How To Monitor Traffic From Backlinks In Google Analytics

how to monitor traffic from backlinks Google Analytics

Backlinks do more than help your site rank higher in search results. They also send real visitors to your pages. Google Analytics lets you track exactly where those visitors come from, how they behave, and whether they take action on your site. This guide shows you how to find backlink traffic, measure conversions, and compare link quality using Google Analytics 4 (GA4). 

How To Find Backlink Traffic In Google Analytics Reports 

Google Analytics tracks backlink traffic under the Referral channel. When someone clicks a link on another website and lands on yours, GA4 records that session as referral traffic. Here is how to find it. 

Step 1: Open the Traffic Acquisition Report 

Log in to your GA4 property. Go to Reports in the left sidebar. Select Acquisition, then click Traffic Acquisition. This report shows all traffic sources grouped by channel. 

Step 2: Filter for Referral Traffic 

In the Traffic Acquisition report, look at the Session default channel group column. Find the row labeled Referral. Click on it to drill down into the specific sources sending traffic to your site. 

You will see a list of referring domains. Each domain represents a website that contains a backlink to your site. The report shows: 

● Sessions – the number of visits from each referral source 

● Engaged sessions – sessions where users spent more than 10 seconds, viewed at least two pages, or completed a conversion 

● Engagement rate – the percentage of engaged sessions out of total sessions 

● Average engagement time – how long visitors from each source stayed active 

Step 3: Use Secondary Dimensions 

To get more detail, add a secondary dimension. Click + next to the primary dimension and select Landing page. This shows which pages on your site receive the most backlink traffic. You can also add Session source / medium to see the exact domain and traffic type together. 

Step 4: Set A Date Range 

Use the date picker in the top right corner to select a specific time period. Comparing date ranges helps you see whether a new backlink is driving more traffic than older ones. 

Step 5: Create An Exploration Report For Deeper Analysis 

For more control, use the Explore section in GA4. Go to Explore and choose Blank to start a new exploration. Drag Session source into the Rows field and add metrics like Sessions, Engaged sessions, and Conversions. This gives you a fully customized view of your backlink traffic. You can also apply a filter in the exploration to show only referral traffic. Set the filter as: Session default channel group exactly matches Referral. 

Step 6: Check Individual Backlink Sources 

Once you see the list of referring domains, click on any domain to view traffic details for that source. Pay attention to domains that send a high number of sessions with a strong engagement rate. These are your most valuable backlinks. If a domain sends many sessions but shows a very low engagement rate, those visitors may not find your content useful, or the link may not be well-placed on the referring page. 

How To Measure Conversions From Backlinks 

Tracking conversions from backlinks tells you whether those links bring visitors who take action. Understanding how backlinks contribute to goals like purchases, sign-ups, or downloads helps you prioritize which links to build more of. 

Over time, the way people discover websites has changed significantly. Tracking tools now make it possible to measure not just how many people visit, but what they do after they arrive. Just as website traffic through the years has grown more diverse and measurable, conversion tracking has become one of the most practical tools for understanding real link value. 

Step 1: Set Up Conversion Events In GA4 

Before you can measure conversions from backlinks, you need to define what counts as a conversion. In GA4, conversions are based on events. 

Go to Admin in the left sidebar. Under the Property column, click Events. Here you can see all events GA4 tracks automatically, such as page_view, scroll, click, and session_start. 

To mark an event as a conversion, toggle the Mark as conversion switch next to the event you want to track. Common conversions include: 

● purchase – completed transactions 
● generate_lead – form submissions 
● sign_up – new account creation 
● file_download – PDF or resource downloads 

If you need to track a custom conversion, click Create event and define the conditions that trigger it. 

Step 2: View Conversions By Referral Source 

Go back to Reports and open Traffic Acquisition. Add the Conversions metric column if it is not already visible. Click + next to the metric columns and search for Conversions. 

Now you can see how many conversions each referral source generates. Sort the table by conversions to identify which backlinks bring the highest-converting visitors. 

Step 3: Calculate Conversion Rate By Source 

GA4 does not display conversion rate directly in the Traffic Acquisition report, but you can calculate it manually. Divide the number of conversions by the number of sessions from each referral source. 

For example: if a backlink from a blog sends 200 sessions and produces 10 conversions, the conversion rate is 5%. Compare this across different sources to find which backlinks deliver the best results. 

Step 4: Use Attribution Reports 

GA4 includes an Advertising section with attribution tools. Go to Advertising, then Attribution and select Conversion paths. This report shows the full journey a user takes before converting, including referral touchpoints. 

This is useful when a backlink appears early in a multi-step journey. A user might click a backlink, leave, and return later through a direct visit before converting. The conversion path report gives credit to each touchpoint that contributed. 

Step 5: Set Up Goals For Specific Pages 

If you want to track visits to a specific page as a conversion (such as a thank-you page after a form submission), create a custom event that fires when the user reaches that URL. Use page_view as the base event and add the condition page_location contains /thank-you. 

How To Compare Backlinks By Traffic Quality 

Not all backlinks send the same quality of traffic. A backlink from a highly relevant website often sends fewer visitors than a link from a high-traffic news site, but those fewer visitors may engage more and convert at a higher rate. Here is how to compare backlink quality using GA4 metrics. 

Metric 1: Engagement Rate 

Engagement rate measures how many sessions from a referral source were genuinely active. A rate above 60% generally indicates good traffic quality. A rate below 30% suggests visitors left quickly without interacting. 

In the Traffic Acquisition report, sort by Engagement rate to see which backlinks send the most engaged visitors. 

Metric 2: Average Engagement Time 

This metric shows how long visitors from a specific source stayed active on your site. Higher engagement time often means the content matched what the visitor expected when they clicked the link. Compare this metric across referral sources. A backlink from a niche blog in your industry may produce longer engagement times than a link from a general directory. 

Metric 3: Pages Per Session 

Although GA4 does not show this directly in the standard reports, you can calculate it in an exploration. Add Views and Sessions as metrics and divide views by sessions for each referral source. A higher number suggests visitors explored more of your site. 

Metric 4: Conversion Rate 

As calculated in the previous section, conversion rate is one of the most direct indicators of traffic quality. A backlink that converts at 4% is more valuable than one that converts at 0.5%, even if the second sends more total sessions. 

Metric 5: Bounce Behavior 

GA4 replaced the traditional bounce rate with engagement rate. A low engagement rate works the same way as a high bounce rate. If referral traffic from a source shows low engagement, review the landing page and the context of the backlink to understand the mismatch. 

Create a Comparison Table in Explore 

Use the Explore section to build a table that shows all key metrics side by side for each referral source. Set your rows to Session source, and add metrics including Sessions, Engagement rate, Average engagement time, and Conversions. Export this table to a spreadsheet to track changes over time or share with your team. 

Use Filters to Focus on Specific Campaigns 

If you run a link-building campaign and want to track only those backlinks, ask the site owners to add UTM parameters to the links. For example: 

https://yoursite.com/page?utm_source=partnerblog&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=linkbuild2025 

In GA4, go to Reports and filter by Session campaign to see only traffic from that campaign. This method gives you precise data on each link you build intentionally.

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