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Germany edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-23

Top 10 Web Analytics Software in Germany for 2026

Independent Germany ranking after German DPAs echoed CNIL ruling on Google Analytics - DSGVO, TTDSG, Betriebsrat, and where Pirsch (Erlangen-built) actually fits.

Germany verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-23

Germany is the second most distinctive web analytics market in this ranking after France. German DPAs (Datenschutzkonferenz, May 2022 DSK guidance; multiple Landesdatenschutzbehörden) echoed the CNIL ruling on Google Analytics, treating Universal Analytics and (with caveats) GA4 with the default Google data path as DSGVO-problematic. TTDSG §25 (in force December 2021) requires explicit opt-in consent for any tracking cookie, with no analytics-purpose exemption. German websites see 30-50% consent opt-in rates, the lowest in this ranking. Pirsch Analytics is the German local champion in this ranking and the only Germany-headquartered top-10 web analytics platform (Erlangen-based, EU-built, cookieless, RGPD-native). etracker (Hamburg-headquartered) is the other German web analytics vendor, not in this top 10 by global revenue but a credible German enterprise reference. Matomo is widely deployed at German government, German universities (TU Munich, RWTH Aachen, Humboldt tier), and German enterprise wanting full data sovereignty. Piwik PRO (Polish, EU-data-residency-native) runs at DAX 40 wanting full Adobe-replacement stack. Plausible, Fathom, and Simple Analytics have growing German SaaS adoption. GA4 remains present in Germany but flagged as legally risky; Usercentrics (Munich) is the dominant German CMP. Betriebsrat consultation is the procurement reality for German employee-facing analytics deployments.

Picks for Germany

  • German SaaS and content sites wanting Germany-built cookieless analytics: pirsch Erlangen Germany-headquartered. The only Germany-headquartered top-10 web analytics platform in this ranking. EU-built, cookieless, RGPD-native by construction, no consent banner required under DSK guidance on cookieless aggregate analytics. EUR-billed. Strong technical pedigree. The German local champion pick for SaaS, content, and B2B teams wanting a German vendor relationship.
  • German enterprise, German government, and German universities wanting RGPD-clean data sovereignty: matomo Matomo Community Edition self-hosted (or Matomo Cloud EU-region) gives full German data sovereignty. Widely deployed at German government (Bundesverwaltungsamt-tier), German universities (TU Munich, RWTH Aachen, Humboldt, LMU), and German enterprise wanting full data sovereignty after the DSK guidance against GA4. Open-source license free; German consultancy partners available. AWS Frankfurt or Azure Germany hosting.
  • German DAX 40 wanting full EU-data-residency-native stack with consent manager and CDP: piwik-pro Wroclaw Poland-headquartered, EU data residency native (AWS Frankfurt available), ships consent manager and CDP alongside analytics. The right German DAX 40 call for a full Adobe-replacement stack post-DSK guidance. EUR-billed. DSGVO DPA. German enterprise sales presence. Usercentrics CMP integration.
  • German SaaS wanting EU-built cookieless analytics without consent banner: plausible Tallinn Estonia-headquartered, EU-built, open-source, cookieless. Transparent flat EUR pricing. No consent banner required under DSK interpretation of cookieless aggregate analytics. The default German SaaS privacy-first pick for teams wanting a clean dashboard without TTDSG consent friction.
  • German solo founders and small content sites wanting simplest dashboard: simple-analytics Amsterdam-headquartered, EU-built, cookieless, transparent flat EUR pricing, simplest UI. Best German pick for solo founders, indie sites, and small German content businesses wanting one clean dashboard with no learning curve and no TTDSG consent friction.
  • German sites already behind Cloudflare: cloudflare-web-analytics Genuinely free for Cloudflare customers (significant German SaaS and ecommerce Cloudflare presence). Server-side measurement avoids ad blockers and is DSGVO-friendly under DSK interpretation of cookieless aggregate measurement. The right German zero-cost baseline for Cloudflare-anchored sites.
  • German sites still running GA4 (despite DSK guidance) for Google Ads attribution: ga4 Present in Germany in 2026 because Google Ads attribution is real, but flagged as legally risky after DSK May 2022 guidance and multiple Landesdatenschutzbehörden actions treating GA4 with default Google data path as DSGVO-problematic. Requires Usercentrics CMP integration with explicit opt-in consent. Betriebsrat consultation required for any employee-facing analytics deployment. German legal review strongly recommended for any new GA4 deployment.
Market context

How the web analytics software market looks in Germany

Germany is the second most distinctive web analytics market in this ranking after France. The German regulatory environment is shaped by three layers that compound: DSGVO (German GDPR), TTDSG §25 (in force December 2021), and DSK guidance from the Datenschutzkonferenz.

DSGVO is the EU GDPR with German-specific implementation through BDSG (Bundesdatenschutzgesetz). German DPAs (Datenschutzbeauftragte at the federal level and Landesdatenschutzbehörden at the state level) are the most active enforcement bodies in the EU after CNIL. The Datenschutzkonferenz (DSK), the joint body of German federal and state DPAs, issued guidance in May 2022 confirming that analytics and testing cookies require opt-in consent with no analytics-purpose exemption, and treating US-based analytics tools (including Universal Analytics and, with caveats, GA4) as DSGVO-problematic for German websites. Multiple Landesdatenschutzbehörden have actively enforced against specific German websites running non-compliant analytics deployments. The German position aligns with CNIL's February 2022 ruling against Google Analytics.

TTDSG §25 requires explicit prior opt-in consent for any cookie or device-storage access that is not strictly necessary for the service. The Datenschutzkonferenz guidance explicitly excludes analytics from the "strictly necessary" exemption. German websites with TTDSG-compliant cookie banners see 30-50% opt-in rates for analytics cookies, the lowest in this ranking. A German enterprise site with 200,000 monthly visitors typically measures only 60,000-100,000 in GA4 client-side analytics; the other 100,000-140,000 declined the consent banner and are not tracked.

The EU-US Data Privacy Framework adopted in July 2023 restored a legal basis for US data transfers in principle. Google participates in DPF. This restored a legal basis for GA4 in Germany in principle, but the DSK guidance was not formally rescinded and German DPAs continue to treat GA4 with default Google data path as legally risky.

The German market response: significant migration to EU-built cookieless alternatives. Pirsch Analytics (Erlangen Germany-headquartered) is the German local champion in this category and the only Germany-headquartered top-10 web analytics platform in this ranking. Founded by a small technical team, EU-built, cookieless by design, transparent EUR pricing. Pirsch is not at Plausible or Fathom scale by global revenue but is the German-built alternative for German SaaS, content, and B2B teams that want a German vendor relationship.

etracker (Hamburg-headquartered, founded 2000) is the other Germany-headquartered web analytics vendor. etracker has a long German enterprise installed base (German retail, German media, German B2B) but is not in this top 10 by global revenue because international footprint is thinner than the global tier. For German enterprise that specifically wants a German vendor with a long German enterprise track record, etracker is the credible local alternative; this ranking calls it out as a German local champion in the localChampions list.

Matomo is widely deployed in Germany for data sovereignty: German government (federal and state, Bundesverwaltungsamt-tier), German universities (TU Munich, RWTH Aachen, Humboldt, LMU, Free University Berlin, Heidelberg, Tubingen), German regional administrations, and German enterprise wanting full data sovereignty after the DSK guidance. AWS Frankfurt or Azure Germany hosting; German consultancy ecosystem for Matomo implementation is mature.

Piwik PRO (Wroclaw Poland, EU data residency native) runs at German DAX 40 wanting a full Adobe-replacement stack with consent manager and CDP. German enterprise sales presence and Usercentrics CMP integration make Piwik PRO a credible German enterprise pick.

German B2B SaaS (Personio, Celonis, Adjust, N26, Contentful, Get Your Guide, Trade Republic, Auto1, HelloFresh, Zalando engineering) is the growth segment for the EU-built privacy-first tier. Plausible, Pirsch, Simple Analytics, and Fathom all have growing German SaaS adoption.

