Know What’s Working on Social Media: 24 Free Social Media Analytics Tools

Where do you turn for meaningful stats on your social media marketing?

I’m grateful for the insight from some truly incredible tools that help make sense of the actions I take on social media. How have my followers grown this month? Which posts seem to perform best? Which times make the most sense to post?

The answers are out there, and there are tools to help you find them. I’ve collected a bunch of my favorites here in this post. Feel free to give them a try and see what insights you can find!

Update: I’ve put together a list of six tools and strategies for managing multiple social media accounts (some free, some paid). If you’re looking for social media management tools, this list might help you use them! ?

Chapters in this article

As a little bonus, we have included 17 free social media analytics tools in this post! We will also cover the seven social media analytics dashboards from the social networks themselves and six paid multi-purpose social media analytics tools.

Feel free to jump to your favorite chapter by using the quick links.

Chapter 1: 17 Free Social Media Analytics Tools

Chapter 2: 7 Social Media Analytics Dashboards from the Social Networks Themselves

Chapter 3: 6 Paid Social Media Analytics Tools

What are social media analytics?

First, before we jump into some of the awesome social media analytics tools available, I wanted to quickly talk a little about how we define social media analytics.

At Buffer, we see social media analytics as the gathering of data from social media platforms to help inform us and guide our marketing strategy. By paying close attention to social media analytics, you can measure your performance against your social media goals.

17 free social media analytics tools

1. Followerwonk

One of our favorite Twitter tools, Followerwonk shows you detailed breakdowns of your followers and activity. Click on the Analytics tab, enter a Twitter username (either yours or someone else’s), and view information on followers and following. See stats like when your followers are online, when you typically post, and how your followers fall into categories like social authority, activity, total tweets, and follower count.

2. ViralWoot

This Pinterest tool helps with much beyond analytics. You can schedule pins, promote pins, and gain new followers all through Viralwoot. The analytics on the free plan shows you basic account metrics (boards, pins, followers, etc.), Pinterest stats (Pinfluence, reach, activity, and engagement scores), and how to increase those stats. Paid users have more comprehensive analytics, including data on best day and time to post and best-performing colors.

3. Google Analytics

The No. 1 use for Google Analytics is for analyzing website traffic. And as part of the analysis, you can dig into the referral stats on your social media marketing as well. Click through to Acquisition > Social > Overview, and you can check out how many visits your site receives from each of the major social networks. If you choose to add goals to your GA tracking, you can see the direct impact of social on the goals and paths as well.

4. Quintly

The free plan on Quintly lets you access analytics for up to three Facebook Pages, offering stats on the main engagement metrics (likes, comments, shares) plus stats on follower growth. When you add multiple pages, you can quickly see at-a-glance how the pages compare on the graphs.

(Update: Quintly now offers a free 14-day trial rather than a free plan.)

5. Cyfe

The robust features at Cyfe let you create a custom dashboard filled with stats from dozens of marketing tools. Its social media section lets you sync up all the major networks and pull overview reports or individual reports for the accounts you manage and the accounts you want to follow.

6. Tailwind

Tailwind is a Pinterest and Instagram marketing solution that helps you schedule content, monitor conversations, and analyze performance. For Pinterest, its analytics tells you insights such as the number of pins with your domain, the potential impressions, and the number of followers for your boards. For Instagram, it tells you basic metrics such as followers, posts, comments, and likes.

7. Keyhole

Keyhole offers a free yet powerful preview of its hashtag, keyword, and account tracking service. For hashtag and keyword tracking, it provides a wealth of information such as reach, top posts, share of posts, and more. For account tracking, you can monitor your brand’s or competitor’s engagement on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.

8. Klout

Working with your profiles and pages across the major social channels, Klout puts together a score from 0 to 100 on your influence on social media. Klout also suggests content, which you can schedule and share through its app to improve your Klout score.

9. Klear

Once you connect your Twitter, Instagram, and/or Facebook Page, Klear will analyze your profile and your followers. Two of my favorite information are my profile insights (whether I’m active and approachable) and my followers’ interests.

10. Audiense

If the sum of your followers and following is less than 5,000, Audiense provides a free analysis of your Twitter profile. You can learn your followers’ demographics, interests, and influence. You can also use its tool to manage your Twitter contacts and find your optimal time to tweet.

11. TweetReach

Type in any keyword, hashtag, or username, and TweetReach returns a snapshot of analytics on your search, including charts and graphs for reach, exposure, activity, and contributors. It’s quite useful for checking in on mentions of your Twitter username and tracking branded hashtags and industry keywords.

