This article provides a detailed comparison between mandera and Google Analytics, examining their features, differences, and overall approach to website analytics.
We’ll explore why mandera stands out as a strong Google Analytics alternative, offering reliable website traffic insights while prioritizing user privacy and full compliance with modern data protection regulations.
Google Analytics (GA) has long been the go-to solution for tracking website users, primarily due to its feature set allowing granular targeting. It is also frequently used with other Google marketing tools, like Google Ads, to serve targeted campaigns.
However, granular user tracking and targeting came at a massive cost—infringing on user privacy.
Online audiences became increasingly aware of and complained about ads “following” them around the internet. They would browse a random product, and the same item would appear all over the web—in sidebars while they read the news, in the middle of YouTube videos, and in their Google Mail Promotions tab.
One of the main reasons why that happens is the fact that Google Analytics relies on cookie data to track user behavior.
Cookies are small pieces of code stored in a user’s browser when they visit a website, allowing data to persist as they navigate the web.
The problem is that cookies remain active even after users leave the original website, continuously tracking their activity across different pages. This enables the company that set the cookie to keep collecting behavioral data, often without users being fully aware of it.
Furthermore, GA data is indirectly accessible by third parties via Google Ads. That is why ads are so effective in “stalking” us around the web. They are based on a large amount of behavioral data used for profiling, and advertisers can target us based on our preferences and habits.
While that information can be useful for marketing activities, this method of collecting personal data is overly intrusive. It conflicts with some of the core rights guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, such as the right to privacy.
Still, a more precise and modern legal framework was needed to tackle the nuances of the digital era, which led to more privacy regulations.
While several privacy regulations impacted global privacy, such as the ePrivacy directive, which still applies today, there was no real breakthrough regarding cookies until the mid-2010s.
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) reshaped the global privacy sector. It applies not only to the territory of the EU but also to the data of its citizens. This means that foreign companies need to comply with GDPR if they want to process data of EU citizens. Considering that the EU is a large and wealthy market, this had global consequences.
Soon, other legislators realized the importance of privacy standards set by the EU and the impact of the GDPR. What followed was a wave of synchronization and national laws that share a similar level of privacy protection. The California Consumer Privacy Act is a prime example of how also the US states are introducing a new level of privacy.
The GDPR revolutionized website analytics, too. Once it was introduced, explicit data processing consent became a requirement. Practically, before any cookies are stored, you are now required to display complex consent banners.
Those cookie notifications and consent banners not only disrupt the user interface and experience but also cause compliance concerns and hefty fines for making it hard to refuse cookies.
However, legislative changes, compliance fines, and cookie banners have had an additional consequence: users are becoming increasingly aware of their privacy.
As a result, more and more website visitors are using ad blockers, VPNs, DoNotTrack settings, and similar technical methods to protect their privacy.
However, users are also increasingly aware that some companies are misusing their private information, which is why respecting privacy matters for ethical business conduct for companies that care about brand reputation.
We have covered how new privacy regulations have affected the world of web analytics, but let’s now speak about Google Analytics and the problems businesses face when using this tool:
The Google Analytics Suite relies on cookies to provide traffic analytics. Cookies not only track users’ interactions with your website but also collect information across the web.
Because of third-party cookies and cross-site tracking, you must implement cookie consent banners on your website. If not, you could face fines for non-compliance, reaching as much as €20 million or 4% of your yearly turnover.
Conversely, displaying the banners will negatively impact the user experience, as website visitors will need to navigate through complex legal information and tickboxes instead of focusing on the content of your pages.
Furthermore, Google is an American company with (cloud) servers spread across the globe. This will cause further GDPR compliance issues, as taking user data outside the EEA is problematic.
Google profiles users based on their preferences and behavior. That is why services such as Google Ads are so effective in targeting users—Google collects data across websites, and its algorithm assigns unique identifiers, allowing granular targeting.
While third parties cannot access personally identifiable information directly, they can use other Google services based on that data.
The most famous example of why this type of profiling is so privacy-infringing is the case of TARGET and their marketing campaign targeting pregnant women solely based on their purchasing habits.
Situations like that were one of the reasons privacy regulations needed to be updated and in line with modern technologies, eventually leading to the GDPR.
GA can be useful for granular tracking, but its interface is quit complex—especially for teams that simply want clear, reliable insights into their website traffic.
In addition, ad blockers, DoNotTrack settings, private browsing, and the growing tendency of users to reject cookie banners are steadily limiting the tool’s ability to gather meaningful data. This leads to less reliable traffic reports and questionable data quality.
But beyond performance and usability issues, there’s a deeper risk: brand reputation.
Using a tool widely associated with aggressive tracking and opaque data-sharing practices can reflect poorly on companies—especially those aiming to position themselves as privacy-conscious and ethically responsible. In a climate where user trust and transparency are increasingly vital, continuing to rely on Google Analytics could signal the wrong values to your audience.