Adobe Analytics has German enterprise presence at DAX 40 scale (BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Bosch, Siemens, Allianz, SAP, Deutsche Bank, BASF) anchored on Adobe Experience Cloud. The DSK guidance did not target Adobe directly and Adobe Analytics has EU data residency options. German DAX 40 on Adobe typically continues Adobe with EU data residency, Adobe Germany regional support, and Usercentrics CMP integration.

Usercentrics (Munich, founded 2017, IPO'd 2021 on Frankfurt Borse) is the dominant German CMP and the required consent layer for any German site running GA4, Adobe Analytics, Pirsch (in cookie mode if used), or any vendor that uses cookies. Cookiebot has secondary German presence.

Betriebsrat (works council) consultation is the German procurement reality. Under BetrVG §87 No. 6, any tool that can monitor employee behavior requires Betriebsrat consultation and consent before deployment. Web analytics on employee-facing internal portals, intranets, or any site where employees are tracked triggers Betriebsrat review. This adds 2-4 months to German procurement timelines versus comparable US deployments.

Compliance & local rules

DSGVO: web analytics data (visitor identifiers, session events, behavioral cohort attributes) constitutes personal data; explicit lawful basis required. German DPAs treat US-based analytics (Universal Analytics and, with caveats, GA4 with default Google data path) as DSGVO-problematic; DSK May 2022 guidance reaffirmed this. EU-US Data Privacy Framework restored a legal basis for US transfers in July 2023 but DSK guidance was not formally rescinded. TTDSG §25 (December 2021): web analytics cookies require prior informed opt-in consent; no analytics-purpose exemption in German law. Opt-in rates 30-50% typical; lowest in this ranking. Usercentrics (Munich) is the dominant German CMP; integration with the analytics platform must be configured before any client-side tracking fires. Cookiebot has secondary German presence. BetrVG §87 No. 6 (Betriebsrat): any tool capable of monitoring employee behavior requires works council consultation and consent before deployment; relevant for employee-facing internal portals, intranets, and any site tracking employees. BSI C5: AWS Frankfurt holds BSI C5:2020 attestation; verify your analytics SaaS vendor's infrastructure holds BSI C5 before DAX 40 procurement sign-off. AWS Frankfurt (eu-central-1) and Azure Germany are the practical DSGVO-compliant hosting regions. EU AI Act (2025-2026): AI-driven analytics features (GA4 predictive metrics, Adobe Analytics AI-driven segmentation) require EU AI Act transparency documentation; German DSBs are raising this in 2026 RFPs. EU-US Data Privacy Framework: US vendors must participate in DPF or hold SCCs; verify current DPF participation given pending Schrems III litigation. Datenschutzkonferenz guidance is updated periodically; verify current DSK position before major procurement decisions. German Bundesdatenschutzgesetz (BDSG) §26: employee data processing in German employment contexts requires specific lawful basis; affects web analytics on internal portals.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Germany

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
10 Pirsch Analytics
German DSGVO-strict buyers, DAX 40 Betriebsrat-sensitive deployments, EU privacy-first SMB
$6 + $0/emp $6 4.7 Global; strongest in DE, AT, CH, EU
5 Matomo
OSS-first buyers, EU public sector, regulated industries needing on-premises analytics
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.4 Global; strongest in EU, US, UK, FR, DE
6 Piwik PRO
EU enterprises and public sector wanting full Adobe-replacement stack with EU data residency
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.5 Global; strongest in EU, DE, FR, PL, NL
3 Plausible Analytics
Privacy-first SaaS, content sites, indie publishers, and EU buyers
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.8 Global; strongest in EU, US, UK, CA
8 Simple Analytics
Solo founders, indie publishers, small content businesses, EU SMB
$10 + $0/emp $10 4.7 Global; strongest in EU, NL, DE, UK, US
7 Cloudflare Web Analytics
Any team already running their site behind Cloudflare
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.5 Global; everywhere Cloudflare operates
1 Google Analytics 4
Any team measuring a website; default at every tier from solo founders to Fortune 500
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.5 Global; strongest in US, EU, India, UK, JP
4 Fathom Analytics
Privacy-first SaaS, content sites, indie publishers serving mixed US-EU traffic
$15 + $0/emp $15 4.8 Global; strongest in US, CA, UK, EU, AU
2 Adobe Analytics
Enterprise buyers with dedicated analyst headcount and multi-channel attribution needs
Quote - 4.1 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, JP, AU
9 Umami
Developer-led OSS-first teams, technical SaaS, indie developer products
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, JP

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Germany actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in EUR. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (EUR) Sample Notes
Pirsch Analytics German SaaS and content €780 47 Pirsch Plus tier; EUR-billed; EU-built; cookieless; German vendor
Matomo Self-hosted (German gov, universities, enterprise) €7,800 48 Infra and ops cost only; OSS license free; AWS Frankfurt; German consultancy partners
Piwik PRO German DAX 40 and enterprise (300-2,000 employees) €26,000 24 Piwik PRO Enterprise; EUR-billed; EU data residency; AWS Frankfurt; Usercentrics integration
Plausible Analytics German SaaS and content €1,080 58 Plausible Business tier; EUR-billed; EU-built; cookieless
Simple Analytics German solo founders and small content €1,020 29 Simple Analytics Plus; EUR-billed; EU-built; cookieless
Google Analytics 4 German sites (standard tier, with legal risk flag) €0 64 GA4 standard free; DSK legal risk flagged; Usercentrics required; Betriebsrat consultation for employee-facing
Adobe Analytics German DAX 40 (1,000-10,000 employees) €195,000 31 Adobe Analytics; EUR-billed via Adobe Germany; EU data residency; BSI C5 via AWS Frankfurt
Cloudflare Web Analytics Any Cloudflare-anchored German site €0 88 Free for Cloudflare customers; EUR-equivalent zero
Local challengers

Germany-built or Germany-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Germany buyers and worth a shortlist.

Pirsch Analytics (Erlangen)

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Erlangen Germany-headquartered. The only Germany-headquartered top-10 web analytics platform in this ranking. EU-built, cookieless, RGPD-native by construction, transparent EUR pricing. Strong technical pedigree; founded by a small technical team focused on developer experience and DSGVO-compliant design. The German local champion for SaaS, content, and B2B teams wanting a German vendor relationship.

etracker (Hamburg)

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Hamburg-headquartered, founded 2000. Long German enterprise installed base (German retail, German media, German B2B). Not in this top 10 by global revenue (international footprint thinner than the global tier) but the credible German enterprise reference for buyers specifically wanting a German vendor with a long German enterprise track record. EU data residency native. DSGVO-compliant by construction. German-language platform and German enterprise support.

Matomo (German government, universities, enterprise sovereignty)

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Wellington New Zealand-headquartered open source; widely deployed in Germany for data sovereignty. German government (Bundesverwaltungsamt-tier), German universities (TU Munich, RWTH Aachen, Humboldt, LMU, Free University Berlin, Heidelberg, Tubingen), German regional administrations, and German enterprise post-DSK guidance. AWS Frankfurt hosting. German consultancy partners available.

Usercentrics (Munich CMP)

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Munich-headquartered, the largest European CMP by revenue. Not a web analytics vendor, but the required consent management layer for German enterprise web analytics. Native integrations with GA4, Adobe Analytics, Piwik PRO, Pirsch (cookie mode), and most cookie-based analytics. Founded 2017, IPO'd 2021 on Frankfurt Borse. The required German CMP layer for DSGVO-compliant deployments.

The Germany ranking

All 10, ranked for Germany

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Germany market.

#10

Pirsch Analytics

German GDPR-native cookieless analytics built by a small bootstrapped team.

