Surpass Congregational costs $50 a month, billed annually - about $600 a year in US dollars. That buys a full church-library ILS: MARC cataloguing, a public catalogue, holds, fines, reading-programme data. A church lending a couple of hundred books to a congregation it already knows by name uses almost none of it.
Your Book Nest is the alternative for that library. Flat $60 a year, no MARC, no barcodes to buy, no scanner, and an instant demo you can try before you type a single book in. Catalogue, copies and check-out, and little else on purpose.
Who should switch, and who should stay
Switch if your library is a few hundred books on a shelf or two, run by volunteers, lent on trust to a congregation of twenty to fifty people. You want to catalogue the books, know who has what, and see what is overdue. Paying $600 a year for a system built to hold 10,000 volumes and run a public catalogue is paying for a ceiling you will never reach.
Stay with Surpass if you genuinely want the heavy ILS. A parish that runs a public catalogue members search from home, needs holds and a ready-for-pickup queue, catalogues in MARC or pulls records over Z39.50, tracks reading-programme levels for an attached church school, or wants fines with printed statements is asking for exactly what Surpass builds. Your Book Nest leaves those out by design, so it is the wrong tool for a library that wants them.
The true annual cost
Surpass Cloud's church plan is Congregational, at $50 a month billed annually - roughly $600 a year. The ceiling is 10,000 volumes and 1,000 patrons. Surpass counts holdings, not titles, so two copies of the same book are two of those volumes, each with its own barcode - but even a duplicate-heavy church shelf sits far below 10,000.
Congregational is also restricted by institution type. Surpass states it is for churches, temples and other congregational libraries, and "is not church-school libraries". A library that serves both the place of worship and a school is pushed up to the Small Library plan at $70 a month - about $840 a year in US dollars.
Your Book Nest is a flat $60 a year, every feature included, no volume ceiling to bump into and no institution-type gate. The same figure whether the library is a church, a mosque, a hospice or a study group. The wedge here is roughly ten to one, for a library that will never touch the ILS surface it would be paying for.
Getting your books in
Surpass is a MARC-based system. Its own FAQ states it "can only import MARC records", so a church bringing an existing spreadsheet or CSV needs a paid conversion through the migration service before the catalogue is populated.
Your Book Nest has no MARC anywhere. You paste your existing list straight in with bulk import, or add books by hand with no mandatory fields - a title is enough. ISBN is an optional field you type if you want it. The reasoning behind skipping MARC entirely is in how to catalogue a small library without MARC.
Barcodes and copies
Surpass has proper copies management and ILS-grade label tooling. It also leans on barcodes: the recommended Codabar format bakes a four-digit location code into every item and patron barcode, which is real infrastructure for a multi-branch system and overhead for a single shelf.
Your Book Nest gives every physical copy its own record, its own status and its own history - the same normalised structure, without the barcode ceremony. Each copy gets a generated three-word code, like oak-bat-tree, printed on a label on blank Avery stock you already have. Read it off the cover and type it, no scanner needed, and the right copy comes up. Copies you bring across keep whatever is already stickered on them in a free-text field. Whether a small library needs a scanner at all is covered in do you need a barcode scanner for a small library.
Trying it before you commit
Surpass offers a 30-day free trial and a demo-request form, with a sales or advisor conversation as part of the motion. You sign up, then evaluate.
Your Book Nest home page is a live demo. Add a book, give it two copies, lend them to two different people - no account, no card, no form. If it does not fit your library, you close the tab.
What Surpass does that Your Book Nest does not
Surpass is a mature, well-regarded ILS, and several of its features are genuinely absent from Your Book Nest:
- A public catalogue (OPAC) members can search from home, with account logins, themes and a digital library card. Your Book Nest has no public catalogue - it is resisted for the moderation load it brings a volunteer.
- Holds and reservations, with a queue and a ready-for-pickup workflow. Your Book Nest does not do holds yet.
- MARC cataloguing plus Z39.50 and OCLC record import - professional bibliographic data for a library that wants it.
- Reading-programme integrations (Accelerated Reader, Reading Counts, Lexile, Fountas and Pinnell) for an attached church school.
- Email and SMS notices. Surpass sends overdue and due-soon notices on every edition. Your Book Nest's patron email reminders are still being built, so today this is a Surpass advantage, not a Your Book Nest one.
- Fines and fees with printed statements on its higher editions, a custom report designer, a mobile circulation app with inventory scanning, and patron photos and ID cards.
If your church wants any of those, Surpass is the better fit and worth its price. Your Book Nest is built for the library that wants none of them.
How Your Book Nest helps
Your Book Nest does the job a small church library actually has: catalogue the books, track every physical copy, check them out and back in, and see what is overdue. Add a title once and give it as many copies as you own, each printed with its own three-word code on plain label stock.
Every volunteer gets their own sign-in, so there is no shared password and you can see who did what - the case for that is in stop sharing one password with your library volunteers. Patrons can be given a read-only login to see their own loans and due dates, and nothing more. It is all a flat $60 a year, with no volume ceiling and no per-institution gate.
The home page is a live demo - catalogue a book, give it two copies, and lend them out, with no account and no card. For the wider picture of choosing software for a church library, best church library software and library software for a church library walk through the options, and what library software really costs covers the pricing traps in the field.
Your Book Nest