You may be undermining your brand image while getting less reliable data in return.
mandera is a privacy-first web analytics platform that provides reliable website data without infringing privacy. Here’s what separates us from Google Analytics:
Google Analytics, as a cookie-based solution and a small fraction of the Google ecosystem, poses privacy, compliance, and ethical dilemmas.
At the most basic level, you are required to show cookie banners and disturb the website interface. However, at the core level, the fragile personal information of your website visitors will be indirectly accessible and used for targeting by third parties. Even if this is done with consent, it is still a questionable practice from an ethical standpoint.
What’s more, third-party cookies and intrusive tracking are under increased regulatory scrutiny. Even Google Chrome will end support for third-party cookies in the future, signaling the industry’s shift toward stricter privacy regulations.
mandera doesn’t process personal data. Because of this, you are not required to show cookie consent banners while still being fully compliant.
Our technology relies on data that can’t be traced back to individual users, so it is not considered personal information.
For example, we remove the IP address from every request by default and respect the DoNotTrack settings. Our technology allows us to distinguish individual visits and show accurate numbers, even though we are not processing personal information:
Because there is no personal data processing, mandera will future-proof your business against upcoming regulatory changes that will likely put new limitations on personal data access.
Google Analytics is part of the Google ecosystem, which means it shares universal analytics with its other services, such as Google Ads and Google Search Console. In other words, visitor analytics will be indirectly accessed by third parties and used for targeting purposes across websites.
Additionally, Google is a global company with servers located worldwide. That means your website visitors’ data will be transferred to locations outside the EEA, which is problematic from a GDPR standpoint.
With mandera, there is no data sharing nor third-party access.
mandera servers are based in Germany, and only you can access your data. Because we don’t store or process personal information, there will be no personal data on our servers in the first place, minimizing the possibility of personal data leaks or breaches.
In other words, your data stays yours and will not leave the EEA, making mandera fully GDPR-compliant.
Google Analytics assigns each visitor a unique identifier and relies on cookies to track website data and behavior. That creates data privacy and compliance concerns.
Because users are aware of their privacy, they increasingly use tools such as ad blockers, VPNs, incognito browsers, and similar technologies to cloak traffic. This interferes with Google Analytics and may cause unreliable traffic metrics.
mandera doesn’t use cookies, and there is no personal data processing.
Instead of storing IP addresses, tracking precise traffic sources, using cookies, or privacy-friendly techniques such as fingerprinting, hashing, or assigning unique user identifiers, mandera relies on data that can’t be tied to any individual user, not even when combined with other information. The real-time analytics we monitor include:
Our goal is to distinguish individual visits and to separate new from repeating traffic, while we don’t use any invasive techniques to achieve that.
Google Analytics relies on cookies to process data. Because of this, you are required to present users with difficult-to-understand cookie consent banners.
Not only may this cause further compliance issues, but it also doesn’t look good on your website, as it distracts from the content.
Because mandera doesn’t process personal information, you aren’t required to display cookie consent banners. This will keep your website interface clean, and users will focus on the content.
Since cookie blocker settings and ad blockers won’t interfere with the results, mandera tracks website traffic accurately.
You often hear Google Analytics users complaining about its script hindering website performance. But page speed is not only important for the user experience; it is also one of the well-known ranking factors
Also, the Google Analytics 4 interface will take some time to get used to, which is also one of the primary complaints users have had since its launch.
mandera has a lightweight script that will not hinder the performance of your website.
The installation is super fast, and mandera will be ready in minutes after you connect your website. So, there are no cookie banners that will interfere with the interface and no heavy script that can lower the website performance.
Not only will it have a negative impact on your website UX, but mandera also has a simple dashboard that is very intuitive. Basic analytics will be available at first glance, allowing you to make the correct conclusions without overwhelming details.
While Google Analytics has a free plan, that is for a reason—Google’s primary source of income are ads and user data monetization. They collect analytics data across websites that use their services and later monetize it by providing paid advertising.
That approach creates many ethical concerns, which can affect your business’s reputation. Users are becoming increasingly aware of their privacy, and they are looking to avoid companies that don’t maintain ethical standards and use services that carry privacy risks only because they are free.
mandera is a state-of-the-art, privacy-first solution. While we have a free trial, our service isn’t free—you pay a fixed price for each domain you use. Because mandera’s paid plan doesn’t scale with traffic, you won’t have any unpleasant surprises when you receive our invoice.
As a private-by-design tracking web analytics tool, mandera doesn’t store or process any personal information in the first place, so no third party can access the user’s data.
With mandera, there is no data monetization whatsoever—your data stays yours.
Even though Google Analytics provides you ways to granularly track users, compliance issues, ethical concerns, complexity, and performance issues are some of the reasons why more and more businesses prioritizing privacy are shifting towards privacy-first tools.
mandera is a private-by-design GA alternative that will provide actionable website traffic data and insights into user flows, all while respecting privacy and staying compliant with GDPR.
Try mandera today, completely free, and explore accurate web analytics without privacy concerns.