Founded 2020 · Erlangen, Germany · private · 1 to 500 employees
G2 4.7 (70)
Capterra 4.7
From $6 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Pirsch Analytics

Pirsch Analytics is the German privacy-first web analytics platform, founded in 2020 by Marvin Blum and operated by Emvi Software GmbH (Erlangen, Germany). The product ships a small cookieless script (under 1 KB), runs no consent banner under TTDSG and GDPR cookieless analytics guidance, stores all data on German infrastructure (Hetzner Falkenstein), and offers a transparent flat pricing model. Strengths: German-headquartered with data hosted in Germany (the cleanest possible GDPR procurement story for DSGVO-strict buyers), bootstrapped and founder-controlled, fast script with negligible performance impact, transparent flat pricing per measured page view volume, clean modern dashboard, defensible procurement story for DAX 40 Betriebsrat-sensitive deployments, and TTDSG compliant by design (the German federal cookies law that is stricter than GDPR alone). Trade-offs: smaller vendor footprint than Plausible or Fathom, feature surface intentionally narrow, no open-source self-host option (closed-source Cloud only), Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4, and the German-only data residency may be too narrow for buyers wanting US data residency at the same vendor.

Best for

German DSGVO-strict buyers and DAX 40 Betriebsrat-sensitive deployments who want a German-hosted privacy-first analytics platform. Particularly strong for German SaaS, content sites, and indie publishers who value TTDSG compliance and German data sovereignty.

Worst for

Teams wanting open-source self-host (Plausible, Matomo, or Umami), enterprise buyers needing analyst-grade depth (Adobe or Piwik PRO), or teams wanting US data residency at the same vendor.

Strengths

  • German-headquartered with data hosted in Germany (Hetzner Falkenstein)
  • TTDSG compliant by design (stricter than GDPR alone)
  • Bootstrapped and founder-controlled
  • Cookieless script under 1 KB
  • Transparent flat pricing per page view volume
  • Clean modern dashboard with no learning curve
  • Defensible procurement for DAX 40 DSGVO-strict buyers

Weaknesses

  • Smaller vendor footprint than Plausible or Fathom
  • Feature footprint narrow next to GA4 or Matomo
  • No open-source self-host option
  • Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4
  • German-only data residency may be too narrow
  • No native session recording or heatmaps

Pricing tiers

public
  • Hobby
    Starts around 6 USD per month for 10,000 monthly page views; one site
    $6+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Starter
    Higher page view volume; multiple sites
    $12+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Business
    High page view volume; full feature set; team access
    $30+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Enterprise
    Custom contract; SAML SSO; dedicated support; AV contract
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Page view volume tier upgrades at scale
  • · No open-source self-host option
  • · German-only data residency may require additional setup for non-EU buyers
  • · Annual contracts typical 20 percent discount versus monthly

Key features

  • +Cookieless measurement with no consent banner
  • +TTDSG compliant by design
  • +Data hosted in Germany (Hetzner Falkenstein)
  • +Clean modern dashboard
  • +Custom events and conversion goals
  • +UTM tracking and referrer reports
  • +API for data export
  • +Multi-site management
  • +Email and Slack reports
  • +AV contract available for DSGVO procurement
18+ integrations
WordPressGhostWebflowShopifySlackZapiern8n
Geography
Global; strongest in DE, AT, CH, EU
#5

Matomo

Open-source self-hosted analytics with the deepest free feature set.

Founded 2007 · Wellington, New Zealand · private · 10 to 50,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (240)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Matomo

Matomo (formerly Piwik) is the long-running open-source web analytics platform, founded in 2007 by Matthieu Aubry and now operated by InnoCraft Ltd (Wellington, New Zealand) which offers Matomo Cloud as a paid managed service alongside the free self-hosted Community Edition. The product ships the deepest feature footprint in the open-source tier: native heatmaps, session recordings, A-B testing, form analytics, and goal funnels are available as add-ons, and Matomo can be configured to comply with GDPR, CCPA, PECR, and the CNIL cookieless analytics guidance with the right settings. Strengths: genuinely free self-hosted Community Edition (GPL v3), deepest open-source feature footprint, full data ownership when self-hosted, configurable for GDPR cookieless compliance, supports importing historical Universal Analytics data, and a defensible procurement story for OSS-first buyers. Trade-offs: Matomo Cloud and Matomo OSS get conflated in marketing and ship at noticeably different velocities, self-host requires real ops investment (database tuning matters at scale), UI feels dated next to Plausible or Fathom, Matomo Cloud pricing is volume-based and gets expensive at high page view counts, and the feature surface has a learning curve closer to GA4 than to the privacy-first single-page-dashboard tier.

Best for

OSS-first buyers who want full data ownership and a deep feature set in one self-hosted platform. Defensible for EU public sector, regulated industries needing on-premises analytics, and any team comfortable operating their own infrastructure to avoid SaaS data residency concerns.

Worst for

Teams wanting a single-page dashboard with no learning curve (Plausible or Fathom better), buyers without ops investment for self-hosting (Matomo Cloud works but gets expensive), or teams running deep Google Ads attribution (GA4 native integration is better).

Strengths

  • Genuinely free self-hosted Community Edition (GPL v3)
  • Deepest open-source feature footprint (heatmaps, recordings, A-B testing)
  • Full data ownership when self-hosted
  • Configurable for GDPR cookieless compliance
  • Historical Universal Analytics data import supported
  • Long-running product since 2007; stable customer base
  • Defensible OSS-first procurement story

Weaknesses

  • Matomo Cloud versus OSS distinction confuses buyers
  • Self-host requires real ops investment (database tuning matters)
  • UI feels dated next to Plausible or Fathom
  • Matomo Cloud pricing gets expensive at high page view volumes
  • Feature surface has a learning curve closer to GA4
  • Add-on modules priced separately on Cloud

Pricing tiers

public
  • Community Edition (GPL v3)
    Self-hosted; full features; requires ops investment
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Matomo Cloud (Essentials)
    Starts around 23 USD per month for 50,000 monthly hits; scales by volume
    $23+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Matomo Cloud (Business)
    Higher volumes; adds heatmaps, recordings, A-B testing modules
    $99+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Matomo On-Premises Enterprise
    Self-hosted with paid support; SLAs and dedicated assistance
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Add-on modules (heatmaps, recordings, A-B testing) priced separately on Cloud
  • · Self-host requires infrastructure plus database tuning at scale
  • · Matomo Cloud volume tiers get expensive past 1 million monthly hits
  • · Annual contracts typical 20 percent discount versus monthly

Key features

  • +Native heatmaps, session recordings, A-B testing as add-ons
  • +Form analytics and goal funnels
  • +Custom dimensions and metrics
  • +Google Ads, Microsoft Ads, and Facebook Ads attribution
  • +Historical Universal Analytics data import
  • +GDPR cookieless configuration available
  • +REST API for data export
  • +SAML SSO and audit log at Cloud and Enterprise
  • +Self-host Community Edition (GPL v3)
  • +On-premises Enterprise support tier
100+ integrations
WordPressDrupalMagentoShopifyJoomlaGoogle AdsMicrosoft AdsFacebook AdsZapier
Geography
Global; strongest in EU, US, UK, FR, DE
#6

Piwik PRO

EU data residency native enterprise analytics with consent and CDP.

Founded 2013 · Wroclaw, Poland · private · 50 to 50,000+ employees
G2 4.5 (170)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Piwik PRO

Piwik PRO is the Polish enterprise analytics platform, founded in 2013 as a spinoff from the original Piwik project to focus on enterprise and EU data residency requirements. The product ships a full Adobe-replacement stack: web analytics, consent manager, customer data platform, and tag manager in a single suite, with EU data residency native (Frankfurt, Germany default) and a defensible procurement story for European enterprises that want to leave Google Analytics and Adobe behind. Strengths: EU data residency native (Frankfurt) at every tier, full suite (analytics plus consent plus CDP plus tag manager) under one license, defensible procurement story for EU enterprise and public sector, configurable for GDPR cookieless compliance, server-side measurement option for ad-blocker resilience, and a stable Polish vendor footprint with EU-based support. Trade-offs: Free tier exists but feature-limited (real evaluations need Core or Enterprise), enterprise pricing is custom-quote and not transparent, UI is functional rather than slick, integration ecosystem narrower than GA4 or Adobe Analytics, and the consent-and-CDP bundle adds complexity that smaller buyers may not need.

