Blog: How much does Google Analytics cost? (#10014)

Co-authored-by: Bijan Boustani <bijan@posthog.com>
Co-authored-by: Lior539 <lneuner@gmail.com>
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Ian Vanagas
2024-12-03 08:55:10 -08:00
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### What is Google Analytics?
Google Analytics has long been the go-to choice for website and app analytics thanks to Google's huge market share, a large amount of informational content, and its connection with the rest of the Google suite.
[Google Analytics](/blog/google-analytics-cost) has long been the go-to choice for website and app analytics thanks to Google's huge market share, a large amount of informational content, and its connection with the rest of the Google suite.
Google Analytics recently switched fully over from session-based Universal Analytics (GA3) to event-based GA4. This also introduced conversion funnels and retention tables that product teams are fans of.

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### What is Google Analytics 4?
Google Analytics 4 (GA4) is a marketing and product analytics tool that's tightly integrated with other Google products, such as Ads, BigQuery, Looker Studio, and Firebase.
[Google Analytics 4](/blog/posthog-vs-ga4) (GA4) is a marketing and product analytics tool that's tightly integrated with other Google products, such as Ads, BigQuery, Looker Studio, and Firebase.
Unlike its predecessor, Universal Analytics (GA3), it's event-based. It also introduces new report types, such as conversion funnels and retention tables. This makes it more useful to product teams than before.
@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ As of July 2023, [30.5% of the top 1 million websites](https://www.linkedin.com/
1. **Because it's Google:** It's not an original reason, but it holds true. Using Google Analytics makes a lot of sense for teams who rely on other Google platforms, like [Google Ads](/tutorials/google-ads-reports) and BigQuery.
2. **It's powerful and free:** Likewise, Google's scale means GA4 is completely free to most small and medium-sized businesses. This, combined with strong analytical tools and the large ecosystem of GA experts to call upon, makes it a safe choice.
2. **It's powerful and free:** Likewise, Google's scale means [GA4 is completely free](/blog/google-analytics-cost) to most small and medium-sized businesses. This, combined with strong analytical tools and the large ecosystem of GA experts to call upon, makes it a safe choice.
3. **To track marketing ROI:** GA4 is predominantly used by marketing and e-commerce teams to track campaign ROI. It's also popular among large content publishers for its scalability.

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1. **Because it's Google:** It's not an original reason, but it holds true. Using Google Analytics makes a lot of sense for teams who rely on other Google platforms, like Google Ads and BigQuery.
2. **It's powerful and free:** Likewise, Google's scale means GA4 is completely free to most small and medium-sized businesses. This, combined with strong analytical tools and the large ecosystem of GA experts to call upon, makes it a safe choice.
2. **It's powerful and free:** Likewise, Google's scale means [GA4 is completely free](/blog/google-analytics-cost) to most small and medium-sized businesses. This, combined with strong analytical tools and the large ecosystem of GA experts to call upon, makes it a safe choice.
3. **To track marketing ROI:** GA4 is predominantly used by marketing and e-commerce teams to track campaign ROI. It's also popular among large content publishers for its scalability.

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### How much does Firebase cost?
Since Firebase is powered by Google Analytics, it follows the same pricing. It has a generous free tier that's sufficient for most startups. Larger enterprises with higher data collection and export requirements will need to upgrade to GA360, which _starts_ at $50,000 per year.
Since Firebase is powered by [Google Analytics](/blog/google-analytics-cost), it follows the same pricing. It has a generous free tier that's sufficient for most startups. Larger enterprises with higher data collection and export requirements will need to upgrade to GA360, which _starts_ at $50,000 per year.
A good rule of thumb is that if you're exporting more than 1 million events per day, or querying data with more than 10 million events, you'll need to upgrade to GA360. See Google's [breakdown](https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/11202874) for more.

