If you run a church, mosque, hospice or study-group library with 20-50 patrons and a few hundred books, Koha is more system than you need. The software is free, but a small library pays for it in the parts that aren’t: a Linux server to run it on, the MARC cataloguing standard to learn, and the volunteer hours to install, upgrade and back it up.
Koha is an excellent integrated library system. It runs public and academic libraries with millions of records, and it models everything properly - copies, holds, branches, circulation rules. That power is the problem for a small shelf: none of it is free to operate, and most of it is machinery a 200-book library will never switch on.
Free software, not a free library
Koha’s licence costs nothing. Running it does. There are two ways to get it going, and both cost far more than the price tag suggests.
Self-hosting means installing Koha on your own Linux server - Apache, MariaDB and Plack, DNS and hosts-file configuration, then ongoing security patches, upgrades and manual backups. The community’s own package-install guide says it is "intended for the impatient or those who are skilled." A cloud server to run it on is cheap; the labour is not. One documented school-library implementation took two volunteers around 200 hours each over 18 months. The hours, not the box, are the real expense.
Vendor-hosted Koha takes the server work off your hands, but the price is quote-only. Vendors like ByWater Solutions and PTFS Europe publish no rates - every figure is a custom quote based on your collection and patron size, billed as an annual hosting-and-support contract. For software a tiny library uses a fraction of, that is a recurring bill with no published ceiling.
Your Book Nest is a flat $60 a year. No server, no vendor quote, no setup labour - it is hosted software you sign in to. The full breakdown of what small-library software really costs puts the quote-only tools next to the flat-price ones.
The MARC learning curve you don’t need
Koha is built on MARC, the international cataloguing standard. Setup forces a choice between MARC21 and UNIMARC, and it ships a full MARC bibliographic editor, authority control and Z39.50 import to pull records from other catalogues. That machinery is exactly what a national library needs and exactly what a church basement doesn’t.
A 20-50-patron library catalogues by hand from the book in front of it - title, author, maybe an ISBN typed in. It never needs authority files or a bibliographic framework. Cataloguing a small library without MARC covers why the standard is optional at this scale, and whether a tiny library needs an ILS at all covers the wider question.
The bus-factor risk
A self-hosted Koha depends on the one volunteer who understands it. When that person moves on, the upgrades stop, the backups lapse, and small libraries often revert to a paper card catalogue rather than find another Linux-literate volunteer. Maintenance that only one person can do is a single point of failure, and a volunteer library rarely has a second.
Hosted software has nothing for a volunteer to keep running. When the person who set it up leaves, the next volunteer signs in and carries on.
What Koha genuinely does better
Koha is the benchmark for a full-featured library system, and a small library should know what it is turning down:
- Holds, reservations, recalls and bookings - a proper reservation queue Your Book Nest doesn’t offer.
- A public OPAC - a searchable public catalogue where patrons find and reserve books themselves. Your Book Nest deliberately has no public catalogue.
- Acquisitions and serials - ordering, invoicing and magazine-subscription tracking, none of which Your Book Nest does.
- An automatic fines and circulation-rule matrix - per-category loan periods and automatic overdue fines. Your Book Nest does not do automatic overdue fines, and its loan rules are deliberately shallow.
- SIP2, RFID and multi-branch - the standards and hardware integrations a larger service runs on.
- Custom SQL reports - report anything you can query, for a library that has someone to write the queries.
If your library genuinely needs a standards-based ILS - MARC records, a public catalogue, acquisitions, multiple branches - choose Koha. It does all of that well, and no simpler tool replaces it.
Where the difference matters is the data model itself: Koha tracks copies, item types and circulation rules properly, so this is never a case of a lightweight tool being more correct. It is a heavier tool being more than a small shelf can carry.
How Your Book Nest helps
Your Book Nest does the small-library job and stops there. Add a book, give it as many copies as you own, lend them out and take them back - each copy its own record with its own status and history. No MARC, no server, no barcodes to buy: every copy gets a generated three-word code like oak-bat-tree, printed on a plain label, that you read off the cover and type. A scanner works too, but nothing needs one.
Multiple volunteers each get their own sign-in - never a shared password - at no extra charge, and patrons get a read-only login to check their own loans and due dates. It is one flat $60 a year, hosted and maintained, with nothing for a volunteer to install or keep patched.
The home page is a live demo - add a book, give it two copies, and lend them to two different people, with no account and no setup. If you are weighing the flat-price cloud tools against each other, the Librarika comparison sits alongside this one, and best church library software rounds up the shortlist for a congregation shelf.
Your Book Nest



