Web Analytics

What is Pageviews?

Pageviews measure the total number of pages viewed on a website. They help understand content consumption and site engagement.

Full FormPageviews
CategoryWeb Analytics
UnitCount (number)
Higher IsBetter
FORMULA

How to Track and Measure Pageviews

Pageviews measure how many times pages are viewed on a website, showing how much content users consume. Higher pageviews often indicate strong interest or navigation, making it useful for content and UX analysis. It helps identify popular pages.

Simple Example

If a user visited 3 pages in one session

total pageviews = 3
1
User
3
Pages
3
Pageviews

Marketing Platforms that supports Pageviews

These platforms provide the data needed to measure or calculate Pageviews in Two Minute Reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

A pageview is recorded each time a page loads or reloads in a browser, representing the most basic unit of website traffic measurement. If someone visits your homepage, clicks to a product page, and refreshes it, that generates three pageviews. Pageviews reveal content consumption patterns, showing which pages attract the most attention and how deeply visitors engage with your site. High pageviews indicate successful traffic generation but don't necessarily mean quality engagement—that requires analyzing pageviews alongside metrics like time on page, conversion rate, and bounce rate to understand if visitors find genuine value.
Pages per session (total pageviews divided by sessions) indicates content engagement depth. The average across industries is approximately 2-3 pages per session. Content-heavy sites like publishers and blogs should target 3-5 or higher as visitors explore related articles. E-commerce sites typically see 4-6 pages per session as shoppers browse products. Single-page applications or highly focused landing pages might see closer to 1-1.5 pages per session by design. Low ratios suggest visitors aren't finding relevant content or clear navigation paths. High ratios indicate strong engagement but verify conversions are happening—sometimes high exploration means difficulty finding information.
Pageviews and unique pageviews measure page consumption differently. Pageviews count every instance of a page loading, including multiple views by the same person. Unique pageviews count each page only once per session, regardless of how many times that user views it. For example, if a visitor views your blog post, clicks to another page, then returns to that same blog post, it generates two pageviews but only one unique pageview. Unique pageviews provide a better measure of actual content reach, while total pageviews indicate overall consumption and re-engagement. The ratio between them reveals how often visitors return to the same content within a session.
Boosting pageviews from existing traffic requires improving on-site engagement and content discovery. Implement strategic internal linking that guides visitors to related content naturally within articles. Add 'Related Posts' or 'You Might Also Like' sections on every page using relevant recommendations. Improve navigation structure making important pages easily discoverable. Use prominent calls-to-action directing visitors to high-value content. Create content series that encourage sequential reading. Reduce page load times so visitors don't abandon before exploring. Use engaging headlines and preview snippets that entice clicks to additional pages. Add interactive elements like quizzes or calculators that require multiple page interactions. Ensure mobile experience facilitates easy browsing across pages.