Why don’t the numbers match between the tracker and Google Analytics?
The tracker and Google Analytics both report website traffic, but they collect and process data differently, so their numbers will not match exactly.
Differences between the tracker and Google Analytics
Both tools can help you understand website traffic, but they are different tools that complement each other. Because they use different tracking methods, the numbers they show are not 100% comparable.
How the tracker works
To track visits to your website or blog, you need to install the platform's tracking code. This JavaScript snippet runs in the browser and sends visit data asynchronously to the servers.
What the tracker does:
Does not use cookies.
Detects the visitor’s country through the IP address.
Records the page viewed, including the URL.
Starts collecting data from the moment it is installed. It cannot recover past data.
Differences in tracking methodology
The gap between both platforms is not only about setup. It also comes from how each one interprets and logs data.
Measurement methodology
Google Analytics (GA4): measures events and sessions using cookies, user IDs, and machine learning when data is missing. It also filters bot traffic automatically.
The tracker: uses a JavaScript script that tracks unique visits mainly through IP addresses. It may also filter repeated or suspicious traffic.
Trackers and cookie blockers
Tools such as uBlock, Ghostery, or Brave Browser can block the Google Analytics script, so those visits are not tracked in GA.
The platform may still receive that traffic if its script is not blocked, or the opposite can happen depending on the browser setup.
Filters and exclusions
GA4 can exclude internal traffic, bots, or filtered IP addresses using advanced rules.
The tracker may log all traffic or apply a different type of filtering.
Session windows and duration
Google Analytics ends a session after 30 minutes of inactivity or at midnight.
The tracker may log several visits from the same IP within a short period as one session, which can produce fewer sessions than GA.
Devices, networks, and browsing context
A user on a mobile network, such as 4G with a dynamic IP, may be counted several times by the tracker.
Google Analytics tries to consolidate those visits as one user if cookies are enabled and accepted.
Difference between active users and visitors
Another common source of confusion is how these metrics are calculated:
Visitors in the tracker
The number of unique users who visited your site.
If someone visits multiple times in a day, they are counted once.
Active users in Google Analytics (GA4)
Any user who triggered an interaction, such as a click or scroll.
The same user can be counted more than once in a day if they start multiple sessions.
In short:
Google Analytics tracks interactions, so it often shows more active users.
The tracker tracks real unique visitors, which gives a clearer view of actual reach.
Comparison table: tracker vs Google Analytics
Feature | Tracker | Google Analytics (GA4) |
|---|---|---|
Use of cookies | No | Yes, which requires user consent |
Tracker installation | Tracking script | Script plus event setup or GTM |
Start of data collection | From the moment the tracker is installed | From the moment it is installed and cookies are accepted |
Data refresh frequency | Real time * | May be delayed by several hours |
How users are counted | Unique visitors by IP, without cookies | Active users based on interactions, and the same user can be counted multiple times |
Session duration | Not measured | Default 30 minutes of inactivity or at day change |
Bot filtering | Basic | Advanced automated bot filtering |
Non-interactive pageviews | Still counted | May not be tracked without events |
Mobile or AMP pages | Might need extra setup | Supported, but needs proper configuration |
Tracking blockers | Less likely to be blocked | May be blocked by extensions or browsers |
Geolocation | Based on IP | Based on IP and browser settings |
Custom events | Not available | Yes, with proper configuration |
Internal traffic exclusion | Possible, but not automatic | Configurable with advanced filters |
In the analytics panel, data updates every 24 hours.
Best practices when using both trackers
Make sure both trackers are installed on every page of your site.
Always compare data from the same date range and similar traffic segments, such as only organic traffic.
Double-check that mobile and AMP pages are also being tracked.
Compare the list of pageviews in both tools to spot missing or misconfigured tracking.
Use the tracker for a clear view of unique visitors.
Use Google Analytics to analyze events, goals, or conversion funnels.
Tools that work better together
This is not about choosing one over the other. The tracker and Google Analytics can work together to give you a fuller view of your website traffic.