Analytics & Reporting Comparisons
Head-to-head Analytics & Reporting tool comparisons to help you make the right choice for your stack.
These two tools are not really competing for the same job. One answers "how much traffic did I get and where from," cookie-free. The other answers "what did users actually do inside my product before they converted or churned."
One is a $15/month cookieless analytics tool you install with a single script tag. The other is a sales-led media mix modeling platform built for DTC brands spending $50k or more a month on paid media.
Both are cookieless and skip the consent banner. Fathom is a closed-source, agency-friendly SaaS starting at $15/month. OpenPanel is open-source, self-hostable, and starts at $2.50/month with funnels and A/B testing built in.
Both are cookieless, GDPR-first Google Analytics replacements with no consent banners. The real split is Pirsch's funnels, A/B testing, and open-source core against Fathom's simpler dashboard and forever data retention.
Both are cookieless GA4 replacements with no consent banners. Fathom bundles every feature into one plan; Plausible splits its Stats API and AI traffic tracking across a tiered, self-hostable structure.
These two barely compete on the same job. Fathom answers "how is my website doing" in one privacy-first dashboard; Power BI answers "what is happening across our entire business" from any data source, with a real DAX learning curve attached.
Fathom tells you who visited your site without collecting a single cookie. Ruler tells you which marketing channel actually closed the deal in your CRM, months later, at a price that starts at £269/month and requires a demo.
One is a $15/month cookieless analytics script for reading traffic in under a minute. The other is $800/month measurement infrastructure for teams reallocating ad budget through AI agents.
Both drop cookies and consent banners entirely. The real difference shows up in currency, free-tier availability, and whether white-label delivery matters to you.
Fathom tells you how many people visited your site for $15 a month. Tableau builds governed, drag-and-drop dashboards on any data source for $75 a seat. They barely compete.
Fathom counts visitors for any website. Triple Whale exists specifically to fix broken ROAS numbers for Shopify brands running paid media.
Fathom tracks your own website traffic with a single cookieless script. Two Minute Reports pulls data from 30+ other platforms into Google Sheets or Looker Studio. They rarely compete for the same job.
Fathom skips cookies entirely and starts at $15/month. Usermaven uses cookies to connect ad spend, product usage, and CRM deal data all the way to closed revenue, starting at $84/month.
Both are cookieless and GDPR-first by design. One is a polished, seven-year-old product with forever data retention. The other is $5 a month, open-source, and tracks your product alongside your website.
Fathom tells you who visited your site without touching a single cookie. Wicked Reports tells you which ad actually earned a new customer. Neither one replaces the other.
One is the free default for measuring where visitors come from and what they do once they arrive. The other autocaptures every click inside your product and lets you define events after the fact, at a price that only shows up after a sales call.
GA4 tells you what happened on your site at zero cost. Hotjar shows you why, with heatmaps and session replay now backed by Contentsquare.
GA4 measures everything for free. Humblytics scores A/B tests against actual Stripe MRR, starting at $19 a month.
GA4 is where the data is measured. Looker Studio is where it gets turned into a dashboard someone other than an analyst can read.
GA4 is free and built for marketing channels. Mixpanel charges per event and is built for product teams tracking retention and funnels.
GA4 is free and tells you what happened on your site and in your app. Northbeam costs a real budget and tells you which ad channel actually caused a sale, including ones GA4 cannot see at the user level.
GA4 is free, deeply wired into Google Ads and Search Console, and the default for a reason. OpenPanel is open-source, self-hostable, and gives AI agents 38 tools to query your data directly.
One is the free default that ships machine learning and a BigQuery export with every property. The other drops cookies and consent banners entirely, starting at $6 a month.
One tracks purchase probability and syncs with Google Ads at zero cost. The other fits every metric that matters on one page, with no cookies and a script 54 times smaller.
GA4 tells you what happened on your site and app for free. Power BI turns that data, and everything else in your business, into a governed BI layer for $14 a user.
GA4 tells you what happened on your site for free. Ruler Analytics closes the loop between that traffic and the revenue your sales team closes months later, starting at £269 a month.
One is the free measurement layer nearly every site already runs. The other sits on top of it, turning that raw event data into incrementality-verified attribution and budget decisions an AI agent can act on.
GA4 sees more of your funnel if visitors let it. Simple Analytics sees more of your visitors, full stop, because it never asks for consent in the first place.
GA4 collects and reports on your web and app data for free. Tableau does not collect anything itself, it visualizes data GA4 and dozens of other sources feed into it, at a per-seat price that starts where GA4 stops charging.
GA4 measures any website or app for free. Triple Whale measures one thing very well: whether a DTC brand's Meta and TikTok ad spend is actually driving revenue, at a price that rises with the store's GMV.
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