Google Analytics offers a few user metrics that provide different ways of understanding how many people visit your website or app.
Differences at a glance
The following core user metrics are used to define how many people visit your site or app:
- "Total users" is the total number of people who visited your site or app in the specified date range.
- "Active users" is the number of people who engaged with your site or app in the specified date range.
- "New users" is the number of people who have never visited your site or app before in the specified date range.
- "Returning users" is the number of people who have visited your site or app before in the specified date range.
It's important to note that not all new users are active, so new users may exceed active users. While new and active users won’t exceed total users, factors such as thresholding may contribute to discrepancies in these numbers. In Google Analytics, you'll only see active users in your reporting, but both active and inactive users will show in exports to Google Ads. Learn more About data thresholds.
Differences in depth
The following table provides the definition for each of these user metrics:
Metric | What it is | How it's populated |
---|---|---|
Total users |
The number of unique users who triggered any event in the specified date range. |
This metric is populated automatically. |
New users |
The number of new unique users who logged the |
This metric is populated automatically. |
Active users |
The number of unique users who engaged with your site or app in the specified date range. An active user is any user who has an engaged session or when Analytics collects:
The user is considered an active user as soon as the user_engagement event is detected within a second. |
This metric is populated automatically. |
Returning users |
The number of unique users who initiated at least one previous session, regardless of whether or not the previous session was an engaged session, in the specified date range. |
This metric is populated automatically. |