Free
Monthly- 1 user
- 5 websites
- 1 month history
- Unlimited pageviews
This plan is described as free forever, but it includes only 1 month of history. The pricing page also notes that a badge is required.
Privacy-first, cookieless GA alternative popular in 2026
Simple Analytics keeps pricing intentionally simple: there is a free forever option for very small sites, a self-serve paid plan that starts at a clearly stated monthly price, and an enterprise option for larger teams that need more control, support, and procurement-friendly terms. The official pricing page emphasizes that the service is privacy-friendly by design, with no cookies, no consent banners, and no personal data collection on the self-serve plan. It also makes the billing model clear: you can choose monthly or annual billing, annual billing includes two months free, and you can cancel anytime while still keeping access through the end of the paid period. For buyers comparing web analytics tools, that combination of transparent entry pricing and usage-based scaling makes it easier to estimate early spend without committing to a long contract. If your team only needs lightweight reporting, the free plan may be enough. If you need team access or higher traffic capacity, the self-serve tier is the natural next step. Larger organizations can move to enterprise for SSO, SLA, manual invoicing, and procurement support.
Free forever plan plus usage-based paid plans, with monthly or annual billing and custom enterprise pricing.
The pricing page offers monthly and annual billing, and it explicitly says annual billing includes two months free. The free plan is described as free forever and does not require a credit card, while the trial lasts 14 days and also does not require a credit card. Customers can cancel anytime and keep access until the end of the period they already paid for. If yearly usage exceeds the selected limit, Simple Analytics says it will email the customer and allow one week to increase the limit before adjusting it.
This plan is described as free forever, but it includes only 1 month of history. The pricing page also notes that a badge is required.
The pricing page shows an estimate based on monthly pageviews, with the example range moving from 100k pageviews up to 2.5M pageviews. It also says the monthly fee will match usage.
Enterprise is positioned for larger teams that need security reviews, procurement, billing support, and SOC 2-related capabilities. The official page asks buyers to request a demo.
The official pricing page says the self-serve plan includes 1 user, and additional users are billed separately per month.
The pricing page states that Bitcoin is accepted for paid plans, with a 10% surcharge when paying this way, and that the surcharge is tied to yearly billing.
For bills from $500, the pricing page says payment via bank transfer is available and adds banking and service fees.
A solo founder or hobby site wants basic analytics without paying.
Expected cost$0 /monthA small team wants the self-serve plan and pays for a few extra teammates.
Expected cost$20 /month plus $20/mo per extra userAn enterprise team needs security reviews, procurement support, and advanced access controls.
Expected costCustom pricingYes. The pricing page says Simple Analytics is free forever, and it also says you can start a trial with no credit card required. After the 14-day trial, you can either continue on a paid plan or downgrade to the free plan. The free plan includes limits such as 1 month of history.
Yes. The pricing page says you can cancel your subscription at any moment. It also says you will keep access to your account and data until the end of the period you paid for. That makes the billing model straightforward for buyers who want to avoid long commitments.
The pricing page says yearly billing includes two months free. It also says that when you choose yearly, you estimate your traffic after the trial and that Simple Analytics will email you if you go over your limit. Buyers that prefer fewer invoices may find annual billing attractive, but they should set the limit high enough to avoid extra invoices during the year.
The pricing page says paid plans accept credit card, debit card, Bitcoin, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. It also says bills from $500 can be paid via bank transfer, with an additional 10% in banking and service fees. Customers can also pay in Euros, US Dollars, or British Pounds.