Source

What is Source?
In web analytics, Source is the label for where a visitor came from—typically a domain or system that initiated a visit or Session (e.g., google, bing, facebook.com, newsletter). It’s most often paired with “medium” (e.g., google / organic, newsletter / email) to describe both origin and transport. Source powers acquisition reporting, Attribution, and ultimately connects traffic to Conversion and Conversion Rate.

How Source works

Analytics tools determine Source using:

  • UTM tags: utm_source explicitly sets the value (e.g., utm_source=newsletter). See UTM and Campaign.
  • HTTP referrers: The browser’s Referrer header reveals the linking site; if it matches a search engine list, Source becomes the engine (e.g., google) and medium becomes Organic Search.
  • No referrer: If neither UTM nor referrer is present, the visit is usually classified as Direct.

Most tools stitch Source to a user via cookies or IDs (e.g., Client ID) and keep the first-touch vs. last-touch value per Session and across Pageview hits, depending on their attribution logic.

Common Source values (examples)

Source typeExample values
Search enginegoogle, bing, duckduckgo
Social networkfacebook.com, twitter.com
Referral websitepartner.example.com
Email systemnewsletter, mailchimp
Paid ad platformgoogle, facebook, adroll
Direct (none)(no referrer / no UTM)

Tool specifics (GA4, Matomo, Plausible, Simple Analytics)

  • GA4: Prefers UTM; otherwise derives from referrer and its search engine catalog. Source is assigned at session start; later UTMs start a new session.
  • Matomo, Plausible, Simple Analytics: Similar precedence (UTM > referrer > direct), but naming and grouping may vary slightly. Always standardize your UTM naming to keep Source clean.

Why it matters

A clean Source dimension makes acquisition cost analysis, Attribution, and channel trend detection trustworthy. Get UTMs right, audit redirects that drop referrers, and whitelist self-domains to avoid self-referrals.