monitoring, patching, backups, and basic cybersecurity. Strategic services like fractional CIO work cost extra.
Can a nonprofit have both outsourced and in-house IT?
Yes, and this hybrid model is increasingly common. A nonprofit might have one internal IT coordinator who handles day-to-day requests while a managed service provider handles monitoring, security, and after-hours support. A fractional CIO can provide the strategic layer. This approach works well for organizations with 50-150 staff.
What should I look for in a nonprofit IT consulting partner?
Look for experience working specifically with nonprofits, transparent pricing, clear SLAs, references from similar-sized organizations, and a willingness to align with your mission. Avoid providers who push unnecessary hardware purchases or lock you into long contracts without exit clauses. Ask how they handle after-hours emergencies and staff transitions.
Your Next Steps
- Audit your current IT spending: Add up salaries, benefits, tools, software, and ad-hoc vendor costs to understand your true IT cost. A tech stack audit can help.
- Define your requirements: List what you need from IT – help desk, monitoring, security, strategic planning, compliance. This determines whether outsourced, in-house, or hybrid fits best. A strong backup and disaster recovery plan is essential regardless of which model you choose.
- Get quotes from 2-3 MSPs: Ask for per-user pricing and make sure they have nonprofit experience. Compare their total cost against your current spending.
- Check references: Talk to other nonprofits of similar size who use the provider. Ask about response times, communication quality, and hidden costs.
- Consider a fractional CIO: If you outsource operations, pair it with fractional strategic leadership to ensure your technology investments align with your mission.
- Start a conversation: Schedule a consultation with Scottship Solutions. We will help you evaluate your options and find the right-sized IT model for your organization.
Related Reading
- What Is a Fractional CIO? — the hybrid model described above pairs an MSP with fractional CIO leadership
- Common IT Infrastructure Problems — the issues that drive nonprofits to seek outside IT help
- Nonprofit IT Policy Guide — whether in-house or outsourced, your team needs these policies
Sources
- PixelCrayons – IT Consulting Vs. In-House IT: Pros & Cons (62% outsourcing savings statistic)
- Optimal Networks – How Much Does Outsourced IT Cost for 501c3 Nonprofits?
- Cortavo – Best IT Support for Non-Profits (2026 Guide)
- SystemsDigest – How Outsourced IT Services Helped a Growing Nonprofit ($50K savings case study)
- CTTS – Outsourced IT vs In House IT Cost Comparison (2026)
- Community IT Innovators – Managed IT Services for Nonprofits
At Scottship Solutions, we specialize in IT services for nonprofits including managed IT support that balances cost, expertise, and mission alignment. Whether you need fully managed IT, a fractional CIO, or help evaluating your current setup with a tech stack audit, we help nonprofits make smart technology decisions. Schedule a consultation today to find the right IT model for your organization.