Best for

EU enterprises and public sector buyers who want a full Adobe-replacement stack with EU data residency native, no US data path, and consent plus CDP bundled. Particularly strong for German DAX 40, French public sector, and EU regulated industries (healthcare, financial services).

Worst for

SMB and indie buyers (Plausible or Fathom ship cleaner), teams running deep Google Ads attribution (GA4), or buyers wanting a single-page dashboard with no learning curve.

Strengths

  • EU data residency native (Frankfurt, Germany) at every tier
  • Full suite: analytics, consent manager, CDP, tag manager
  • Defensible procurement for EU enterprise and public sector
  • Polish-headquartered; ANSSI and BSI aligned
  • Configurable for GDPR cookieless compliance
  • Server-side measurement option for ad-blocker resilience
  • Stable vendor footprint with EU-based support

Weaknesses

  • Free tier feature-limited; real evaluations need Core or Enterprise
  • Enterprise pricing custom-quote and not transparent
  • UI is functional rather than slick
  • Integration ecosystem narrower than GA4 or Adobe Analytics
  • Consent-and-CDP bundle adds complexity for small buyers
  • Learning curve closer to Adobe Analytics than to Plausible

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Core (Free)
    Free tier; limited to 500,000 monthly actions; analytics only
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Core (paid)
    Starts around 590 USD per month; higher action volume; full analytics module
    $590+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Enterprise
    Custom contract; full suite (analytics, consent, CDP, tag manager); SAML SSO, dedicated support, EU data residency
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Enterprise pricing opaque; varies by action volume and modules
  • · Consent manager and CDP modules add to Enterprise contract
  • · Implementation services typically 20,000 to 60,000 USD
  • · Server-side measurement infrastructure adds operational complexity
  • · Annual contracts typical 15 percent discount versus monthly

Key features

  • +Web analytics with full Adobe-replacement depth
  • +Consent manager (GDPR, CCPA, TTDSG)
  • +Customer data platform with audience segmentation
  • +Tag manager
  • +EU data residency native (Frankfurt)
  • +Server-side measurement option
  • +Custom dimensions, metrics, and reports
  • +SAML SSO and audit log at Enterprise
  • +REST API and Data Studio connector
  • +Multi-property and multi-user access controls
60+ integrations
WordPressShopifySalesforceHubSpotMagentoDrupalGoogle AdsFacebook AdsZapier
Geography
Global; strongest in EU, DE, FR, PL, NL
#3

Plausible Analytics

Cookieless, GDPR-native web analytics with the cleanest privacy story.

Founded 2019 · Tallinn, Estonia · private · 1 to 1,000 employees
G2 4.8 (320)
Capterra 4.8
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Plausible Analytics

Plausible Analytics is the leading cookieless, privacy-first web analytics platform, founded in Estonia in 2019 by Uku Taht and Marko Saric and bootstrapped to profitability without venture funding. The product ships a small (under 1 KB) script, runs no cookies, requires no consent banner under the CNIL 2022 cookieless analytics guidance, stores data in the EU (Frankfurt and Hetzner Falkenstein), and is genuinely open-source (AGPL Community Edition self-host plus a paid managed Cloud). Strengths: cleanest GDPR posture in the category, transparent flat-rate pricing per measured site or pageview volume, fast script with negligible performance impact, single-page dashboard that loads in one screen with no learning curve, and a founder voice that publicly commits to no acquisition, no tracking, no data sale. Trade-offs: feature footprint is intentionally narrow (no native funnels at lower tiers, no session recording, no heatmaps), Google Ads attribution is not as deep as GA4, customer-data platform integration is lighter than the enterprise tier, and the self-host setup requires real ops investment.

Best for

Privacy-first SaaS, content sites, indie publishers, and EU buyers who want a clean GDPR-native dashboard with no consent friction. The default privacy-first pick for teams that have given up on the GA4-plus-consent-banner tradeoff. Particularly strong for European businesses serving EU traffic.

Worst for

Teams running deep Google Ads attribution (GA4 is the right call), enterprise buyers needing analyst-grade segmentation (Adobe Analytics or Piwik PRO), or teams wanting session recording and heatmaps in one tool (Matomo).

Strengths

  • Cleanest GDPR posture in the category; no cookies, no consent banner
  • Estonian-headquartered; data hosted in Frankfurt and Hetzner EU
  • Open-source Community Edition (AGPL) for self-host
  • Transparent flat-rate pricing per measured pageview volume
  • Script under 1 KB; negligible page-performance impact
  • Single-page dashboard with no learning curve
  • Bootstrapped and profitable; no acquisition pressure

Weaknesses

  • Feature footprint narrow next to GA4 (no native funnels at lower tiers)
  • No native session recording, heatmaps, or A-B testing
  • Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4 native integration
  • Customer data platform integration thinner than enterprise tier
  • Self-host setup requires real ops investment
  • Higher pageview volumes get expensive on Cloud tier

Pricing tiers

public
  • Community Edition (AGPL)
    Self-hosted; full features; requires ops investment
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Growth (Cloud)
    Starts at 9 USD per month for 10,000 monthly pageviews; scales by pageview volume
    $9+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Business (Cloud)
    Adds funnels, custom properties, ecommerce revenue, and team plan
    $19+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Enterprise
    Custom contract; SAML SSO, dedicated support, custom data residency
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Pageview volume tier upgrades at scale; high-traffic sites hit Business tier quickly
  • · Self-host requires infrastructure plus ops effort
  • · No native session recording or heatmaps; add separate tool if needed
  • · Annual contracts typical 33 percent discount versus monthly

Key features

  • +Cookieless measurement (no consent banner under CNIL 2022 guidance)
  • +Single-page dashboard with traffic sources, pages, locations, devices
  • +Custom events and goals
  • +Funnels at the Business tier
  • +Ecommerce revenue tracking at Business tier
  • +API for data export
  • +Email and Slack weekly reports
  • +Public dashboards for shared sites
  • +Open-source Community Edition (AGPL)
  • +GDPR, CCPA, PECR compliant by default
25+ integrations
WordPressGhostWebflowShopifySlackZapiern8nMake
Geography
Global; strongest in EU, US, UK, CA
#8

Simple Analytics

Dutch privacy-first analytics with the cleanest single-screen dashboard.

Founded 2018 · Amsterdam, Netherlands · private · 1 to 200 employees
G2 4.7 (120)
Capterra 4.7
From $10 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Simple Analytics

Simple Analytics is the Dutch privacy-first web analytics platform, founded in 2018 by Adriaan van Rossum and bootstrapped to profitability. The product ships a cookieless script, runs no consent banner under EU DPA interpretations, hosts all data in the EU (Netherlands), and offers the simplest single-screen dashboard in the category. Strengths: Dutch-headquartered with EU data residency native, bootstrapped and founder-controlled, transparent flat pricing, simplest UI in the category (genuinely one screen for the full dashboard), strong founder voice on privacy, GDPR compliant by default with no configuration required, and a defensible procurement story for solo founders, indie publishers, and small content businesses. Trade-offs: feature footprint intentionally narrow (no funnels at lower tiers, no session recording, no heatmaps, lighter event tracking than Plausible at the upper tiers), no open-source self-host option (closed-source Cloud only), Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4, smaller integration ecosystem than the enterprise tier, and the simplest-dashboard positioning is a real trade-off if you need analyst depth.

Best for

Solo founders, indie publishers, small content businesses, and EU SMB buyers who want a privacy-first dashboard with no learning curve and no consent friction. Particularly strong for buyers who explicitly value a single-screen view over feature breadth.

Worst for

Teams needing deep funnels and segmentation (Plausible Business or Matomo), buyers wanting open-source self-host (Plausible, Matomo, or Umami), or teams running deep Google Ads attribution (GA4).

