Bounce Rate Calculator — Engagement Rate & Benchmarks | LazyTools

Free SEO Tool · Bounce Rate · Engagement Rate · GA4 · Benchmarks

Bounce Rate Calculator

Calculate bounce rate and GA4 engagement rate instantly. Compare against page-type benchmarks, set targets and export. Free, no signup.

📊 Bounce Rate Calculator
📊 Traffic data
Total sessions
Single-page sessions (bounces)
🎯 Benchmark
Target bounce rate (%)
Page type
📋 Results
📊 Bounce rate📈 Engagement🎯 Benchmarks⬇ JSON export

How to Use the Bounce Rate Calculator

Enter total sessions and single-page sessions (bounces) to calculate bounce rate and engagement rate. Furthermore, select the page type for industry-specific benchmark comparison. Additionally, the target field shows how many bounces need to be reduced to reach the desired rate.

  1. Enter sessions and bouncesTotal sessions is the full session count from analytics. Furthermore, bounces are sessions where only one page was viewed. Additionally, bounce rate equals bounces divided by total sessions multiplied by 100.
  2. Set target bounce rateThe target shows how many fewer bounces are needed. Furthermore, a realistic target depends on page type. Additionally, the result panel shows pass or fail against target.
  3. Select page typeBlog posts typically bounce at 70–90%. Furthermore, e-commerce products average 20–45%. Additionally, landing pages average 40–60%.
  4. Read engagement rateEngagement rate equals 100% minus bounce rate. Furthermore, GA4 uses engagement rate as its primary metric. Additionally, an engaged session in GA4 lasts at least 10 seconds or views 2 or more pages.
  5. Export resultsCopy or download the analysis as JSON. Furthermore, include benchmarks in stakeholder reports. Additionally, track bounce rate trends weekly for actionable insights.

Bounce Rate Formula

Bounce rate = Single-page sessions ÷ Total sessions × 100 Engagement rate = (Total sessions − Bounces) ÷ Total sessions × 100 GA4 engagement: session ≥ 10 seconds OR 2+ pageviews OR conversion

Bounce Rate Benchmarks by Page Type

Page typeAverage bounce rate
Blog / article70–90%
Landing page40–60%
Homepage30–50%
E-commerce product20–45%
SaaS / web app30–55%
Reference: Google Analytics Help — bounce rate | GA4 documentation.

Bounce Rate in GA4 vs Universal Analytics

GA4 redefined bounce rate as the inverse of engagement rate. Furthermore, an engaged session in GA4 must last at least 10 seconds, have a conversion, or view multiple pages. Additionally, GA4 bounce rates are generally lower than Universal Analytics for the same traffic because the 10-second threshold captures engaged single-page users.

Reducing Bounce Rate — Practical Strategies

Match landing page content to search intent — this is the primary cause of high bounce rates. Furthermore, improve page load speed since every additional second increases bounce by approximately 32%. Additionally, add clear navigation, internal links and calls-to-action to encourage second-page visits.

Content readability directly affects bounce rate. Furthermore, short paragraphs, clear headings and visual elements keep users engaged. Additionally, above-the-fold content must signal relevance within 3 seconds of landing.

Is a High Bounce Rate Always Bad?

Not necessarily — a blog post that fully answers the question has a high bounce rate by definition but the user was satisfied. Furthermore, single-page tools have high bounce rates because the user completes their task. Additionally, GA4 engagement-based metrics better capture these scenarios.

Bounce Rate by Traffic Source

Organic search traffic typically bounces at 40–50% because intent is strong. Furthermore, social media traffic bounces at 60–80% due to weaker intent. Additionally, well-targeted paid traffic achieves 30–40% bounce rates.

Engagement Rate — The GA4 Standard

GA4 positions engagement rate as the primary metric instead of bounce rate. Furthermore, engagement rate equals engaged sessions divided by total sessions times 100. Additionally, a good engagement rate is above 60% meaning most sessions interact meaningfully with content.

Frequently Asked Questions

Bounces ÷ Sessions × 100. Furthermore, a bounce is a single-page session. Additionally, GA4 uses engagement rate instead.
Depends on page type — blog 70–90%, landing 40–60%, ecom 20–45%. Furthermore, compare to same type. Additionally, context matters more than absolute number.
GA4 uses 10-second engagement threshold. Furthermore, GA4 rates are typically lower. Additionally, engagement rate is the primary GA4 metric.
No — satisfied single-page visits naturally bounce. Furthermore, GA4 captures these better. Additionally, combine with time-on-page for insight.
Match content to intent, improve speed, add CTAs. Furthermore, above-the-fold signals relevance in 3 seconds. Additionally, readability improvements help.
Organic: 40–50%. Social: 60–80%. Paid: depends on targeting. Furthermore, well-targeted ads: 30–40%. Additionally, email: 40–55%.
Engaged sessions ÷ Total × 100. Furthermore, above 60% is good. Additionally, engaged = 10+ seconds, conversion, or 2+ pages.
Not a confirmed ranking factor. Furthermore, Google says it does not use analytics data directly. Additionally, it correlates with poor content quality which does matter.

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