Best Google Analytics Alternatives in 2026 (Compared)

March 12, 2026

Google Analytics 4 (GA4) was the breaking point for a lot of people: a completely redesigned interface, a new data model, no historical data migration, and a learning curve that honestly feels gratuitous. Layer on top of that the GDPR and CCPA compliance headaches, mandatory cookie consent banners, ad blocker interference degrading your data quality, and the general discomfort of sending all your visitors' behavioral data to Google, and you've got a legitimate case for switching.

The good news is the market for GA alternatives is strong. There are many good options, at multiple price points, with very different philosophies about what analytics should be. The bad news is they're not all equal, and most of them make a trade-off that's worth understanding before you commit: they give you clean, simple traffic summaries, but they strip out individual visitor data entirely. Only two tools on this list (Clicky and Matomo) give you detailed visitor session logs, and both in a privacy-friendly way. Everything else is aggregate numbers only.


Quick comparison

Tool100K pageviewsFree PlanNo cookiesVisitor logsHeatmapsUptime monitorOpen sourceBest for
Clicky$10Granular data, affordability, advanced features
Plausible$19Self-hostSimplicity, open source
Fathom$15GA migration, billing flexibility
Simple Analytics$20GA migration, Maximum privacy
Matomo$42Self-hostSelf-host, enterprise, full control
Umami$20Developers, free/self-hosted

1. Clicky

Clicky analytics dashboard showing real-time visitor data, content stats, and the recent visitors log

Clicky was the premiere real-time web analytics service, debuting in 2006. Yes, two decades ago. In that time, the analytics market shifted dramatically toward simpler, less intrusive tools that show you nice traffic summaries, but not much else. We went a different direction: Clicky gives you a real-time view of what's happening on your site right now, and detailed visitor session logs, so you can see exactly who's on your site, what they've looked at, where they came from, what device they're on, and how long they've been there. Not aggregated, but actual visitors.

In addition to real-time visitor logs, the Spy feature is a customer favorite. It shows you current visitors as live dots moving across a world map, plus a auto-refreshing log of the last ~40 visitors and actions. For anyone who's ever tried to debug a conversion problem using only aggregate data, you know how much faster it goes when you can look at actual sessions.

Clicky also offers proxy tracking to ensure as much traffic is logged as possible, in addition to many advanced features lacking from most other services on this list, such as heatmaps, uptime monitoring, and automatic tracking of file downloads and outbound links.

Pricing: $9.99/month for up to 1 million monthly page views across 10 websites, with custom plans available up to 100 million monthly page views across 1,000 sites. A generous free plan is also available, for up to 100K page views/month.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: Small to medium websites that want real-time granular data and visitor session detail at an affordable price. If you ever find yourself asking, "what are my visitors actually doing", this is where to look.

clicky.com


2. Plausible

Plausible Analytics single-page dashboard showing visitors, page views, bounce rate, and traffic graph

Plausible launched in 2019 and helped to legitimize the privacy-first analytics category. The premise was simple: one page, all your core metrics, no cookies, no personal data, GDPR compliant by default. If GA4 is a spaceship cockpit, Plausible is a clean dashboard with six gauges: visitors, sessions, pageviews, bounce rate, visit duration, and sources. Everything in one view, no configuration required. They're also fully open source, so you can self-host the whole thing for free if you have the server infrastructure.

They've added features over time. The Business plan now includes funnels, goals, custom properties, and revenue attribution, and Google Search Console integration is available across all paid plans. But Plausible is still fundamentally a traffic-summary tool. There are no individual visitor sessions, no per-user drill-down, no heatmaps. You see how many people visited, where they came from, and what pages they hit, and that's about it. Then again, that's good enough for a lot of people.

