How to Choose the Right Analytics Platform for Your Website

Picking an analytics platform feels overwhelming. Google Analytics is free and powerful, but privacy concerns are real. Matomo offers data ownership, but requires more setup. Plausible is simple, but costs money.

Here’s how to cut through the noise and choose the right analytics platform based on what actually matters for your situation.

Comparing different analytics platforms on screen
Choosing the right analytics platform depends on your specific needs

The Three Questions That Actually Matter When You Choose an Analytics Platform

Forget feature comparisons for a moment. Your choice comes down to three things:

1. How important is privacy and data ownership?

Some businesses need full control over their data. Maybe you’re in healthcare, finance, or operating in the EU where GDPR compliance is critical. Maybe you simply don’t want Google having access to your visitor data.

If privacy is a top priority, you’ll lean toward Matomo (self-hosted) or Plausible. If you’re comfortable with Google’s data practices, GA4 works fine.

2. What technical resources do you have?

Self-hosted solutions like Matomo require server setup, maintenance, and updates. Cloud solutions handle everything for you but cost money or come with trade-offs.

Be honest about your team’s capacity. A powerful self-hosted tool you can’t maintain properly is worse than a simpler managed solution.

3. What’s your budget?

Google Analytics 4 is free (you pay with data). Plausible starts around $9/month. Matomo Cloud costs more. Self-hosted Matomo is free but requires server costs and time.

“Free” isn’t always cheapest when you factor in complexity and opportunity cost.

Your Main Analytics Platform Options

Platform Price Hosting Privacy Complexity
Google Analytics 4 Free Google Cloud Data shared with Google Medium-High
Matomo Cloud From $23/mo Matomo servers You own data Medium
Matomo Self-Hosted Free (server costs) Your servers Full control High
Plausible From $9/mo EU servers Privacy-first, no cookies Low
Fathom From $14/mo Multiple regions Privacy-first, no cookies Low

Google Analytics 4 as Your Analytics Platform

GA4 is the default choice for most websites — and that’s not necessarily wrong. It’s powerful, integrates with Google’s ecosystem, and costs nothing.

Team making decision about analytics platform
GA4 offers powerful features but comes with data privacy trade-offs

Best for:

  • Websites that use Google Ads and need conversion tracking integration
  • Teams that need advanced analysis, custom reports, and BigQuery exports
  • Businesses where privacy regulations aren’t a primary concern
  • Anyone who needs a free, full-featured solution

Limitations:

  • Data is processed on Google’s servers — you don’t own it
  • Requires cookie consent banners in EU/UK (affects data completeness)
  • Interface is complex; learning curve is real
  • Data sampling kicks in on high-traffic sites (free tier)
  • Privacy-conscious visitors may block it

The honest truth:

GA4 is genuinely powerful. If you’re running Google Ads or need deep analysis capabilities, it’s hard to beat. But if you’re a content site or small business that just needs to understand traffic patterns, GA4 is overkill — and the privacy trade-offs may not be worth it.

Want to learn more? Read our complete GA4 guide.

Matomo as Your Analytics Platform

Matomo (formerly Piwik) is the leading open-source alternative to Google Analytics. You can self-host it for complete data ownership, or use their cloud version for convenience.

Privacy-focused analytics and data protection
Matomo offers full data ownership for privacy-conscious organizations

Best for:

  • Organizations that need full data ownership (healthcare, finance, government)
  • EU-based businesses prioritizing GDPR compliance
  • Teams with technical resources for self-hosting
  • Anyone who wants GA-like features without Google

Self-hosted vs Cloud:

Self-hosted (free): Complete control, no data limits, but you handle servers, updates, security, and backups. Requires PHP/MySQL and ongoing maintenance.

Cloud (paid): Matomo handles everything. Easier setup, but monthly costs add up, especially with higher traffic.

Limitations:

  • Self-hosted requires real technical commitment
  • Interface feels dated compared to newer tools
  • Some advanced features require premium plugins
  • Cloud pricing can get expensive at scale

The honest truth:

Matomo is the right choice if you genuinely need data ownership and have the resources to manage it. But don’t choose self-hosted Matomo just to save money if you’ll neglect maintenance. A poorly maintained analytics setup gives you bad data — which is worse than no data.

Plausible and Simple Analytics Platform Alternatives

A new category of analytics tools has emerged: privacy-first, cookie-free, and intentionally simple. Plausible and Fathom are the leaders here.

Team discussing analytics options
Simple analytics tools focus on essential metrics without complexity

Best for:

  • Content sites, blogs, and portfolios that need basic traffic insights
  • Privacy-conscious site owners who want to respect visitors
  • Anyone tired of complex dashboards and cookie banners
  • Sites where “good enough” data beats “perfect but ignored” data

What you get:

  • Pageviews, visitors, sources, top pages, countries — the essentials
  • No cookies means no consent banners needed (in most cases)
  • Lightweight script (under 1KB) that won’t slow your site
  • Clean, simple dashboard you’ll actually check

What you don’t get:

  • Individual user tracking or session recordings
  • Complex funnels and custom event schemas
  • Integration with advertising platforms
  • Historical data import from other platforms

The honest truth:

For many websites, Plausible or Fathom provides everything you actually need. The data is less granular, but if you weren’t using GA4’s advanced features anyway, you’re not losing anything. And you gain simplicity, speed, and privacy.

The question isn’t “Is Plausible as powerful as GA4?” — it’s “Do I need that power?”

Decision Framework: How to Choose Your Analytics Platform

Use this table to find your starting point:

If you… Consider…
Run Google Ads and need conversion tracking Google Analytics 4
Need advanced segmentation and custom reports Google Analytics 4 or Matomo
Must own your data (compliance/policy) Matomo Self-Hosted
Want data ownership without server management Matomo Cloud
Just need traffic basics, value simplicity Plausible or Fathom
Hate cookie consent banners Plausible or Fathom
Have zero budget and limited tech skills Google Analytics 4 (despite trade-offs)
Run an e-commerce store Google Analytics 4 or Matomo

Making the Switch

Already using one platform and considering a change? A few things to know:

You’ll lose historical data. Analytics platforms don’t share data. When you switch, you start fresh. Consider running both tools in parallel for a few months to maintain continuity.

Tag Manager makes switching easier. If you use Google Tag Manager, you can add or remove analytics tools without touching your site code.

Start simple, expand later. You can always add more sophisticated tracking as your needs grow. It’s much harder to simplify an overcomplicated setup.

The Bottom Line

There’s no universally “best” analytics platform. The right choice depends on your privacy requirements, technical capacity, and what you’ll actually use.

  • GA4 if you need power, run ads, and accept the trade-offs
  • Matomo if you need data ownership and have technical resources
  • Plausible/Fathom if you want simplicity and respect visitor privacy

Pick one, install it properly, and actually use it. A simple tool you check weekly beats a powerful tool you ignore.

New to analytics? Start with our guide on what web analytics is and why it matters for your business.

Aleksey Gromov
Written by

Aleksey Gromov

Web analytics consultant with 10+ years of experience helping businesses make data-driven decisions. Specializing in GA4, Matomo, and privacy-first tracking solutions. Passionate about making analytics accessible to everyone.

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