Master Google Analytics with our step-by-step tutorial, detailed feature walkthrough, and expert tips.
Explore the key features that make Google Analytics powerful for coding agents workflows.
Yes, the standard GA4 tier is completely free with no credit card required. The free version includes up to 10 million events per month per property, 25 custom dimensions, up to 14 months of user-level data retention, real-time reporting, predictive audiences, and free BigQuery export—a feature that previously required the $150,000/year GA360 tier. For most small and mid-sized businesses, the free version provides everything needed to run comprehensive marketing and product analytics without ever hitting paid limits.
Universal Analytics was fully sunset on July 1, 2024, so migration is no longer optional—all historical UA data is read-only and will be deleted July 1, 2024 onward. GA4 uses an event-based data model where every interaction is an event with parameters, rather than UA's session and pageview-based model. This means different reports, different metrics (engagement rate replaces bounce rate), a new interface, and a steeper learning curve, but enables cross-platform tracking, predictive metrics, and more flexible analysis.
GA4 offers GDPR compliance tools including consent mode v2, IP anonymization by default, configurable data retention (2-14 months), and data deletion requests. However, several European data protection authorities (France's CNIL, Austria, Italy) have previously ruled GA implementations non-compliant due to US data transfers. Companies serving EU users should implement consent mode v2, consider server-side tagging via Google Tag Manager, and consult legal counsel. Alternatives like Matomo or Plausible may be safer for privacy-sensitive organizations.
GA4 360 pricing is negotiated per contract through a Google sales rep and typically starts around $50,000 per year, scaling with data volume up to $150,000+ for large enterprises. The upgrade is worth it for sites exceeding 10 million events per month, organizations needing data-driven attribution modeling, sub-property/roll-up property support, higher sampling thresholds, a 99.9% SLA, and dedicated technical support. Most businesses with under 10 million monthly events will not see meaningful ROI from upgrading.
Yes, running multiple analytics platforms in parallel is common practice. GA4 excels at acquisition and marketing analytics (ads, SEO, conversions), while product analytics tools like Mixpanel or Amplitude are better for deep funnel analysis and user cohort retention. Many teams deploy both via Google Tag Manager or a customer data platform like Segment. Be aware that duplicating data collection increases cost (on paid tools) and page load weight, so tag only the events needed in each system.
Now that you know how to use Google Analytics, it's time to put this knowledge into practice.
Sign up and follow the tutorial steps
Check pros, cons, and user feedback
See how it stacks against alternatives
Follow our tutorial and master this powerful coding agents tool in minutes.
Tutorial updated March 2026