Pricing: Hosted service is expensive. For 100K monthly page views across 3 websites, you're looking at $29/mo, vs $10/mo for Clicky. The Business plan (required for funnels and custom properties) costs even more. There's no hosted free plan, but there is a 30-day trial.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: Founders, bloggers, and small teams who want clean traffic reporting and nothing more, for a small number of websites.

plausible.io


3. Fathom

Fathom Analytics dashboard showing site visitors, pageviews, bounce rate, and traffic trend graph

Fathom launched in 2018 with a similar philosophy to Plausible: simple, private, no cookies, no consent banners. What distinguishes them is their billing model and one genuinely useful feature nobody else has matched. On billing: if you exceed your pageview limit for two months in a row, they notify you before bumping your plan. No surprise charges, no data cutoffs, no service interruption if a payment fails on the first attempt. That's a unusually user-friendly approach that matters if you run a site where traffic spikes unpredictably.

Fathom has a Google Analytics import tool, making it easy to switch over. For sites with a lot of Google Analytics history they don't want to abandon, that's a nice advantage.

Pricing: $15/month for 100K monthly page views. No free plan, though a 7-day trial is available. No contracts, and you can export all your data at any time.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: Sites migrating away from Google Analytics who want to preserve historical data. Also a good pick for anyone who wants clean, zero-friction analytics with honest billing and built-in uptime monitoring.

usefathom.com


4. Simple Analytics

Simple Analytics dashboard showing visitors, pageviews, traffic graph, referrals, and geographic breakdown

Simple Analytics is a Dutch company that has taken privacy further than most. Not only do they avoid cookies, they also explicitly don't use browser fingerprinting as a fallback. Most privacy-friendly tools will at minimum use fingerprinting to estimate unique visitors without cookies. Simple Analytics doesn't. That's a principled choice, and it does mean their visitor counts can be slightly less precise than tools that use fingerprinting as a fallback, but if your goal is to collect as little as possible about your users, this is the right trade-off to make.

They've also introduced AI-powered insights that surface notable trends automatically, which is a smart addition to a tool whose whole pitch is "you don't have to think about this." The pricing is clear, the data stays in the EU, and they publish their revenue publicly. We appreciate that as a signal that they're a real company with a sustainable business model and not a tool that might quietly disappear.

Pricing: $20/month for 100K monthly page views. A free plan is also available.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: EU-based companies with strict data handling requirements, and privacy-forward businesses that want to be able to honestly tell users they collect almost nothing about them.

simpleanalytics.com


5. Matomo

Matomo analytics dashboard showing real-time visitor log with individual sessions, visits over time graph, and channel breakdown

Matomo is the most direct Google Analytics replacement on this list in terms of raw feature coverage. It's open source, self-hostable, and ships with essentially everything GA4 has, plus things GA4 doesn't: heatmaps, session recordings, A/B testing, form analytics, and full visitor logs. That last part is worth highlighting again. Like Clicky, Matomo lets you drill down to individual visitor sessions and trace exactly what a specific user did on your site, step by step. For debugging conversion problems or understanding drop-off in complex flows, aggregate-only tools just can't do what visitor logs can.

The self-hosted version is completely free to download and run on your own infrastructure. That's a meaningful advantage for organizations that can't send user behavior data to third-party servers, or for high-traffic sites where SaaS analytics pricing gets painful. The cloud-hosted version (managed by Matomo's team) starts around $42/month for 100K monthly page views. The catch with Matomo is real: the feature depth comes with genuine complexity. It's not a five-minute setup. The reporting interface has a learning curve, and running it self-hosted means you're responsible for updates, backups, and server maintenance.

Pricing: $42/month for 100K monthly page views on the hosted plan. Premium plugins for heatmaps, session recordings, A/B testing, and form analytics are additional costs, even on hosted plans.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: Organizations that need full data ownership, compliance-sensitive industries like healthcare and finance, and technically capable teams who want a self-hosted GA replacement with full visitor-level data.

matomo.org


6. Umami

Umami analytics dashboard showing traffic summary with views, visits, visitors, and bounce rate

Umami is the tool developers reach for when they want lightweight, free, open-source analytics they can self-host and customize. The tracking script is around 2KB (lighter than anything else on this list), and the cloud version has a genuinely usable free tier: 100,000 monthly events with no credit card required. For side projects, early-stage products, or internal tooling that needs basic analytics without a recurring bill, that's hard to argue with.

