Groovy Post
groovypost.com › how-to › google tracks your online purchases. find out what it knows and remove it
Google Tracks Your Online Purchases. Find Out What it Knows and Remove it
October 22, 2023 - To see what Google knows about your purchases, head to https://myaccount.google.com/purchases and log into your account if you aren’t already. There you will find a list of items you have purchased from Google and other locations online.
CNET
cnet.com › tech › mobile › phones › google tracks your purchases. here’s how to see what gmail knows
Google tracks your purchases. Here’s how to see what Gmail knows - CNET
May 21, 2019 - Google has been keeping tabs on what you buy through your Gmail inbox and storing them in a Google Account page that evidently no one knew about. This purchase tracking has gone on for several years before being discovered. In essence, this creates a list of your online shopping history that can stretch back five years...
Google Account
myaccount.google.com › purchases
Account Purchases - Sign in - Google Accounts
When you sign in to your account, you can see your payment info, transactions, recurring payments, and reservations
Google Support
support.google.com › googlepay › answer › 11828789
Find your Google purchase history - Google Pay Help
You can get a list of your charges and transactions for Google purchases and subscriptions. Find transactions for Google products Go to payments.google.com. Click
Google Support
support.google.com › googleplay › answer › 2850369
Review your order history - Google Play Help
When you make a purchase on Google Play, we'll send a confirmation email with your order information to the Google Account you use when making your purchase. You can always see your order history on G
Google
store.google.com › authentication
Track Order History & Package Status - Google Store
Pixel Care+Preferred Care is a device protection program that allows you to get repairs and replacements on your device. Add coverage now or within 30 days of your purchase. Accessories · Phone accessories · Watches & Trackers accessories · Smart Home accessories ·
EPIC
epic.org › documents › google-purchase-tracking
In re: Google Purchase Tracking
Google Store Sales Measurement would gather this same purchasing data, but from third-party sources who have access to a consumer’s credit and debit card transactions, and on a much greater scale.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/privacy › google is tracking all of my online purchases
r/privacy on Reddit: Google is tracking all of my online purchases
May 25, 2018 -
I've just noticed that Google tracks all your purchases by looking through your Gmail for receipts.
https://myaccount.google.com/purchases
As far as I can tell there is no way to turn this functionality off.
Anyone know if it's actually possible to stop this?
ZDNET
zdnet.com › home › tech › smartphones › mobility
Google uses Gmail to track everything you buy online | ZDNET
Google is keeping tabs on all your online purchases by tracking receipts that are emailed to your Gmail account.
Published May 29, 2019
MIT Technology Review
technologyreview.com › silicon valley › google now tracks your credit card purchases and connects them to its online profile of you
Google Now Tracks Your Credit Card Purchases and Connects Them to Its Online Profile of You | MIT Technology Review
August 22, 2024 - Google’s new ability to match people’s offline credit card purchases to their online lives is a stunning display of surveillance capitalism in action. The capability, which Google unveiled this week, allows the company to connect the dots between the ads that it shows its users and what they end up actually buying.
Google Support
support.google.com › accounts › answer › 7673989
Find your purchases, reservations & subscriptions - Computer - Google Account Help
Go to the Purchases page in your Google Account.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/googleanalytics › how do i track purchases?
r/GoogleAnalytics on Reddit: How do I track purchases?
April 23, 2025 -
I'm trying to track purchases from people who viewed my blog at anytime during the 30 days leading up to the purchase. I'm guessing this will be done by tracking the device but I'm stumped on how to go about it. Any help?
Edit: blog and checkout are both on Shopify.
Top answer 1 of 5
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You should be able to set up a custom report in the explore area of google analytics tracking visitors who come to your site via the blog and make a purchase.
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First, if you're entertaining the idea of dropping cookies, well...I wouldn't. There's no need for your reporting question, and you don't want to cookie people unless you really really need to and you can back it up. Analytics are not explicitly requested by the user, nor are they necessary for your website to work, so you analytics cookie would require consent. Again, you don't need one at all to get the report you mentioned in your original question. If you want a more sophisticated tracking solution, (and I don't know why you would based on your ask), that's easy: add page type to the dataLayer to identify blog visits and add it to your page view tag, or the global events settings, etc etc etc. There are a bunch of ways from simple to complex, that don't require cookies and are standard practice. To your question: Assuming you've used GA and confirmed there's traffic, etc., what questions are you trying to answer? How many purchases? What products were purchased? How many Users? Conversion rate for blog visitors? Device category is a dimension you can bring into reports if you want, but again, that's already happening - there's nothing you need to do. If blog and checkout are on the same domain, then it's as simple as... Creating custom report ('Explore', found in reports tab) Adding the dimensions Event Name and Date...you only need date really. Adding the metrics Purchases, and Gross Purchase Revenue, etc. Creating a User-Scoped sequenced segment for visited blog > purchased. For step one, use 'Page Location' (your blog url) and for step two 'Event name = purchase'. Configure the conditions (blog visit, purchase) to have happened across all sessions or in the same session as you need. For Rows, add Date and Event Name, For Values, adds you metrics...purchases, revenue, etc. Set your date range for the last 30 days. Finding everything will take you a half hour and/or be irritating the first time, but it's take you five mins in the reports that follow. :-) It's a standard reporting workflow that you'll need to know now or in the future - a great first reporting exercise. Keep in mind that you won't get all of your visitor data in GA4, and it definitely won't match Shopify. GA4 is there to tell you what % of our purchasers viewed your blog in this case...not how many actually visited or how many purchases actually happened. GA4 is all about those ratios...like conversion rate (transactions/sessions), etc. Good luck and feel free to message if you get stuck for free help.