GA4 Funnel Exploration is one of the most powerful analysis tools available to Shopify store owners — but it lives inside Explore, which most people never open. If you want to know exactly where in your purchase flow you are losing customers, this is the report to use.
This guide explains how to set up a funnel, how to read the results, and how to act on what you find.
Where to Find Funnel Exploration in GA4
Go to Explore in the left sidebar of GA4. Click Blank to start a new exploration, then in the Technique dropdown at the top left, select Funnel exploration. You will see a canvas on the right and a configuration panel on the left.
How to Set Up a Purchase Funnel
In the Steps section, click the pencil icon to open the step editor. Add each step of your funnel using GA4 event names. A standard Shopify purchase funnel looks like this:
- session_start — user arrives on the site
- view_item — user views a product page
- add_to_cart — user adds something to their cart
- begin_checkout — user starts checkout
- purchase — user completes the order
For each step, select the event name from the dropdown. You can also add dimension filters at each step — for example, filtering to only show the funnel for users from a specific traffic source or campaign.
How to Read Funnel Exploration Results
The funnel visualization shows you:
- How many users entered each step
- How many completed it
- The completion rate between steps
- The abandonment count and percentage
Example: 5,000 sessions started → 1,800 viewed a product (36%) → 420 added to cart (23%) → 300 began checkout (71%) → 240 purchased (80%).
The biggest drop-off in this example is between session start and product view. That means most visitors are not even reaching a product page. Your homepage or category pages may not be directing traffic effectively, or your paid ads are landing users on pages that do not connect to what they searched for.
Drop-Off Benchmarks for Shopify
Use these as rough benchmarks. Wide variance exists by niche and price point, but these give you a starting point:
- Session start → Product view: 40–60% completion
- Product view → Add to cart: 8–15% completion
- Add to cart → Begin checkout: 60–75% completion
- Begin checkout → Purchase: 50–70% completion
If your numbers are significantly below these at any step, you have a specific problem to investigate at that point in the funnel.
How to Segment the Funnel by Traffic Source
The most valuable use of Funnel Exploration is comparing how different traffic sources move through the funnel. In the Breakdown section, add Session source / medium. This splits the funnel by channel so you can see that, for example:
- Meta / cpc: 12% add-to-cart rate
- Google / cpc: 8% add-to-cart rate
- Email / none: 22% add-to-cart rate
If Meta ads are converting product views to add-to-cart at a higher rate than Google, that tells you product-ad intent alignment is stronger on Meta for your store. Use this to guide budget allocation.
Open Funnel vs Closed Funnel
GA4 gives you the option to use an open or closed funnel:
- Closed funnel: users must complete each step in order. If they skip step 2 and jump to step 3, they are not counted. This is the default.
- Open funnel: users can enter the funnel at any step, even if they did not complete the ones before it.
For a Shopify purchase funnel, a closed funnel usually gives you more actionable data because the order of the steps matters. Use an open funnel only if you want to measure how many users completed checkout without having been tracked viewing a product first.
Using the Data to Improve Your Store
Here is how to turn the numbers into specific actions:
- High drop-off at Product view → Add to cart: Improve product page copy, images, and pricing. Add social proof (reviews, badges, guarantees).
- High drop-off at Add to cart → Begin checkout: Reduce friction in the cart. Try removing forced account creation. Add urgency or reassurance near the checkout button.
- High drop-off at Begin checkout → Purchase: Check payment method availability. Review checkout page load speed. Add payment options like Buy Now Pay Later or Apple Pay.
Why Your Funnel Numbers Might Be Wrong
If your funnel shows large numbers at session start and view_item but very few at the purchase step — even though Shopify shows normal order volume — your purchase event is not tracking correctly. This is the most common GA4 issue on Shopify after Shopify’s checkout extensibility update.
A funnel with a broken final step gives you incorrect completion and drop-off rates at every stage above it. You cannot trust the analysis until the tracking is fixed.
Confirm Your Funnel Events Are Firing Correctly
Setting up Funnel Exploration takes 10 minutes. Getting accurate, actionable results from it requires accurate event tracking underneath every step.
If your funnel numbers look off, or you want to confirm every event in the funnel is firing correctly with the right parameters, we can audit your GA4 setup and tell you exactly what is missing. Book your free Shopify tracking audit here.