Feature-wise, Umami is more capable than its simple exterior suggests. Custom dashboards, multiple chart types, funnels, retention analysis, and user profiles are all included. It also supports tracking for Next.js, React, and React Native out of the box, which makes it a natural fit for developer-heavy teams already working in that ecosystem. What it doesn't have is visitor logs. You're working with aggregate data only. And the cloud product relies on a smaller, less established company than some of the others on this list, which is worth weighing if continuity matters.

Pricing: $20/month for 100K monthly page views. A generous free plan is available. The self-hosted version is completely free with no event limits.

Pros:

Cons:

Best for: Developers, indie makers, and technically capable teams who want free or low-cost self-hosted analytics without Matomo's complexity.

umami.is


Full comparison

Tool100K pageviewsFree PlanNo cookiesVisitor logsHeatmapsUptime monitorOpen sourceBest for
Clicky$10Granular data, affordability, advanced features
Plausible$19Self-hostSimplicity, open source
Fathom$15GA migration, billing flexibility
Simple Analytics$20GA migration, Maximum privacy
Matomo$42Self-hostSelf-host, enterprise, full control
Umami$20Developers, free/self-hosted

Why Clicky is still the right choice for most sites

Most of the tools on this list make the same core trade-off: simple dashboard (they all mostly look the exact same), no cookies, no personal data, no visitor detail. That's fine if you only need to know how many people visited and where they came from. But the moment you need to understand why a page has a high bounce rate, or what users are actually doing before they abandon a checkout flow, or how a specific referral source behaves differently from your organic traffic... aggregate data stops being enough. You need to look the actual visitors.

Clicky is the best of both worlds. You get a real-time summary of all your traffic, plus per-visitor session logs, and other advanced features like heatmaps, all at an insanely affordable price. The Spy feature alone is worth the subscription for anyone who runs a site where user behavior matters beyond headline numbers. Add heatmaps, goal tracking, outbound link tracking, campaign tracking (fully UTM-compatible), and uptime monitoring, and Clicky covers more ground than just about any service available.

We'll be straight about the downside: The UI is dated. We know. It's functional and fast, but it hasn't had a major visual refresh in a while (it's on the wish list). On the plus side, you'll notice from the screenshots here that most other services look the exact same, beyond the color scheme. Clicky's look and feel is very unique, yet still highly functional.


FAQ

Is Google Analytics completely free?

It's free to use, but it comes with real costs: GDPR compliance overhead, mandatory cookie consent banners, data sampling on high-traffic sites, and the fact that your users' behavioral data goes to Google. For many businesses, the hidden compliance and infrastructure costs make a paid privacy-first alternative genuinely cheaper in practice.

Which tool is best for GDPR compliance?

All of the tools on this list are GDPR compliant by default. Simple Analytics takes the strictest approach (no cookies, no fingerprinting, EU data storage). Matomo gives you the most control when self-hosted. Clicky, Plausible, Fathom and Umami are all cookie-free with compliant defaults out of the box.

Do any of these tools show individual visitor sessions?

Only Clicky and Matomo. Every other tool on this list shows aggregate data only. If per-visitor session detail matters to you, those are your two options.

What's the cheapest option?

Clicky is the most affordable hosted solution, starting at just $9.99/month for up to 1 million monthly page views across 10 websites. A hosted solution is by far the easiest way to get up and running quickly.

Umami has the most generous hosted free tier service, allowing up to 100k events/month.

Some of these tools are open source, which allows you to self-host them. However, keep in mind that requires a lot more work up front, as well as ongoing maintenance. And if your site is high traffic, that's going to add a lot of server load. We'd only recommend self-hosting for advanced users that are comfortable with system administration.

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