Teams start questioning PostHog when analytics data becomes hard to trust, privacy compliance adds legal overhead, or the tool no longer matches the questions product and marketing teams ask every week. PostHog is useful when its tracking model matches your reporting needs, but analytics tools diverge sharply on event design, session replay, funnels, retention, sampling, cookie consent, and data ownership. 2 of the top alternatives are open-source, giving teams the option to self-host and eliminate the subscription entirely. The right replacement is usually not the tool with the longest feature list; it is the one that preserves your current workflow while changing the constraint that made PostHog frustrating. Use the alternatives below to compare pricing model, deployment control, migration effort, and the specific tradeoffs between Google Analytics, Mixpanel, Amplitude.
Who should switch from PostHog
- You're evaluating PostHog but haven't committed — Google Analytics offers a free tier covering the core workflow so you can compare on real data before spending.
- Your compliance or security posture requires data residency or source code auditability — Plausible is open-source and self-hostable, putting data under your control.
- You're on a PostHog plan primarily for one or two features — a focused alternative covers your real use case at a lower tier price.
PostHog alternatives compared
| Tool | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Open source | Key differentiator |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Analytics | Google Analytics for analytics teams | Yes | Free | No | Google Analytics is proprietary, starts at free, and runs as managed SaaS. |
| Mixpanel | Mixpanel for analytics teams | Yes | Free | No | Mixpanel is proprietary, starts at free, and runs as managed SaaS. |
| Amplitude | Amplitude for analytics teams | Yes | Free | No | Amplitude is proprietary, starts at free, and runs as managed SaaS. |
| Plausible | Plausible for analytics teams | Yes | $9/mo | Yes | Plausible is open-source, starts at $9/month, and is self-hostable. |
| Umami | Umami for analytics teams | Yes | Free | Yes | Umami is open-source, starts at free, and is self-hostable. |
Plausible is open-source and self-hostable. Running it on a $10/month VPS costs roughly $120/year in server fees. PostHog's paid tier starts at free — for most team sizes, the self-hosted route is materially cheaper. The trade-off is engineering time to set up and maintain the deployment.
Google Analytics — Best PostHog Alternative for Teams Paying for Features They Never Use
Google Analytics strips away the configuration depth that makes PostHog powerful but slow to adopt. The narrower feature set means faster onboarding and less ongoing admin burden — teams that struggled to get consistent adoption on PostHog often find Google Analytics sticks. The trade-off is real: you'll hit limits as complexity grows, but that's often years away.
Pricing: Google Analytics starts at free; PostHog starts at free. Google Analytics has a free plan and PostHog has a free plan. At comparable feature tiers, check both annual and monthly billing — annual discounts of 20–30% are standard across both.
Best for: Non-technical users and small teams who need the core job done without configuration overhead.
The catch: The simplicity ceiling is also a feature ceiling — teams with complex workflows will eventually hit limits that force a move back to a more configurable tool.
Mixpanel — Best PostHog Alternative for Parallel Running During a Platform Switch
Mixpanel is frequently chosen by teams actively migrating away from PostHog. The data import tools, migration guides, and feature mapping make the transition more straightforward than building a case for a greenfield tool. Many teams run both in parallel during transition — Mixpanel's pricing accommodates this without penalty.
Pricing: Mixpanel starts at free; PostHog starts at free. Mixpanel has a free plan and PostHog has a free plan. At comparable feature tiers, check both annual and monthly billing — annual discounts of 20–30% are standard across both.
Best for: Teams in the Analytics space that have evaluated the category and want a Mixpanel-first workflow.
The catch: Mixpanel's integration catalog is smaller than PostHog's, which may require additional middleware or Zapier connections for niche tools.
Amplitude — Best PostHog Alternative for Teams on a Tighter Software Budget
Amplitude delivers the core PostHog workflow at free — meaningfully cheaper than PostHog's free starting point. The feature set is slightly narrower, which is exactly what teams paying for PostHog capabilities they don't use should expect. The savings compound: over 12 months, the difference often covers a meaningful addition to the stack.