Strengths

  • Dutch-headquartered; EU data residency native (Netherlands)
  • Bootstrapped and founder-controlled; no acquisition pressure
  • Simplest single-screen dashboard in the category
  • Cookieless script; no consent banner needed
  • GDPR compliant by default with no configuration
  • Transparent flat pricing per measured site
  • Strong founder voice on privacy

Weaknesses

  • Feature footprint narrow next to Plausible at upper tiers
  • No open-source self-host option
  • Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4
  • Smaller integration ecosystem
  • Lighter event tracking than Plausible Business
  • Simplest-dashboard positioning trades off analyst depth

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Starts at 10 USD per month for one site and 100,000 monthly pageviews
    $10+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Business
    Up to 1 million monthly pageviews; multiple sites; full feature set
    $49+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Enterprise
    Custom contract; higher volume; SAML SSO; dedicated support
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Pageview volume tier upgrades at scale
  • · No open-source self-host option
  • · Annual contracts typical 17 percent discount versus monthly
  • · No native session recording or heatmaps

Key features

  • +Cookieless measurement with no consent banner
  • +Single-screen dashboard with traffic sources, pages, locations
  • +Custom events and goals
  • +Email weekly reports
  • +Public dashboards for shared sites
  • +EU data residency native (Netherlands)
  • +API for data export
  • +GDPR, CCPA, PECR compliant by default
  • +GDPR-friendly visitor referrer tracking
  • +UTM tag tracking
15+ integrations
WordPressGhostWebflowShopifySquarespaceSlackZapier
Geography
Global; strongest in EU, NL, DE, UK, US
#7

Cloudflare Web Analytics

Free server-side web analytics for any site behind Cloudflare.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · public · 1 to 100,000+ employees
G2 4.5 (280)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Cloudflare Web Analytics

Cloudflare Web Analytics is the free, server-side web analytics surface that ships with any Cloudflare-fronted site, launched in 2020 and steadily expanded through 2024-2026. The product is built on Cloudflare edge server-side measurement (no JavaScript script required for Cloudflare-fronted sites), which means it captures visitors that ad blockers and consent-banner rejections would otherwise hide. Strengths: genuinely free at every tier, server-side measurement avoids ad blockers and consent-banner data loss, fast performance impact (zero client-side script weight for Cloudflare-fronted sites), defensible procurement story for buyers who are already on Cloudflare, basic dashboard covers traffic sources, pages, devices, and locations, and Cloudflare publicly commits to privacy (no third-party tracking, no cookies). Trade-offs: feature footprint is intentionally thin (no custom events at typical scale, limited funnel and conversion tracking, no native A-B testing), works best for sites behind Cloudflare (script-based measurement exists but is lighter), retention and granularity limited at the free tier, and the dashboard is functional rather than slick next to Plausible or Fathom.

Best for

Any team already running their site behind Cloudflare who wants a free, privacy-first baseline analytics surface that captures the full visitor population. Strong as a second tool alongside GA4 or a privacy-first vendor for cross-validation.

Worst for

Teams not on Cloudflare (script-based measurement exists but is thinner), teams needing deep funnel or attribution analysis (GA4, Adobe, or Piwik PRO), or buyers wanting custom event volume at scale.

Strengths

  • Genuinely free at every tier for Cloudflare-fronted sites
  • Server-side measurement avoids ad blockers and consent-banner loss
  • Zero client-side script weight for Cloudflare-fronted sites
  • Privacy-first: no third-party tracking, no cookies
  • Defensible procurement story for Cloudflare buyers
  • GDPR, CCPA, and PECR compliant by default
  • Captures traffic that GA4 and other tools miss

Weaknesses

  • Feature footprint thin; no native custom events at scale
  • Limited funnel and conversion tracking
  • No native A-B testing or session recording
  • Works best for sites behind Cloudflare
  • Retention and granularity limited at free tier
  • Dashboard functional rather than slick

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free (Cloudflare-fronted sites)
    Free at every Cloudflare tier; server-side measurement; basic dashboard
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Pro (bundled with Cloudflare Pro)
    Cloudflare Pro plan; longer retention and more granular reports
    $20+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Business (bundled with Cloudflare Business)
    Cloudflare Business plan; enterprise features bundled
    $200+$0 /mo +/emp
Watch for
  • · Best value requires sites behind Cloudflare; non-Cloudflare sites get thinner script measurement
  • · Custom events and funnels limited at free tier
  • · Higher retention and granularity gated to Cloudflare paid plans
  • · Enterprise contracts negotiated with Cloudflare sales

Key features

  • +Server-side measurement for Cloudflare-fronted sites
  • +Zero client-side script weight option
  • +Traffic sources, pages, devices, locations
  • +No cookies; no third-party tracking
  • +GDPR, CCPA, PECR compliant by default
  • +Cloudflare dashboard integration
  • +API access via Cloudflare API
  • +Privacy-first by design; no PII collection
  • +Captures ad-blocker and consent-rejection traffic
  • +Free at every Cloudflare tier
50+ integrations
Cloudflare WorkersCloudflare PagesCloudflare R2WordPressWebflowZapier
Geography
Global; everywhere Cloudflare operates
#1

Google Analytics 4

The default web analytics platform with real friction in 2026.

Founded 2005 · Mountain View, CA · public · 1 to 100,000 employees
G2 4.5 (7,800)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Google Analytics 4

Google Analytics 4 is the default web analytics platform on the modern web, used on a majority of measured properties globally and free at the entry tier. GA4 replaced Universal Analytics, which sunset on July 1, 2023 after roughly 18 months of migration warnings; the forced migration is the defining buyer story of the category through 2024-2026 and remains the largest single complaint pattern in the review corpus. Strengths: free at the standard tier, deepest integration with Google Ads (attribution, audience export, smart bidding), Search Console (the only practical way to join organic search query data with on-site behavior), BigQuery (free raw event export at GA4, a paid feature in UA 360), and Looker Studio. Trade-offs: GA4 ships an event-based data model that is genuinely different from the session-and-pageview model marketers learned in UA, the UI was widely criticized at launch and through 2024 for being harder to navigate, the consent-banner tax loses 20 to 40 percent of measurable EU visitors on Reject-all clicks, the Austrian DPA (January 2022), French CNIL (February 2022), and Italian Garante (June 2022) all ruled Universal Analytics illegal under GDPR before the EU-US Data Privacy Framework restored a legal basis in July 2023, and the GA4 UI is still not where buyers want it on the basics like landing page reports and conversion funnels.

Best for

Any team that already runs Google Ads, needs Search Console integration, or accepts the consent-banner tax as a cost of doing business. The honest default for the majority of buyers despite real GA4 UX complaints. Particularly strong for ecommerce, content sites with paid acquisition, and SaaS teams that want one free analytics tool plus paid layers on top.

Worst for

Privacy-strict EU buyers, teams that have abandoned consent banners as a strategy, regulated buyers wanting EU-only data residency at the standard tier, or teams that want a clean dashboard without the GA4 learning curve.

