The best web analytics tools for developers, compared
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Welcome. Grab a chair.
There's coffee in the back. No one's judging you for ignoring your analytics for six months. We've all been there.
This is a safe space for developers with a complicated relationship with web analytics.
If this sounds like you, you're not alone. Most web analytics tools were built for marketers – not developers – which makes finding one that actually fits a modern dev workflow harder than it should be.
In this guide, we compare the best web analytics tools for developers, so you can understand your site, debug faster, and actually trust your data.
What features do you need in a web analytics tool?
At a minimum, a web analytics tool should tell you what's happening on your site:
- Pageviews, sessions, and unique visitors
- Traffic sources and referrers
- UTM and campaign tracking
- Conversion or goal tracking
- Real-time or near real-time reporting
The best web analytics tools are actually platforms that go further and give you:
- Event-based tracking, so you can track meaningful actions
- Funnels, paths, and retention, to understand how users move through your site and where they drop off
- Session replay and heatmaps, to see what users actually did
- Error tracking and performance context, so you can connect broken experiences to user impact
- Raw data access via SQL, APIs, or exports for custom queries, data retrieval, and external integrations
- Privacy-first design so you can skip cookie banners and stay GDPR/CCPA compliant
- Transparent pricing so a traffic spike doesn't lead to a finance incident
Here's how some of the most popular web analytics tools compare: