# Mightycause vs mycause

## What the data says.

Paying by Credit card, mycause delivers about 2.28 more of every 100 donated than Mightycause (A$97.50 vs $95.22 per 100). On the headline numbers, Mightycause and mycause are closely matched — the better pick comes down to Credit card availability, language coverage, and where your donors are.

## Side-by-side.

| Metric | Mightycause | mycause |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Recipient gets | $95.22 | A$97.50 |
| Platform fee | 1.99% | 0% |
| Payment processing fee | 2.2% + $0.29 | 2.5% + A$0.00 |
| Trustpilot | 3.2 (1) | — (0) |
| Domain Rating (by Ahrefs — https://ahrefs.com/) | 78 | 75 |
| Country coverage | 1 | 1 |
| Data residency | — | Australia (US backup) |
| Languages | 1 | 1 |
| Payment methods supported | 7 | 0 |

## Choose Mightycause if

> US nonprofits looking for a free or low-cost starting point for donation pages, peer-to-peer campaigns, and event fundraising.

- Free plan available at $0 per month.
- Nonprofit-focused toolset: donation pages, peer-to-peer, and event fundraising.
- Used by more than 76,000 nonprofit organisations.
- Supports cards, PayPal, Venmo, ACH, and digital wallets.


## Choose mycause if

> Australian individuals, registered charities, and schools running domestic donation campaigns who value a long-established, locally owned platform with Australian data residency and a donor-tip funding model for personal causes.

- Long-established Australian pioneer of crowdfunding, operating since 2009.
- Wholly Australian owned and operated, with primary servers based in Sydney.
- Personal fundraisers carry no platform charge, funded by an optional donor tip.
- Donations receipted to the chosen Australian charity.

