
ZoomGrants
Scholarship management software
Grant management software
Education software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
Take the quiz to check if ZoomGrants and its alternatives fit your requirements.
$9,500 first year total
Small
Medium
Large
- Information technology and software
- Media and communications
- Professional services (engineering, legal, consulting, etc.)
What is ZoomGrants
ZoomGrants is a cloud-based grants management system used to collect applications, manage review workflows, and track awards and reporting. It is used by public agencies, foundations, and education-related programs that administer grants or scholarships. The product focuses on configurable online forms, role-based reviewer access, and end-to-end workflow from intake through award decisions and post-award reporting.
End-to-end grant workflow
Supports common grantmaking stages such as application intake, eligibility checks, reviewer scoring, award decisions, and follow-up reporting. Centralizes applicant data and attachments to reduce email and spreadsheet-based processing. Fits programs that need a single system for both application and review management.
Configurable forms and workflows
Provides configurable application forms, required fields, and conditional logic to match different program requirements. Enables role-based access for staff and reviewers, helping separate internal evaluation from applicant-facing steps. This flexibility is useful for organizations running multiple programs with different criteria.
Reviewer collaboration features
Includes tools for assigning reviewers, collecting scores and comments, and aggregating evaluation results. Helps standardize review processes across panels and cycles. Reduces manual consolidation work compared with ad hoc review via documents or spreadsheets.
Limited public technical detail
Publicly available documentation on APIs, data model, and integration patterns is limited compared with some larger platforms in this category. This can make it harder to validate fit for complex integration needs during procurement. Organizations with strict IT requirements may need additional vendor-led discovery.
May not suit complex portfolios
Organizations with highly complex grant portfolios (many programs, advanced budgeting, multi-entity governance, or extensive compliance requirements) may outgrow lighter workflow configurations. Some use cases may require deeper post-award financial management than a typical application-and-review-focused system provides. Buyers should confirm support for their specific reporting, audit, and finance workflows.
Scholarship-specific features vary
While it can be used for scholarships, it may not include all education-specific capabilities found in dedicated financial aid or student information ecosystems. Examples include tight SIS integrations, packaging workflows, or institution-specific compliance processes. Education organizations should validate scholarship lifecycle needs beyond application and review.
Plan & Pricing
Pricing model: Annual account subscription + per-program (program-level) fees; most pricing provided via custom quotes.
Official listed fees (from ZoomGrants site):
- One-time account activation: $1,000 (one-time). (ZoomGrants "Grant Makers" page).
- Annual account subscription: $5,000 per year. (ZoomGrants "Grant Makers" page).
- Grant Program Fee: $3,500 per program per year. (ZoomGrants "Grant Makers" page).
Notes & vendor guidance:
- Program-level fees are determined by configuration, feature usage, and volume; ZoomGrants provides custom quotes to align with an organization’s specific use case (ZoomGrants Pricing page).
- ZoomGrants also advertises a "Pricing and Savings Calculator" and encourages contacting Sales for a custom quote.
Example (inference from official figures):
- First-year example minimum: $1,000 (activation) + $5,000 (annual subscription) + $3,500 (one program) = $9,500 first year. Subsequent years (if keeping one program): $5,000 + $3,500 = $8,500 per year. (This example is an inference combining the official fees listed on the vendor site.)