ShareThis Dashboard for Google Analytics
by ShareThis 3.6 (138 reviews)

ShareThis Dashboard for Google Analytics

Use Google Analytics on your WordPress site without touching any code, and view visitor reports right in your WordPress admin dashboard!

Tested up to WP 6.8 (Current: 6.9)
v3.2.4 Current Version v3.2.4
Updated 4 months ago Last Update on 19 Sep, 2025
Synced 16 hours ago Last Synced on
Rank
#493
No change
Active Installs
100K+
No change
KW Avg Position
N/A
No change
Downloads
6.3M
+1 today
Support Resolved
0%
No change
Rating
72%
Review 3.6 out of 5
3.6 (138 reviews)

Next Milestone 200K

Total Progress 0%
100K+ 200K+
211
Ranks to Climb
-
Growth Needed
8,000,000
Active Installs
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Rank Changes

468 481 493 505 518 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
468 481 493 505 518 05-01-2026 06-01-2026 07-01-2026 08-01-2026 09-01-2026 10-01-2026 11-01-2026 12-01-2026 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
465 478 491 504 517 21-12-2025 22-12-2025 23-12-2025 24-12-2025 25-12-2025 26-12-2025 27-12-2025 28-12-2025 29-12-2025 30-12-2025 31-12-2025 01-01-2026 02-01-2026 03-01-2026 04-01-2026 05-01-2026 06-01-2026 07-01-2026 08-01-2026 09-01-2026 10-01-2026 11-01-2026 12-01-2026 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
464 477 491 504 517 22-10-2025 23-10-2025 24-10-2025 25-10-2025 26-10-2025 27-10-2025 28-10-2025 29-10-2025 30-10-2025 31-10-2025 01-11-2025 02-11-2025 03-11-2025 04-11-2025 05-11-2025 06-11-2025 07-11-2025 08-11-2025 09-11-2025 10-11-2025 11-11-2025 12-11-2025 13-11-2025 14-11-2025 15-11-2025 16-11-2025 17-11-2025 18-11-2025 19-11-2025 20-11-2025 21-11-2025 22-11-2025 23-11-2025 24-11-2025 25-11-2025 26-11-2025 27-11-2025 28-11-2025 29-11-2025 30-11-2025 01-12-2025 02-12-2025 03-12-2025 04-12-2025 05-12-2025 06-12-2025 07-12-2025 08-12-2025 09-12-2025 10-12-2025 11-12-2025 12-12-2025 13-12-2025 14-12-2025 15-12-2025 16-12-2025 17-12-2025 18-12-2025 19-12-2025 20-12-2025 21-12-2025 22-12-2025 23-12-2025 24-12-2025 25-12-2025 26-12-2025 27-12-2025 28-12-2025 29-12-2025 30-12-2025 31-12-2025 01-01-2026 02-01-2026 03-01-2026 04-01-2026 05-01-2026 06-01-2026 07-01-2026 08-01-2026 09-01-2026 10-01-2026 11-01-2026 12-01-2026 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
Current #493
Change
Best #

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Active Installs Growth

Active Installs 0,000,000+
Growth +0.0%
Peak 0,000,000

Downloads Growth

0 50 100 150 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
0 50 100 150 05-01-2026 06-01-2026 07-01-2026 08-01-2026 09-01-2026 10-01-2026 11-01-2026 12-01-2026 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
0 50 100 150 200 250 21-12-2025 22-12-2025 23-12-2025 24-12-2025 25-12-2025 26-12-2025 27-12-2025 28-12-2025 29-12-2025 30-12-2025 31-12-2025 01-01-2026 02-01-2026 03-01-2026 04-01-2026 05-01-2026 06-01-2026 07-01-2026 08-01-2026 09-01-2026 10-01-2026 11-01-2026 12-01-2026 13-01-2026 14-01-2026 15-01-2026 16-01-2026 17-01-2026 18-01-2026 19-01-2026 20-01-2026
0 200 400 600 800 1K 1.2K 1.4K 22-10-2025 25-10-2025 28-10-2025 31-10-2025 03-11-2025 06-11-2025 09-11-2025 12-11-2025 15-11-2025 18-11-2025 21-11-2025 24-11-2025 27-11-2025 30-11-2025 03-12-2025 06-12-2025 09-12-2025 12-12-2025 15-12-2025 18-12-2025 21-12-2025 24-12-2025 27-12-2025 30-12-2025 02-01-2026 05-01-2026 08-01-2026 11-01-2026 14-01-2026 17-01-2026 20-01-2026
0 5K 10K 15K 20K 20-01-2025 01-02-2025 13-02-2025 25-02-2025 09-03-2025 21-03-2025 02-04-2025 14-04-2025 26-04-2025 08-05-2025 20-05-2025 01-06-2025 13-06-2025 25-06-2025 07-07-2025 19-07-2025 31-07-2025 12-08-2025 24-08-2025 05-09-2025 17-09-2025 29-09-2025 11-10-2025 23-10-2025 04-11-2025 16-11-2025 28-11-2025 10-12-2025 22-12-2025 03-01-2026 15-01-2026 20-01-2026
Downloads
Growth
Peak

