Google Analytics 4 doesn't have a classic 'dashboard.' The closest built-in version is the Reports snapshot, a page of summary cards you can customize (with the Editor role) by clicking Customize report, then adding or removing cards. For a polished, shareable dashboard that blends in data from other sources, connect GA4 to Looker Studio, which is free.
If you’ve gone looking for a “dashboard” in Google Analytics 4, you’ve probably come up empty. GA4 doesn’t have one, at least not by that name.
Here’s what that means. The old Universal Analytics had a Dashboards section. GA4 replaced it with a few different pieces, and once you know which is which, you can build a view that answers your real questions: where traffic comes from, which pages work, and whether people are doing what you want.
This guide walks through all four options, from the two-minute built-in version to a full shareable dashboard.
Before you start: Your GA4 property should be installed and collecting data (see the installation guide), and ideally you’ve already set up key events so your dashboard can show them. To customize reports, you need the Editor role on the property.
First, what “dashboard” means in GA4
When people say “GA4 dashboard,” they usually mean one of four things. Here’s how they compare, so you pick the right one.
| Option | What it is | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Reports snapshot | The built-in overview page of summary cards | A quick, always-on view inside GA4 |
| Report collections | Custom groups of reports in your left menu | Organizing GA4’s reports around your goals |
| Explorations | A free-form analysis workspace | Answering one-off, deeper questions |
| Looker Studio | A separate free tool for building dashboards | Polished, shareable reports for your team |
The short version: for a fast internal view, customize the Reports snapshot. For a dashboard you’ll send to your boss or a client, use Looker Studio.
Option 1: Customize your Reports snapshot
The Reports snapshot is the first thing you see under Reports. It’s a page of summary cards (users, where they came from, top pages, and so on). This is the closest thing GA4 has to a built-in dashboard, and you can reshape it in a couple of minutes.
Step 1: Open the snapshot in edit mode
Go to Reports > Reports snapshot, then click Customize report in the top-right corner. This opens the editing panel on the right.
You should see: An edit panel slide in from the right, with your existing cards listed.
Step 2: Add, remove, and reorder cards
Now build the view you want:
- To add a card, click + Add cards and pick one from the list.
- To remove a card, click the x on it.
- To change the order, drag cards into the sequence you want.
Put the cards that answer your top questions near the top, since that’s what you’ll see first.
Step 3: Save your changes
Click Save. GA4 will tell you which collections contain the report you’re changing, so you know what you’re affecting.
You should see: Your customized snapshot load with the cards in your new order.
If you’d rather keep the original and build a fresh one, GA4 also lets you create a new overview report from the Library and set it as your snapshot. Google covers the full process in Customize overview reports and “Reports snapshot”.
Option 2: Build a report collection in the Library
A collection is a custom group of reports that shows up in your left menu. Think of it as building your own section of GA4 around a goal, like “Lead Gen” or “Content.” You need the Editor or administrator role for this.
Here’s the process:
- Click Library at the bottom of the left menu.
- Click Create new collection, then choose Blank or a template.
- Give the collection a name.
- Click + Create new topic and name it (you get up to 5 topics per collection).
- Drag Detail report cards from the right panel under each topic. A topic holds up to 10 reports total, of which at most one may be an Overview report card (so up to 9 detail reports plus 1 overview, or 10 detail reports).
- Click Save.
- Back in the Library, find your collection card, click More (the three-dot menu), and click Publish.
You should see: Your published collection appear in the left menu, listed alphabetically by name.
A few limits to know: a property allows up to 7 collections, 5 topics each, 10 reports per topic, and 150 custom reports total. Google’s full walkthrough is in Customize report navigation.
Option 3: Use Explorations for deeper questions
Explore (in the left menu) is a separate workspace for free-form analysis: funnels, path analysis, and side-by-side segment comparisons. It’s not really a dashboard. It’s where you go to answer a specific question, like “where do people drop off in my signup flow?”
Two things to keep in mind. Explorations can sample data on high-traffic properties, and they have row limits, so the numbers can differ slightly from standard reports. If you need complete, unsampled data, export to BigQuery. Otherwise, use Explore for investigation and one of the other options for your everyday view.
Option 4: Build a real dashboard in Looker Studio
When you need a dashboard that looks good, updates on its own, and can be shared with people who don’t live in GA4, use Looker Studio. It’s Google’s free reporting tool, and it connects to GA4 in two clicks with no setup fees.
Why it’s worth the extra step:
- Far more chart types and layout control than GA4’s built-in reports.
- You can blend GA4 data with Google Ads, Search Console, and other sources in one view.
- Real sharing, the way Google Docs works, so a client or teammate opens a link and sees the report.
- As of 2026, Gemini in Looker Studio can draft reports and summaries from a plain-language request (a paid Looker Studio Pro feature).
See our Looker Studio tutorial for the full walkthrough. If you only need a quick internal check, the Reports snapshot is enough. If you’re reporting to other people, Looker Studio is the better home.
What to put on a marketing dashboard
Whichever option you choose, the useful metrics are mostly the same. Here’s a starter set and where each one lives in GA4.
| What you want to know | Where to find it |
|---|---|
| Where traffic comes from | Sessions by Session default channel group or Session source / medium |
| Which pages get traffic | Pages and screens report (Reports > Engagement) |
| Whether people convert | Your key events (Reports > Engagement > Key events) |
| How campaigns perform | Traffic filtered by your UTM campaign values |
| How engaged visitors are | Engagement rate and average engagement time |
Start with those five. They answer “is my marketing working?” without drowning you in numbers you’ll never use.
How to share what you built
Built-in GA4 reports don’t share cleanly. Anyone you send them to needs their own access to the property, and they’ll land on the raw interface. That’s fine for a teammate who uses GA4 anyway.
For everyone else, this is the moment Looker Studio earns its place: you build once, then share a link, and the reader sees a clean dashboard without touching GA4.
What to do next
You’ve got a view of your data that matches how you actually work. Here’s where to go from here:
- Mark your important actions as key events if you haven’t yet, so they show up on your dashboard. See the key events guide.
- Tag your campaign links with UTM parameters so the campaign cards show real data instead of “(not set)”.
- Give it a week, then check whether the cards you chose are answering your questions. Swap out any that aren’t.
- Move to Looker Studio when you need to report to other people. If content is your focus, go straight to the content performance dashboard tutorial.
For the bigger picture of how GA4 fits together, start with our GA4 beginner’s guide.