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---
title: How much does Google Analytics actually cost?
date: 2024-12-03
author:
- ian-vanagas
rootpage: /blog
featuredImage: >-
https://res.cloudinary.com/dmukukwp6/image/upload/posthog.com/contents/images/blog/posthog-vs-ga4/posthog-vs-ga4.jpeg
featuredImageType: full
tags:
- Guides
---
_**TL;DR:** Google Analytics 4 is free (with limits) while its enterprise tier, Google Analytics 360, starts at $50,000 per year._
Some of humanity's great mysteries: What happens after death? Where did life come from? Are aliens real? How much does [Google Analytics](/blog/google-analytics-to-posthog) actually cost? This post attempts to answer the only one that can be wrapped up in a single blog post.
Thanks to its connection with Google, early entrance into the [web analytics](/web-analytics) market, and initial price tag (free), Google Analytics has long been the most popular product in its category. According to [BuiltWith](https://trends.builtwith.com/analytics/Google-Analytics), as of December 2024, it's used by 50% of the top million sites.
![BuiltWith graph](https://res.cloudinary.com/dmukukwp6/image/upload/Clean_Shot_2024_11_29_at_10_42_08_d308dcfae1.png)
The confusion about the cost of Google Analytics comes from the fact that it's actually two products:
1. **Google Analytics 4 (GA4):** The free version a majority of people use.
2. **Google Analytics 360 (GA360):** The paid version built for enterprises.
Although the core features of both are the same, there are differences between them, with price being the most significant. This post details these differences and helps you figure out what Google Analytics will end up costing you.
## Google Analytics 4 is free (but limited)
[Google Analytics 4](/blog/posthog-vs-ga4) (GA4) is Google's latest iteration of analytics. It replaced Universal Analytics on July 1st, 2024 much to its users' chagrin. GA4 includes many standard features of analytics tools including:
- Customizable capture and reporting of behavioral and demographic data
- Traffic and acquisition analysis
- Conversion tracking and funnels
- User paths to track flows and drop-offs
- Retention for users and revenue
- Monetization analytics to track purchase value, LTV, and revenue metrics
- UTM tracking and advertising analytics for marketing and Google Ads campaigns
Although Google loves to talk about all of GA's features, one thing they don't talk about is GA4's limitations. You can think of GA4 as the **free plan** of their analytics product. This means it has [limits](https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/11202874?sjid=1063875790934107320-NC) like:
- Up to 500,000 sessions per report before sampling
- Data retention up to 14 months
- 25 event parameters per event
- 25 user properties per property
- 50 custom dimensions/metrics per property
- 100 audiences
- 200 explorations per user
- BigQuery export is limited to 1M events daily
While most GA users are under these limits, those getting close to the limit will likely need to upgrade to Google Analytics 360, the enterprise version of the product.
### How and why is GA4 free?
All businesses have costs, and as big as Google is, this is still true for them. There are multiple reasons why GA4 is free to use:
1. The limits to data retention, size, and querying limit the most expensive potential costs they could face.
2. By having strong integrations with Google Ads, GA4 encourages users to buy more of them. Ads have traditionally been Google's primary revenue driver, so other products can operate at losses.
3. Your data is valuable to Google. It helps them improve ad targeting, product development, and data infrastructure among many other benefits. [GA has been declared illegal](/blog/is-google-analytics-illegal-microsite) in many countries because of this.
4. It leads to Google Analytics 360. For a company like Google, the money is in the massive enterprises. Casting a wide net, creating an ecosystem of support and information, and locking them in with a free product inevitably leads to more enterprise deals.
## Google Analytics 360 is expensive
From what I can gather, when you start hitting the limits of GA4, you get an invite into the secret club that is Google Analytics 360 (GA360). This is Google's enterprise version of analytics.
![GA360 target customers meme](https://res.cloudinary.com/dmukukwp6/image/upload/image_ec753abf75.png)
How much GA360 costs is a bit of a mystery, Google doesn't list it anywhere officially. This is because it is provided by resellers AKA "sales partners." These are organizations and consultants that help Google sell GA360 licenses and provide related services like dedicated support, implementation, optimization, and analysis. Two examples give an idea of pricing:
- [Cardinal Path](https://www.cardinalpath.com/blog/ua-360-vs-ga4-360-pricing-model), a leading partner for Google Marketing Platform services, states that the suggested retail price of GA360 starts at $50,000 per year. This entitles customers to 25M events per month.