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Reviews & Ratings

3.6
138 reviews
Overall 72%
5
85 (62%)
4
6 (4%)
3
1 (1%)
2
1 (1%)
1
45 (33%)

Tracked Keywords

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Plugin Details

Version
3.2.4
Last Updated
Sep 19, 2025
Requires WP
5.5+
Tested Up To
6.8
PHP Version
N/A
Author
ShareThis

Support & Rating

Rating
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ 3.6
Reviews
138
Support Threads
0
Resolved
0%

Keywords

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Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about ShareThis Dashboard for Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a powerful tool for monitoring website performance. With Google Analytics, you’ll gain insights such as what geographic areas your visitors are coming from, what channels led them to your website (paid search, social, organic, etc.), what devices they use to browse your site, and what other websites are sending visitors to your site. But Google Analytics does much more than simply show you how visitors are finding your website. Once visitors land on your site, Google Analytics can show you what pages they visit, how much time they spend on each page, what links they click, what files they download, what pages are converting visitors to subscribers or buyers, and much more. Armed with this data, you can create valuable content perfectly targeted to your visitors’ needs. When you know what topics your visitors search for and spend the most time on when they reach your website, you can create content expanding on or covering related topics to keep them coming back for more.
Using Google Analytics on your WordPress website is a must for monitoring your website’s traffic and gaining valuable visitor insights. There are two ways to use Google Analytics on WordPress: Manually adding the Google Analytics tracking code to your header.php file Installing the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin and setting up tracking in a few simple steps While some publishers prefer the manual option, installing the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin not only makes it easier to configure Google Analytics for your WordPress website by authenticating via Google, but it also provides you with a number of additional convenient features. With the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin, you’ll get access to your most important Google Analytics data right within your WordPress dashboard. And that means you can say goodbye to frustrating website analysis that requires constant switching between multiple browser tabs.
Google Analytics tracking code is a block of JavaScript code that executes Google Analytics tracking when a visitor loads a page on your website. The script that triggers these events must be loaded on every page in order for Google Analytics tracking to work. That doesn't mean you need to become an expert in JavaScript code or spend hours manually inserting Google Analytics tracking code on every page of your WordPress website. You can insert the tracking code in your header.php file so that it automatically loads on every page, or you can install the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin and follow a few simple steps to get Google Analytics tracking setup in minutes by authenticating with Google. Even if you prefer the traditional manual option of adding the UA tracking code to every page, the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin makes that process easier, too. Simply click “Manually enter Tracking ID” and paste your Google Tracking code into the box that appears. Then, just click “Save Changes,” and your code will instantly be live on all your pages. Click here for more details on this process. However, keep in mind that using this option means your dashboards won’t appear, so to get the most from the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin, we recommend using the authenticate with Google setup option from our latest update.
There are many ways to leverage Google Analytics to improve your WordPress website’s SEO. SEO, or search engine optimization, is the practice of tracking and analyzing website data to improve organic traffic. But tracking traffic and other website metrics alone doesn’t magically improve your SEO. Here are a few ways to leverage all the valuable Google Analytics data to improve your WordPress website’s SEO, start improving your search engine rankings, and growing your website traffic organically: Set up goals and track conversions to monitor performance. If you’re trying to grow your email marketing list, for instance, you can create goals in Google Analytics to monitor how well your opt-in pages or forms are converting visitors. If you’re generating leads for your business, set up goals to track how well your landing pages are performing. If you’re not seeing the conversion rates you’re aiming for, you can revisit your copy or conduct A/B tests to implement targeted improvements. Install the Google Analytics for WordPress plugin to get the most important insights in your WordPress dashboard. With the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin, you can monitor important metrics like page views, pages per session, and bounce rate for the past 7 days compared to the previous 7 days. The plugin keeps you up to date on your 10 top-performing web pages or posts based on page views and the top 5 traffic sources that are driving the most visitors to your website, plus it gives you access to age and gender data – all without navigating away from your WordPress dashboard. When you authenticate your Google Analytics account when setting up the plugin, you can exclude all irrelevant traffic (such as administrators and editors) so you get the most accurate insights. Update and promote your top-performing content. With the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin, you’ll always be aware of your 10 top-performing pages. While seeing your carefully crafted content getting the attention it deserves is worthy of celebration, don’t pop the cork on that sparkling water or champagne just yet. Leverage that data to promote your best-performing content with social media ads or organic social media posts, or slate those posts for an update to make them even better and draw in even more visitors who stick around to visit more pages on your site. Another way to leverage your top-performing pages data is to create content on topics related to your top-performing posts or content, which can boost