Strengths

  • Free at the standard tier; no per-seat or per-event fee at typical scale
  • Deepest Google Ads integration (attribution, audience export, smart bidding)
  • Search Console join for organic search query plus on-site behavior
  • Free raw event export to BigQuery (paid feature in UA 360)
  • Looker Studio native connector for dashboards
  • Used by the majority of measured properties on the open web
  • Predictive metrics and machine-learning audiences at no extra cost

Weaknesses

  • Forced Universal Analytics sunset July 1, 2023 broke buyer trust
  • GA4 UI widely criticized for harder navigation versus UA
  • Event-based data model has a real learning curve for UA-trained marketers
  • Consent-banner tax loses 20 to 40 percent of measurable EU visitors
  • Austrian, French, and Italian DPA rulings against UA (2022) not formally rescinded
  • Data thresholding hides reports on small audiences with no opt-out at standard tier
  • Sampling at high volume at the standard tier; GA4 360 required to avoid it

Pricing tiers

partial
  • GA4 Standard
    Free; data thresholding and sampling at high volume; up to 10 million events per month free
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • GA4 360 (Enterprise)
    Annual contract starting around 150,000 USD; unsampled reports, higher quotas, SLAs, BigQuery export with no caps
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Consent banner data loss; 20 to 40 percent of EU visitors lost on Reject-all clicks
  • · Migration cost from Universal Analytics; reporting continuity broken by event-model change
  • · GA4 360 enterprise pricing opaque; starts around 150,000 USD annual at typical mid-market
  • · BigQuery storage and query costs at high event volume
  • · Consent Mode v2 implementation effort to recover modeled conversions

Key features

  • +Event-based data model with custom events
  • +Cross-platform measurement (web plus app via Firebase)
  • +Google Ads attribution and audience export
  • +Search Console integration for organic search data
  • +Free BigQuery raw event export at standard tier
  • +Looker Studio native connector
  • +Predictive metrics and machine-learning audiences
  • +Consent Mode v2 for modeled conversions
  • +Data Studio funnels and path exploration
  • +Built-in segments and audiences
500+ integrations
Google AdsSearch ConsoleBigQueryLooker StudioFirebaseSegmentHubSpotSalesforceShopifyWordPress
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, India, UK, JP
#4

Fathom Analytics

Canadian privacy-first analytics with isolated EU data path.

Founded 2018 · Vancouver, Canada · private · 1 to 500 employees
G2 4.8 (180)
Capterra 4.8
From $15 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Fathom Analytics

Fathom Analytics is the leading Canadian privacy-first web analytics platform, founded in 2018 by Jack Ellis and Paul Jarvis and bootstrapped to profitability. The product ships a small cookieless script, runs no consent banner under most EU DPA interpretations, and offers a defensible EU Isolation data path that keeps EU visitor data inside the EU on isolated infrastructure (a meaningful procurement story for GDPR-strict buyers). Strengths: bootstrapped and founder-controlled, transparent flat pricing per page view volume, EU Isolation data path for strict GDPR procurement, fast and lightweight script, single-page dashboard with no learning curve, strong founder voice on privacy and data ethics, and a defensible procurement story for buyers who want a non-EU-but-not-US vendor (Canada is GDPR adequate under the European Commission decision since 2002). Trade-offs: feature footprint intentionally narrow (no session recording, no heatmaps, no native funnels at lower tiers), Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4, no native open-source self-host option (closed-source Cloud only), and higher page view volumes get expensive at the upper tiers.

Best for

Privacy-first buyers who want a non-EU-but-not-US vendor (Canada is GDPR adequate). Particularly strong for SaaS, content sites, and indie publishers serving mixed US, EU, and Canadian traffic. The right call for buyers who value founder-controlled, bootstrapped vendors.

Worst for

Buyers wanting open-source self-host (Plausible, Matomo, or Umami), enterprise buyers needing analyst-grade segmentation (Adobe Analytics or Piwik PRO), or teams running deep Google Ads attribution (GA4).

Strengths

  • Canadian-headquartered; GDPR-adequate jurisdiction under EU Commission decision
  • EU Isolation data path for GDPR-strict procurement
  • Bootstrapped and founder-controlled; no acquisition pressure
  • Cookieless script; no consent banner under most EU DPA interpretations
  • Transparent flat pricing per page view volume
  • Single-page dashboard with no learning curve
  • Strong founder voice on privacy and data ethics

Weaknesses

  • Feature footprint narrow next to GA4
  • No native session recording, heatmaps, or A-B testing
  • No open-source self-host option (closed-source Cloud only)
  • Google Ads attribution lighter than GA4
  • Higher page view volumes get expensive at upper tiers
  • Customer data platform integration lighter than enterprise tier

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Starts at 15 USD per month for 100,000 monthly page views; scales by volume
    $15+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Growth
    Higher page view volumes; unlimited sites; full feature set
    $50+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Enterprise
    Custom contract; SAML SSO, dedicated support, EU Isolation infrastructure
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Page view volume tier upgrades at scale
  • · EU Isolation infrastructure may carry a premium at Enterprise
  • · No open-source self-host option; locked into Cloud
  • · Annual contracts typical 20 percent discount versus monthly

Key features

  • +Cookieless measurement with no consent banner
  • +EU Isolation data path for GDPR-strict buyers
  • +Single-page dashboard with traffic sources, pages, locations, devices
  • +Custom events and goals
  • +Email reports and weekly summaries
  • +API for data export
  • +Unlimited sites at the Growth tier
  • +Public dashboards for shared sites
  • +Uptime monitoring at Growth tier
  • +GDPR, CCPA, PECR compliant by default
20+ integrations
WordPressGhostWebflowShopifySquarespaceCarrdSlackZapier
Geography
Global; strongest in US, CA, UK, EU, AU
#2

Adobe Analytics

Enterprise web analytics leader with a slow Customer Journey Analytics shift.

Founded 1996 · San Jose, CA · public · 500 to 100,000+ employees
G2 4.1 (980)
Capterra 4.5
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Adobe Analytics

Adobe Analytics is the enterprise analytics leader, descended from Omniture (founded 1996, acquired by Adobe in 2009 for 1.8 billion USD) and now sold as part of the Adobe Experience Cloud. The product anchors deep multi-channel attribution, granular segmentation, calculated metrics, and the strongest enterprise analyst workflow in the category. Adobe has been steering customers toward Customer Journey Analytics (CJA), a newer product built on the Adobe Experience Platform that offers cross-channel reporting beyond the website surface; the strategic shift is real and slow, and many existing Adobe Analytics customers are unsure when or whether to migrate. Strengths: deepest enterprise segmentation and calculated-metric model, strongest analyst workflow (Workspace), Adobe Experience Cloud integration (Target, AEM, Campaign), FedRAMP-ready posture, and a defensible enterprise procurement story. Trade-offs: list pricing is opaque, contracts run six-figure to seven-figure annually, the UI has been allowed to coast, Marketo retention concerns surfaced after the Adobe acquisition in 2018, the Customer Journey Analytics shift creates real migration uncertainty, and renewal pricing has crept up across the customer base through 2023-2025.

Best for

Enterprise buyers running multi-channel attribution at scale, particularly those already on the Adobe Experience Cloud (Target, AEM, Campaign). Defensible for Fortune 500 and large mid-market with dedicated analyst headcount and complex cross-domain measurement needs.

Worst for

SMB and lower mid-market buyers (GA4 free is the rational call), privacy-first buyers (the privacy tier ships cleaner), or any team without a dedicated analyst headcount to use the depth Adobe ships.

Strengths

  • Deepest enterprise segmentation and calculated-metric model
  • Strongest analyst workflow in the category (Workspace)
  • Adobe Experience Cloud integration (Target, AEM, Campaign)
  • FedRAMP-ready posture for US federal buyers
  • Defensible enterprise procurement story for Adobe-stack buyers
  • Server-side data collection (Web SDK) reduces ad-blocker losses
  • Strong cross-domain and multi-site reporting

Weaknesses

  • List pricing opaque; contracts run six-figure to seven-figure annually
  • UI feels dated next to GA4 and the privacy-first tier
  • Customer Journey Analytics shift creates migration uncertainty
  • Post-Marketo retention concerns since the 2018 acquisition
  • Renewal pricing crept up through 2023-2025
  • Steep learning curve for analysts new to the platform
  • Implementation cost is a real line item (typically 100,000 USD plus)

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Select
    Entry enterprise tier; server-call commitment, Analysis Workspace, segmentation
    Quote
  • Prime
    Adds calculated metrics, attribution IQ, cross-device, Anomaly Detection
    Quote
  • Ultimate
    Adds Customer Journey Analytics, Data Workbench, full Experience Platform integration
    Quote
Watch for
  • · List pricing opaque; deal size varies widely by server-call volume
  • · Implementation services typically 100,000 USD plus for enterprise rollout
  • · Customer Journey Analytics is a separate SKU; migration adds project cost
  • · Adobe Experience Platform license required for full CJA value
  • · Renewal pricing crept up across the customer base through 2023-2025

Key features

  • +Analysis Workspace for drag-and-drop analyst workflow
  • +Segmentation and calculated metrics
  • +Attribution IQ with multi-touch attribution models
  • +Anomaly Detection and Contribution Analysis
  • +Adobe Web SDK for server-side data collection
  • +Cross-device and cross-domain measurement
  • +Customer Journey Analytics integration (separate SKU)
  • +Adobe Experience Cloud integration (Target, AEM, Campaign)
  • +REST API and Data Warehouse exports
  • +SAML SSO, audit log, FedRAMP-ready posture
200+ integrations
Adobe TargetAdobe Experience ManagerAdobe CampaignSalesforceMicrosoft DynamicsBigQuerySnowflakeTableauPower BI
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, JP, AU
#9

Umami

MIT-licensed open-source web analytics with a clean self-host story.

