The Ecomm Analyst

Growing stores, one honest take at a time.

ThoughtMetric vs Triple Whale

If you run a Shopify brand and you’ve outgrown GA4, ThoughtMetric and Triple Whale are two of the names that come up most. I use ThoughtMetric across the stores I work with, so I’m not pretending to be neutral. But these tools are aimed at different versions of the same problem, and which one fits depends less on price than on how much surface area you actually want your analytics tool to cover.

Triple Whale

Triple Whale has turned into an operating layer, not just an attribution tool. The pitch now is that your whole business sits in one view, paid and owned and subscription and organic, with an AI operator called Moby on top of it. They recently reworked pricing, and the headline change is a real free tier.

The free plan ($0) gets you blended ROAS, the Triple Pixel for cross-device tracking, first and last click attribution, and post-purchase surveys. Foundation runs $219 a month and is where multi-touch attribution, no-code dashboards, custom metrics, a SQL editor, and Moby in Slack show up. Automate is $749 a month and adds Moby automations, creative generation, and rule-based campaign actions. Enterprise is contact-sales and brings MMM, incrementality testing, and MTA together.

That’s a lot of tool. If you want one place where your team asks questions, builds reports, and increasingly lets an AI agent do repeatable work, Triple Whale is built for that. The thing I’d push back on is the “most accurate pixel in ecommerce” language. Every pixel vendor says some version of this, and the post-iOS reality is that no pixel sees everything. Triple Pixel is good, but treat the accuracy claims as marketing and check the numbers against your own platform data and your post-purchase survey before you trust any single attribution view.

ThoughtMetric

ThoughtMetric is narrower on purpose. It’s attribution and reporting for e-commerce brands, and it doesn’t try to also be your AI operator or your creative tool. What you get is channel-level attribution you can actually defend in a meeting, plus the LTV and cohort views that matter once you’re past judging channels on day-one ROAS.

I reach for it because the numbers hold up and the surface area is small enough that the team actually uses it. There’s no Moby-style agent layer and no ambition to run your ad accounts for you. The honest tradeoff is that it’s built only for e-commerce. If you sell physical products on Shopify, that focus is the point. If you’re running a mixed model with a big services or B2B component, it’s the wrong tool.

On fit, I’d put ThoughtMetric in the $1M to $20M revenue range, the brands that have outgrown GA4 but don’t need an enterprise attribution stack with geo holdouts and a data team to run it.

Head to head

On accuracy, both lean on pixel tracking, and both live with the same iOS and cross-device gaps everyone deals with. Neither is magic. The difference is that Triple Whale wraps more around the number, with surveys and blended views and AI summaries, while ThoughtMetric keeps the attribution view clean and asks you to do the interpreting. I prefer the second approach, but I get why a busy team wants the first.

On scope, this is the real split. Triple Whale wants to be the layer your whole team operates from, including an AI agent doing recurring work. ThoughtMetric wants to be the attribution and reporting tool you trust and then get out of. If you’re not going to use Moby and the automation layer, you’re paying for a lot you won’t touch.

On price, the new free tier makes Triple Whale easy to start with, which is a genuine improvement. But the version most operators actually need, with real multi-touch attribution, is the $219 Foundation plan, and the automation story lives at $749. ThoughtMetric is simpler to reason about because you’re buying one thing.

Picking between these

  • Pick Triple Whale if you want an all-in-one operating layer and you’ll actually use Moby and the automation and creative features. The free tier is a low-risk way to test it.
  • Pick ThoughtMetric if you mainly want trustworthy e-commerce attribution and clean LTV and cohort reporting without the broader operating-system ambitions, and you’re a physical-product brand in roughly the $1M to $20M range.
  • Start on the free Triple Whale tier if you just want blended ROAS and basic tracking and aren’t ready to pay for anything yet.
  • Skip both if you’re below the point where measurement accuracy actually changes a decision. The trigger for paying for attribution is caring about getting the number right, not hitting a spend threshold.

Triple Whale is the better fit for teams that want one tool to run on with an AI operator inside it. ThoughtMetric is the better fit if you want the attribution layer to be accurate, focused, and boring in the good way. I use the second one, but the right answer is the one your team will actually open every morning.

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About

Six years in e-commerce. Three Shopify stores across different niches, one scaled past seven figures. I’ve tested hundreds of ad creatives, obsessed over email flows, and learned more from my failures than my wins.

Now I focus on conversion optimization, retention marketing, and the analytics behind it all. This blog is where I share what actually works, backed by real numbers. No fluff, no guru energy.