Client Side Tracking or Server Side Tracking in 2026
Imagine this desirable e-commerce brand, crushing its numbers. $2 million in annual revenue, Meta ads returning 4x ROAS according to Facebook's dashboard, Google Analytics showing steady growth. Life was good.
Then iOS 14.5 dropped in April 2021.
Within weeks, Facebook ROAS "dropped" to 1.8x. But here's the twist: actual revenue hadn't changed. The bank account was still growing at the same rate. The problem? Facebook couldn't see half the conversions anymore.
Basically businesses were making the same money, maybe more, but they were flying blind.
This is happening to thousands of businesses right now. And it's not going away—it's getting worse. You will be forgiven to think, well changes happened as far back as 2021, it should be a fixed issue. Well for a lot of businesses, it isn't! Just not yet.
The Invisible Crisis in Digital Marketing
If you're running a business online, you're probably experiencing some version of this:
Your ad platforms report different conversion numbers than your analytics
You can't tell which marketing channels actually drive sales
You're spending more on ads but can't measure if they're working
Your data feels... incomplete
You're not imagining it. The way we've tracked user behavior for the last 15 years is fundamentally broken.
The culprits?
Apple's iOS privacy changes. Code named - App Tracking Transparency)
GDPR and privacy regulations
Ad blockers (used by 30-40% of internet users)
Browser restrictions (Safari, Firefox blocking third-party cookies)
Chrome's eventual third-party cookie deprecation
The result? Traditional tracking methods now miss 30-50% of conversions. You're making decisions based on half the picture.
The Old Way: How Tracking Used to Work
For years, tracking was simple. You'd add some JavaScript code to your website—Google Analytics, Facebook Pixel, TikTok Pixel—and magic happened.
Here's what was actually going on behind the scenes:
The Client-Side Tracking Flow
Step 1: A visitor lands on your website
Step 2: Their browser downloads your HTML page
Step 3: Embedded JavaScript tags start executing in their browser
Step 4: These tags watch everything the visitor does:
Page views
Button clicks
Form submissions
Purchases
Time on page
Scroll depth
Step 5: The JavaScript sends this data directly from the visitor's browser to third-party servers (Google's servers, Meta's servers, etc.)
Step 6: Each platform drops cookies in the visitor's browser to remember them
Think of it like this: Every marketing platform has its own "spy" sitting in your visitor's browser, watching their every move and reporting back to headquarters.
This worked beautifully... until it didn't.
Why Client-Side Tracking Is Dying
The problem with having JavaScript "spies" in browsers? Users and by extension regulators decided they don't like being watched.
Apple struck first. iOS 14.5 made apps ask permission to track. Spoiler: 96% of users said "no thanks." Yup, you read that right, 96%!
Browsers followed. Safari and Firefox started blocking third-party cookies by default. Chrome announced they'd do the same (they keep delaying, but it's coming).
Ad blockers exploded. That JavaScript code trying to send data to Facebook or Google? Blocked. The data never arrives. It's like the spy got kicked out before they could report anything.
Privacy laws tightened. GDPR in Europe, CCPA in California, and dozens of others require explicit consent before tracking. Many users decline.
The result? Your "spies" are being systematically removed from users' browsers.
The New Way: Server-Side Tracking
Enter server-side tracking—a completely different approach.
Instead of tracking events in the user's browser, it happens on your server before the page even fully loads.
The Server-Side Tracking Flow
Step 1: A visitor requests your website
Step 2: Your server receives the request
Step 3: Before sending the page to the visitor, your server logs what happened: "User visited homepage at 2:34pm"
Step 4: Your server decides what data to send to marketing platforms
Step 5: Your server sends that data to Google, Meta, TikTok—directly from server to server
Step 6: Your server sends the HTML page to the visitor (often with fewer or no JavaScript tags)
Step 7: The visitor sees your website, but the important tracking has already happened on the backend
Think of it differently: Instead of platforms having spies in the visitor's browser, you control a gatekeeper on your server who decides what information to share with whom.
The Key Difference (This Changes Everything)
Client-side tracking:
Third-party platforms have direct access to user browsers
Users and browsers can block it
Data collection happens in an environment you don't control
Server-side tracking:
You collect the data first
You decide what to share with platforms
Happens in an environment you DO control
Can't be blocked by ad blockers or browser settings
It's the difference between letting strangers into your house to watch your family (client-side) versus you recording what happens and deciding what to tell those strangers (server-side).
But It's Not That Simple
Before you rush to rip out all your JavaScript tags, here's the reality: both approaches have trade-offs.
Client-side is dying but still easier to implement and captures rich behavioral data.
Server-side is the future but requires technical resources and loses some automatic data collection.
Most businesses will need both—a hybrid approach that takes the best of each world.
What This Means for Your Business
Right now, you're likely in one of these situations:
Scenario 1: "My data looks fine"
You're probably losing 30-40% of conversions without realizing it
Your ad platform optimization is working with incomplete data
You're making decisions based on a partial picture
Scenario 2: "I know my data is off"
You see discrepancies between platforms
Revenue doesn't match what analytics reports
You're frustrated but don't know what to do
Scenario 3: "I've heard of server-side but it sounds complicated"
You're right, it is more complex
But it might be essential for your business
The question isn't IF but WHEN
The Questions You Should Be Asking
Before you can choose the right tracking strategy, you need to understand:
What are the actual pros and cons of each approach? (Not just the marketing fluff from vendors)
Which approach fits MY business? (A lottery brand needs different tracking than a media company)
Do I need to go all-in on one, or use both? (Spoiler: probably both)
How do I actually implement this? (And how much will it cost?)
What's the ROI? (Is fixing my tracking worth the investment?)
Let's talk about your situation and help you land on the most probable solution for your business today and in the future!