Founded 2020 · Los Angeles, CA · private · 1 to 1,000 employees
G2 4.6 (90)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Umami

Umami is the MIT-licensed open-source web analytics platform, founded in 2020 by Mike Cao and positioned as a developer-friendly alternative to Google Analytics that is genuinely free to self-host. The product ships a small cookieless script, runs no consent banner, stores data wherever the operator chooses (full data ownership), and offers a paid Umami Cloud tier for teams that prefer managed hosting. Strengths: MIT-licensed open-source (most permissive license in the category), genuinely free to self-host, clean modern UI that loads fast, developer-friendly architecture (PostgreSQL or MySQL backend, Docker-friendly), no consent banner needed under EU DPA guidance, defensible procurement story for OSS-first technical teams, and Umami Cloud is transparent and affordable. Trade-offs: smaller vendor footprint than Plausible or Fathom, feature surface intentionally narrow (no native funnels at lower tiers, no session recording, no heatmaps), self-host requires real ops investment, integration ecosystem narrower than the enterprise tier, and Umami Cloud is a lighter operation than the privacy-first SaaS leaders.

Best for

Developer-led OSS-first teams who want a clean, modern analytics dashboard to self-host on their own infrastructure. Particularly strong for technical SaaS, indie developer products, and teams that value the MIT license over the AGPL Plausible self-host model.

Worst for

Non-technical buyers (Plausible Cloud or Simple Analytics simpler), teams needing deep funnel and segmentation (Plausible Business or Matomo), or enterprises wanting strong vendor support (Plausible or Piwik PRO).

Strengths

  • MIT-licensed open-source (most permissive license in category)
  • Genuinely free to self-host
  • Clean modern UI that loads fast
  • Developer-friendly architecture (PostgreSQL, MySQL, Docker)
  • Cookieless script; no consent banner needed
  • Full data ownership when self-hosted
  • Umami Cloud is transparent and affordable

Weaknesses

  • Smaller vendor footprint than Plausible or Fathom
  • Feature footprint narrow next to Matomo
  • No native session recording or heatmaps
  • Self-host requires real ops investment
  • Integration ecosystem narrower than enterprise tier
  • Umami Cloud lighter operation than Plausible Cloud

Pricing tiers

public
  • Self-host (MIT)
    Self-hosted; MIT-licensed; full features; requires ops
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Umami Cloud Hobby
    Free tier up to 10,000 monthly events; managed hosting
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Umami Cloud Pro
    Starts at 20 USD per month; higher event volumes; full feature set
    $20+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Umami Cloud Enterprise
    Custom contract; high volume; SAML SSO; dedicated support
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Self-host requires infrastructure plus ops effort
  • · Event volume tier upgrades at scale on Cloud
  • · No native session recording or heatmaps
  • · Smaller integration ecosystem than enterprise tier

Key features

  • +Cookieless measurement with no consent banner
  • +Clean modern dashboard with traffic sources, pages, devices
  • +Custom events and goals
  • +PostgreSQL or MySQL backend (self-host)
  • +Docker and Docker Compose deployment
  • +REST API for data export
  • +MIT-licensed open-source
  • +Umami Cloud managed option
  • +Multi-website management
  • +GDPR, CCPA, PECR compliant by default
20+ integrations
WordPressGhostWebflowNext.jsAstroDockerVercelNetlify
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, JP