- [Infotrust](https://infotrust.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/google-analytics-adobe-analytics.pdf), a marketing and analytics consultancy, says typical pricing starts at $150,000 per year in the US for up to 500M hits.
> **How much would PostHog cost for those amounts?** Unlike Google, PostHog has [fully transparent pricing](/pricing). 25M [anonymous events](/docs/data/anonymous-vs-identified-events) per month would cost $791 per month or $9492 per year. 500M anonymous events would cost $7,118 per month or $85,416 per year.
Both sources mention that beyond the minimum $50-150k organizations pay, pricing is then usage-based based on the volume of data you capture.
### What are the features of GA360?
The primary benefit is [upgrades](https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/11202874?sjid=1063875790934107320-NC) to all the limits of GA4. These include:
| **Feature** | **Standard GA4** | **Google Analytics 360** |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Event parameters** | 25 per event | 100 per event |
| **Custom dimensions and metrics** | 50 per property | 125 per property |
| **API daily quota** | 200,000 tokens | 2M tokens |
| **Data freshness** | 4-8 hours | ~1 hour |
| **Data retention** | Up to 14 months | Up to 50 months |
| **Conversions** | 30 | 50 |
| **Audiences** | 100 | 400 |
| **Shared explorations** | 500 per property | 1,000 per property |
| **Exploration sampling** | 10M events per query | 1B events per query |
| **Distinct app events** | 500 per instance | 2,000 per instance |
| **BigQuery daily exports** | 1M events | Billions of events |
On top of this, you get:
- Unsampled explorations, rollup properties, subproperties
- Enterprise-level support and SLAs
- Advanced integration capabilities with other Google Marketing Platform products
## The opportunity cost of Google Analytics
There is another cost Google Analytics doesn't want you to think about: all the time, money, and effort that could be going towards better options.
The potential problems can be summed up by looking at the two words that make up its name:
### 1. It's Google
Google Analytics is a small fish in the large pond that is Google. The company has proven time and again that it will shut down beloved projects on a whim (see [Optimize](/blog/google-optimize-alternatives), Universal Analytics, and all of [Killed by Google](https://killedbygoogle.com/)).
When a product does work, it mostly only works with Google and rarely includes outside integrations. Want to send, query, or export data to/from an external source like your CRM, payment processor, or data warehouse? Tough luck!
### 2. It's just analytics
Although Google Analytics is strong when it comes to [web](/web-analytics) and [product analytics](/product-analytics), the landscape of tools organizations rely on now has expanded dramatically and GA hasn't kept up. It lacks [session replays](/session-replay), [A/B testing](/experiments), [surveys](/surveys), [marketing automation](/cdp), and more. This means you miss out on a lot of potential benefits these tools provide.
## How PostHog is different
We've written a full post on [how GA4 and PostHog compare](/blog/posthog-vs-ga4), but as a quick summary:
1. **We're transparent.** Everything from our [pricing](/pricing) to [code](https://github.com/PostHog/posthog) to [strategy](/handbook) is open for anyone to see.
2. **We're built for engineers.** This means [SDKs](/docs/libraries) for popular languages, [docs](/docs) for (nearly) everything you want to build, [APIs](/docs/api) you can actually use, and direct [SQL](/docs/hogql) access to your data.
3. **We integrate with other tools.** Our [data warehouse](/docs/data-warehouse) allows you to import and query data from sources like [Stripe](/tutorials/stripe-reports), [Hubspot](/tutorials/hubspot-reports), and [Zendesk](/tutorials/zendesk-reports) while our [CDP](/docs/cdp) lets you send data anywhere like [Zapier](/docs/cdp/destinations/zapier), [Google Ads](/docs/cdp/destinations/google-ads), and [webhooks](/docs/cdp/destinations/webhook).
On top of all this, we've got a generous free tier. You can [sign up](https://us.posthog.com/signup) and get started for free right away.

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### How much do PostHog and Google Analytics cost?
Google Analytics has a free tier that's sufficient for most startups. Larger enterprises with higher data collection and export requirements will need to upgrade to GA360, which _starts_ at $50,000 per year.
[Google Analytics](/blog/google-analytics-cost) has a free tier that's sufficient for most startups. Larger enterprises with higher data collection and export requirements will need to upgrade to GA360, which _starts_ at $50,000 per year.
A good rule of thumb is that if you're exporting more than 1 million events per day, or querying data with more than 10 million events, you'll need to upgrade to GA360. See Google's [breakdown](https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/11202874) for more.