Pricing: Amplitude starts at free; PostHog starts at free. Amplitude has a free plan and PostHog has a free plan. At comparable feature tiers, check both annual and monthly billing — annual discounts of 20–30% are standard across both.
Best for: Cost-conscious SMBs and seed-stage startups watching software spend as a percentage of revenue.
The catch: The feature gap versus PostHog is real at the equivalent tier — power users migrating from PostHog will hit limits that require workflow changes.
Plausible — Best PostHog Alternative for Teams That Need a Functional Free Tier
Plausible offers a functional free tier that covers what most small teams actually need from PostHog's paid plan. You can evaluate real usage without committing to an annual contract. The paid upgrade path exists, but many teams stay on the free plan indefinitely.
Pricing: Plausible starts at $9/month; PostHog starts at free. Plausible has a free plan and PostHog has a free plan. At comparable feature tiers, check both annual and monthly billing — annual discounts of 20–30% are standard across both.
Best for: Early-stage startups, bootstrapped founders, and small teams evaluating Analytics tools before committing to a paid plan.
The catch: The paid upgrade path can be steep — free tier limits are intentionally tight to encourage conversion, and the jump to the first paid plan is often abrupt.
Umami — Best PostHog Alternative for Enterprise Procurement With Security Reviews
Umami targets the enterprise segment with governance, compliance, and audit features that go beyond PostHog's mid-market positioning. SSO, SCIM provisioning, role-based access, and dedicated support SLAs are standard rather than expensive add-ons. For teams in regulated industries or with security review requirements, the additional structure justifies the premium.
Pricing: Umami starts at free; PostHog starts at free. Umami has a free plan and PostHog has a free plan. At comparable feature tiers, check both annual and monthly billing — annual discounts of 20–30% are standard across both.
Best for: Mid-market and enterprise buyers with procurement, security review, and compliance requirements.
The catch: Enterprise pricing is opaque and typically requires a demo and negotiation — you won't find a self-serve signup with predictable per-seat cost.
How to choose your PostHog alternative
- Do you serve EU users and need GDPR compliance without a cookie consent wall? Cookieless analytics tools like Plausible and Fathom avoid this; PostHog requires a CMP.
- Do you need product analytics (funnels, retention, cohorts) or just traffic and acquisition data? These are different tools with different architectures.
- Does your engineering team have bandwidth to self-host? Self-hosted Matomo and Umami are free on your infrastructure; managed options cost $9–15/month.
Frequently asked questions
Yes — Matomo and Umami are free to self-host. Plausible offers a 30-day trial. Mixpanel has a free tier for up to 20 million events/month. Each trades different features against PostHog's depth. For a fair comparison, price PostHog against the exact workflow you use weekly, not the whole feature checklist. Google Analytics is listed at free, while Mixpanel is listed at free; PostHog is listed at free.
Plausible and Fathom are cookieless and GDPR-compliant without consent banners. Both are EU-hosted. Self-hosted Matomo stores all data on your servers with zero third-party transmission. For a fair comparison, price PostHog against the exact workflow you use weekly, not the whole feature checklist. Google Analytics is listed at free, while Mixpanel is listed at free; PostHog is listed at free.
PostHog applies data sampling on high-traffic sites in some Explore reports. For smaller sites, accuracy is generally high. Privacy-first alternatives like Plausible use no sampling at all. For a fair comparison, price PostHog against the exact workflow you use weekly, not the whole feature checklist. Google Analytics is listed at free, while Mixpanel is listed at free; PostHog is listed at free.
Self-hosted Umami (MIT) and Matomo (GPL) are completely free. You pay only for server hosting — typically $5–10/month on a basic VPS. For a fair comparison, price PostHog against the exact workflow you use weekly, not the whole feature checklist. Google Analytics is listed at free, while Mixpanel is listed at free; PostHog is listed at free.
About PostHog
Open-source product analytics suite