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

After the DSK guidance against GA4, what should a German site replace it with?
DSK (Datenschutzkonferenz, the joint body of German federal and state DPAs) issued guidance in May 2022 confirming that analytics cookies require opt-in consent with no analytics-purpose exemption, and treating US-based analytics tools (including Universal Analytics and, with caveats, GA4 with default Google data path) as DSGVO-problematic. The EU-US Data Privacy Framework restored a legal basis in July 2023 but DSK guidance was not formally rescinded. The credible German replacements are: (1) Pirsch Analytics (Erlangen Germany-headquartered, the German local champion in this ranking, EU-built, cookieless) for German SaaS and content sites wanting a German vendor; (2) Matomo self-hosted on AWS Frankfurt for German government, universities, and enterprise wanting full data sovereignty; (3) Piwik PRO (Polish, EU-data-residency-native) for DAX 40 wanting full Adobe-replacement stack with consent manager and CDP; (4) Plausible (Tallinn Estonia, EU-built, cookieless) for German SaaS wanting transparent EUR pricing; (5) etracker (Hamburg, the other German vendor, long German enterprise track record). For German sites that retain GA4 for Google Ads attribution, configure Usercentrics with explicit opt-in consent, document the legal risk for the German DSB, and complete Betriebsrat consultation for any employee-facing analytics surface.
Is Pirsch ready for German enterprise or is it still a SaaS-tier tool in 2026?
Pirsch is Erlangen Germany-headquartered and is the only Germany-headquartered top-10 web analytics platform in this ranking, but the honest 2026 position is that Pirsch is best for German SaaS, content, and B2B sites at the SMB-to-mid-market tier (5-500 employees) wanting a German vendor relationship with DSGVO-native architecture. For German DAX 40 enterprise wanting a full Adobe-replacement stack with consent manager and CDP, Piwik PRO is the more enterprise-mature alternative. For German enterprise wanting a long German enterprise track record, etracker (Hamburg) is the credible alternative (listed as a German local champion in this ranking; not in the top 10 by global revenue). For German government, universities, and enterprise wanting full data sovereignty, Matomo self-hosted on AWS Frankfurt is the documented path. Pirsch is genuinely the right Germany-built pick at SaaS scale; enterprise should evaluate Pirsch against Piwik PRO and etracker before committing.
How does the Betriebsrat consultation requirement affect German web analytics procurement?
Under BetrVG §87 No. 6, any tool that can monitor employee behavior requires Betriebsrat (works council) consultation and consent before deployment. Web analytics on German employee-facing internal portals, intranets, employee self-service systems, or any site where employees are identifiable triggers Betriebsrat review. The typical German procurement requirement: (1) DSB sign-off on the data processing including documented lawful basis under DSGVO and BDSG §26 for employee data; (2) Betriebsrat consultation including disclosure of what employee data the analytics platform captures (visitor identifier, session events, time-on-page); (3) Betriebsrat consent or Betriebsvereinbarung (works council agreement) governing usage; (4) employee-facing documentation of monitoring scope. This typically adds 2-4 months to German procurement timelines versus US deployments. Teams that cannot afford the delay sometimes scope initial deployments to customer-facing only (no employee identifier capture) to avoid Betriebsrat triggers; this constrains analytics on employee-facing surfaces but does not block customer-facing marketing analytics.
Should I just use GA4, or do I need a privacy-first second tool?
For most teams that already run Google Ads or need Search Console integration, GA4 remains the rational default at the free tier. The honest case for a privacy-first second tool: you serve significant EU traffic, you have given up on the consent-banner-to-data tradeoff, you want a dashboard without the GA4 learning curve, or your brand promises privacy and the product should reflect it. The standard pattern in 2026 is to run both: GA4 for Google Ads attribution and Search Console join, plus Plausible, Fathom, Pirsch, or Simple Analytics for the metrics that actually inform product and marketing decisions without consent friction. Total cost stays modest because the privacy-first tier starts at 6 to 15 USD per month at indie scale.
What happened with Universal Analytics and why does it still come up?
Universal Analytics, the original Google Analytics product that millions of sites used from 2012 onward, was sunset on July 1, 2023 (free tier) and July 1, 2024 (UA 360 enterprise tier). Google forced the migration to Google Analytics 4, which ships a fundamentally different event-based data model. The migration was the largest single trust-damaging event in the category for a decade: long-standing reports stopped working, year-over-year comparisons broke, and many marketers found GA4 harder to navigate than UA. The sunset is also why the privacy-first tier (Plausible, Fathom, Matomo, Pirsch, Simple Analytics, Piwik PRO, Umami) grew so quickly through 2023-2024; buyers forced to re-platform anyway used the moment to evaluate alternatives. The trust damage is still visible in GA4 review sentiment in 2026.
Was Google Analytics actually illegal in the EU, and is it now?
Yes and partly. The Austrian DPA in January 2022, the French CNIL in February 2022, and the Italian Garante in June 2022 each ruled that the use of Universal Analytics constituted an unlawful transfer of personal data to the United States under GDPR, following the Schrems II ruling in July 2020 that invalidated the EU-US Privacy Shield framework. Those rulings forced many EU site operators to migrate off Universal Analytics. The EU-US Data Privacy Framework adopted by the European Commission in July 2023 restored a legal basis for transfers, and Google Analytics 4 is generally treated as lawful in the EU today provided you implement Consent Mode and run a consent banner. The 2022 DPA rulings were never formally rescinded, however, and EU privacy advocates argue the DPF could be challenged again (Schrems III is a real possibility). Buyers wanting full insulation from that risk run a privacy-first second tool.
Do Plausible, Fathom, Pirsch, and Simple Analytics actually skip the consent banner legally?
Generally yes, under the CNIL February 2022 guidance and corresponding guidance from other EU DPAs. The legal framework: a consent banner is required when you set cookies or track identifiers that uniquely identify a visitor across sessions or sites. Cookieless analytics tools that aggregate visitor data without any persistent identifier (no cookies, no fingerprinting, no cross-site tracking) fall into a CNIL-defined exempt category. Plausible, Fathom, Pirsch, Simple Analytics, Umami, and Matomo with the right configuration all claim compliance with this exemption. Specific implementation matters: do not enable IP-address logging if your DPA does not have a documented anonymization step, do not enable session-replay add-ons that change the legal posture, and document the configuration in your Record of Processing Activities. For German TTDSG compliance, Pirsch is the cleanest by design.
How does Adobe Analytics compare to GA4 in 2026?
Different tools for different buyers. Adobe Analytics ships deeper enterprise depth: stronger segmentation and calculated metrics, the Workspace analyst workflow, multi-touch attribution beyond GA4 native, and tighter integration with Adobe Experience Cloud (Target, AEM, Campaign). GA4 ships free at the standard tier, deeper Google Ads attribution, free BigQuery raw event export, and Search Console join. The honest framing: Adobe Analytics is right for enterprise buyers with dedicated analyst headcount, complex multi-channel attribution, and an existing Adobe Experience Cloud investment; GA4 is right for everyone else including most mid-market buyers. Adobe has been steering customers toward Customer Journey Analytics (a separate SKU on Adobe Experience Platform) since 2022, which creates real migration uncertainty for existing Adobe Analytics customers and is a buyer concern through 2024-2026.
What is the Matomo Cloud versus Matomo OSS distinction and which should I use?
Matomo ships two products that get conflated. Matomo Community Edition is the free GPL v3 open-source web analytics platform that you self-host on your own infrastructure: full feature footprint, full data ownership, requires real ops investment. Matomo Cloud is the paid managed offering operated by InnoCraft Ltd (the company behind Matomo): subscription pricing per monthly hit volume, starts around 23 USD per month at the entry tier, adds modules like heatmaps and session recordings as separate paid extras. The two tiers ship at noticeably different velocities and the marketing does not always make the distinction clear. Honest rule: pick Community Edition if you have ops capacity and want full data ownership; pick Matomo Cloud if you want managed hosting and accept the volume-based pricing; do not pick Matomo if your team prefers the single-page-dashboard simplicity of Plausible or Fathom.
How does web analytics overlap with product analytics, marketing analytics, and CDPs?
Four overlapping layers that most modern teams run together. Web analytics (this page) measures the website surface (sessions, pages, conversions, traffic sources). Product analytics (Top 10 Product Analytics Software) measures in-app behavior at the event level (Mixpanel, Amplitude, PostHog), with cohort analysis, funnels, and retention. Marketing analytics (Top 10 Marketing Analytics Software) measures cross-channel attribution and spend (paid search, paid social, organic). A customer data platform (Top 10 Customer Data Platforms) unifies identity across all of those surfaces and powers downstream activation. The architecture decision is which layers you buy native (GA4 plus Google Ads native attribution covers the basic version), which layers you buy dedicated (Mixpanel or Amplitude for product analytics; Segment or RudderStack for CDP), and where the privacy-first tools fit (typically alongside or replacing GA4 on the website surface).
How much should I budget for web analytics software in 2026?
Verified budget ranges. Solo or indie publisher: 0 to 20 USD per month, GA4 free plus optionally Plausible Starter, Fathom Starter, Pirsch Hobby, or Simple Analytics Starter. SMB (under 50 employees): 0 to 200 USD per month, GA4 free plus a privacy-first second tool at the Business tier, plus optionally Matomo Cloud or Umami Cloud. Mid-market (50 to 500 employees): 200 to 4,000 USD per month, GA4 free plus Plausible Business at scale or Piwik PRO Core, with optional Adobe Analytics evaluation for analyst-heavy teams. Enterprise (500+ employees): 12,000 USD plus per month, GA4 360 (around 150,000 USD per year), Adobe Analytics (often 360,000 USD plus per year), or Piwik PRO Enterprise full suite (around 150,000 USD per year). The largest line items at enterprise are GA4 360, Adobe Analytics, or Piwik PRO Enterprise; the privacy-first tier rarely exceeds 4,000 USD per year at typical mid-market scale.
Is Cloudflare Web Analytics really free and worth using as a primary tool?
Yes to free, no to primary tool for most buyers. Cloudflare Web Analytics is genuinely free at every Cloudflare tier including the Free plan, requires no separate billing, and ships server-side measurement for Cloudflare-fronted sites that captures visitors ad blockers and consent rejections would otherwise hide. The feature footprint is intentionally thin: no native custom events at scale, limited funnel and conversion tracking, no session recording or heatmaps. The honest use case is as a free baseline measurement layer alongside GA4 or a privacy-first vendor, used to cross-validate visitor counts and capture the ad-blocker-and-consent-rejected population that GA4 misses. For most Cloudflare buyers, Cloudflare Web Analytics is worth enabling immediately because it costs nothing; whether it becomes a primary tool depends on whether the feature thinness matters for your use case.
Will Schrems III invalidate the EU-US Data Privacy Framework and force GA4 migration again?
Possible and worth tracking. The EU-US Data Privacy Framework adopted in July 2023 restored a legal basis for EU-US data transfers after Schrems II invalidated Privacy Shield in 2020. EU privacy advocacy organization NOYB, led by Max Schrems, has indicated intent to challenge the DPF on similar grounds (US surveillance law, lack of meaningful redress for EU data subjects). If a Schrems III ruling invalidates the DPF, EU buyers running GA4 would face renewed legal exposure similar to the 2022 Austrian, French, and Italian DPA rulings against Universal Analytics. The practical risk mitigation in 2026: maintain a privacy-first second tool that runs on EU infrastructure (Plausible Cloud Frankfurt, Pirsch Falkenstein, Piwik PRO Frankfurt, Simple Analytics Netherlands, Matomo self-host on EU infrastructure) so a future legal change does not force a fire-drill migration. The cost is modest and the optionality is real.

Final word

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Last updated 2026-05-23. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.