Referrer Traffic by Page

This table breaks down traffic sources at the page level. Each row shows a unique combination of page URL, referrer, and device type—along with session counts for that combination.

Where the Referrer Pages vs Sessions chart gives you the big picture, this table lets you drill into specifics.

Important: Session counts only include visitors who accepted the cookie consent banner. Actual traffic may be higher.

How to read the data

Page URL – The destination page on your site.

Referrer – Where the visitor came from. "Direct" means they typed your URL, used a bookmark, or came from an untracked source.

Device – Desktop, Mobile, Tablet, or Unknown.

Sessions – Total sessions for this specific combination. The pink bar provides visual comparison—longer bars mean more traffic.

Using the table controls

Page selector – Filter to a specific page or view "All Pages" to see every page/referrer combination.

Column sorting – Click any column header to sort. Click again to reverse the order. The pink arrow indicates current sort direction.

Rows per page – Choose how many rows to display (10, 25, 50, or 100).

Pagination – Navigate through results using the page buttons at the bottom.

Export CSV – Download the current filtered data as a spreadsheet for further analysis.

Filter badges

The badges below the title show your active filters:

  • Referrer – Which traffic source you're viewing (or "All Referrers")
  • Date – The time period selected
  • Device – Which device type (or "All")

These filters sync with the global page filters. Change them there, and the table updates automatically.

Patterns worth investigating

Same page, multiple referrers – Shows which sources drive traffic to specific content. Useful for understanding which channels care about which topics.

Internal referrers – Your own pages appearing as referrers reveal internal navigation paths. High numbers suggest strong content linking.

UTM-tagged referrers – Campaign URLs with tracking parameters appear as separate referrers. This helps measure specific marketing efforts.

Device variations – The same page/referrer combination appearing with different devices shows how traffic splits across platforms.

Low-session combinations – Long-tail traffic sources. Individually small, but patterns may reveal niche audiences worth nurturing.

Taking action

Export the data to analyse in a spreadsheet. Group by referrer to see total traffic from each source. Group by page to understand which content attracts diverse traffic.

Cross-reference high-traffic combinations with conversion data. A referrer sending many sessions to a page that doesn't convert suggests mismatched visitor intent—either improve the page or adjust your targeting.

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