repeat visits from the same visitors who helped catapult the original page to top-performer status. Take steps to reduce bounce rate. The Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress keeps you up-to-date on your website’s bounce rate over a 7-day period compared to the previous 7-day period. If your bounce rate is rising, it’s likely that you have an SEO problem. For instance, if visitors are reaching your site from relevant keywords but aren’t sticking around, you might consider targeting different or longer-tail keywords to better match users’ search intent. Perhaps your content is thin on landing pages and other points of entry, and visitors quickly bounce, thinking that your website isn’t offering the level of information they’re looking for. You can address this issue by creating more effective landing pages and entry pages to capture visitors’ attention in the first few seconds. Try different tactics to improve page views and pages per session. If your bounce rate is creeping up, it’s likely that your page views and pages per session are declining. This issue can be addressed by creating longer-form, data-driven, and highly detailed content to draw visitors in and keep them sticking around. Consider creating pillar content with topic clusters that encourage visitors to explore the deeper levels of your website through strategic linking and use videos and other visuals on your web pages to engage visitors. Keep tabs on top referral sources – and nurture them. The Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress shows you your website’s top 5 traffic sources that are driving the most visitors to your website. This may seem like it’s just interesting-to-know information, but it’s actually a goldmine. Why? First, you can discover organically earned backlinks that you weren’t previously aware of, and then leverage that information to get more of them. For instance, if an influencer linked to your content, you can reach out to arrange having them guest blog on your website (or vice-versa) to bring in even more traffic or expand your reach to a wider, relevant audience. You can also conduct some research to find other similar influencers or publishers and conduct an outreach campaign to encourage them to link to the same post, arrange guest posting opportunities, or pursue other mutually beneficial partnerships.
When the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) was first introduced, website publishers everywhere were fraught with anxiety about what it would mean for their businesses and overwhelmed with the steps they needed to take to ensure compliance. If you’re running third-party tools on your website, such as share buttons and follow buttons or Google Analytics, these tools are likely collecting information about your website visitors – and that means you’re on the hook for GDPR compliance, especially if you get visitors from the EU. Fortunately, a number of useful compliance tools emerged to make compliance easier for publishers and businesses of all sizes. Consent Management Platforms (CMPs) are tools designed to inform visitors about the data a website or third-party tool is collecting about them and how that data will be used, provide an opt-in option for users to grant consent to have their data collected (as well as an opt-out option to decline), and communicate the consent status of users and cookies to other vendors operating within the IAB Framework. CMPs also offer transparency to users, providing granular information on the companies their data will be shared with and allowing them to monitor and control who receives their data. Finally, CMPs provide a centralized database for users to review the most up-to-date privacy policies and information related to their data collection. If you’re using Google Analytics on your WordPress website or a plugin like the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress, you must comply with GDPR. A CMP is the best way to manage the consent process for GDPR compliance. With ShareThis’ GDPR Compliance Tool built right in to the Google Analytics Dashboard for WordPress plugin, you can easily stay on top of getting consent to collect your visitors’ data and provide visitors with clear and valuable information. Our GDPR Compliance Tool is compliant with the IAB’s Transparency & Consent Framework v2.0, meaning it meets the latest standards for transparency in data collection and consent management. Check out our GDPR checklist for publishers & website owners to make sure you’re meeting the requirements or download our GDPR Compliance Guide for detailed information on GDPR compliance with ShareThis’ tools.
Universal Analytics is Google’s legacy Google Analytics. The code line will normally look like so: UA-XXXXXXX. This is the product that we have been using on your behalf to collect data for your Google Analytics.
Google Analytics 4 (GA4) is the latest update from Google Analytic’s platform. GA4's biggest update is allowing you to track both websites and apps under one account. There are also many new reporting features and it provides deeper insights into how users interact with your content. On the back end, the way data is maintained is a little bit different, which will ultimately provide all of us new ways to track, measure and eventually analyze traffic.
In theory, you don’t have to set up GA4 if you do not want to. Our ShareThis Google Analytics plugin will continue working with UA and support it as long as possible. However, like all new products that are brought to market, Google will only release new features that support GA4 moving forward. We highly suggest setting up a GA4 property even if you do not plan on using it for the moment. That way, when you do decide to make the cross over, you’ll have access to historical data as soon as possible. Our plugin will collect data at the same time for UA and GA4. Setting up a GA4 property is very easy and we provide the ability to connect through your Wordpress admin section.
Nothing will happen to your existing data! Your UA property will be kept as is. If you do decide to start using GA4, a new property will be created in Google Analytics. As with all new properties, it means there won’t be any data (you start from scratch). Luckily we’ve allowed you to use both UA and GA4 properties and view both analytics on the same dashboard.
Google has already switched to supporting Google Analytics 4. However, you can still use your UA code and it will continue to collect data.

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