12. IBM Watson Personality Insights

If you are ever curious about your (brand) personality and tone on Twitter, this tool by IBM uses linguistic analytics and personality theory to work out your personality from your tweets. It’s a neat way to find out if your perceived brand personality and tone match what you have in mind.

13. Peakfeed

Peakfeed (Snapshot) sends a simple report with your key social media profile stats to your email every week. You can connect up to three accounts for the major social media platforms. Peakfeed has since expanded into three separate tools.

14. WolframAlpha Facebook Report

A fun tool built by the team behind the Wolfram Alpha search engine, the Wolfram Alpha Facebook Analyzer shows you all sorts of fun and useful information for your Facebook profile and posts.

15. SocialRank

The free plan for SocialRank allows you to manage and analyze with your Twitter and Instagram followers. It also provides a summary report of your followers including their distribution, top locations, popular words in bio, and more.

16. Talkwalker

Talkwalker gives you unlimited free searches for hashtags and keywords across major social media platforms, news, blogs, and forums. It provides a wide range of data such as mentions, sentiment, distribution of conversations, top posts, and more.

17. LikeAlyzer

Pop in your Facebook Page URL, and LikeAlyzer will analyze your Facebook Page and provide metrics such as posts per day, engagement per post, timing, and length of posts. It also offers recommendations for improving your Facebook Page.

7 social media analytics dashboards from the social networks themselves


Several of the major social media networks have their own built-in analytics that offers some great insights into your activity on the network. Here’s how to dig into each of the analytics offered by the social networks themselves.

1. Facebook Insights

Available for all Page admins, Facebook Insights shows you the full stats behind your posts, your fans, and your reach. Additionally, from the Insights tab, you can set up a list of Pages to Watch, which gives you information on the performance of other Facebook pages.

To access Insights, click the Insights tab in the menu bar across the top of your Facebook page (the menu bar is visible only to admins of the page).

Quick tip: You can click on the “people reached” text at the bottom of any individual post in your Page’s timeline to see a pop-up of the full stats for that post.

2. Instagram Insights

If you have an Instagram Business Profile, you will have access to Instagram Insights — Instagram’s native in-app analytics. It offers a comprehensive range of data about your profile, posts, stories, and ads. It also has detailed information about your followers such as their most active times and days.

To access Instagram Insights, you’ll have to do is to convert your personal Instagram profile into a Business Profile and navigate to your profile page in the mobile app. Click on the graph icon in the upper-right corner.

Here’s a complete guide on Instagram analytics, covering the ins-and-outs of Instagram Insights.

3. Twitter analytics

Twitter provides a 28-day overview of how your tweets have performed in all the major engagement areas—retweets, mentions, favorites, and clicks. One of the most useful bits of analysis here is seeing the impressions of each tweet. You can export all the data and run some pretty neat reports for yourself.

Clicking on any individual tweet in your list will show a complete breakdown of every element of engagement on the tweet, including clicks on URLs, clicks on your username, clicks on images, expanded details, and a bar chart for engagement over the first 24 hours and the past 24 hours.

To access Twitter analytics, log in to Twitter and go to analytics.twitter.com.

4. Pinterest analytics

One of the best sources for Pinterest analytics resides on Pinterest itself. From the Pinterest analytics dashboard, you can see insights into every relevant aspect of your Pinterest marketing.

The dashboard shows growth in impressions and followers, audience stats, and website engagement. You can click into more in-depth reports for each of these and see which posts and boards have performed the best.

To access Pinterest analytics, log in to Pinterest and go to analytics.pinterest.com. Pinterest analytics is available to business accounts; you can convert a personal account to a business account for free.

5. LinkedIn analytics for individuals

LinkedIn provides analytics for your long-form LinkedIn articles (i.e. LinkedIn Pulse articles). It shows you for each article, the total number of views and engagement, the demographics of your readers, and the people who have engaged with your article.

It seems like the full analytics isn’t available at all locations yet. For those who don’t have the full analytics and are curious (like me!), here are some screenshots and descriptions of the analytics.

To access your LinkedIn Pulse analytics, go to your LinkedIn homepage and click on the view counts on the left column and then, the “X views on this post” link.

(Image from LinkedIn)

Quick tip: You can also see the number of people who viewed your profile in the last week in the right column of your LinkedIn feed.

6. LinkedIn analytics for businesses

Much like Facebook’s Insights tab, LinkedIn’s analytics include data of all the posts on your company page as well as a breakdown of your followers and follower growth.

To access LinkedIn analytics, log in at LinkedIn and go to your business page. Click on Analytics next to the Home link at the top of the page.

Quick tip: For the new Company Page design, you’ll be able to see the stats of your post below each of them, such as impressions, engagement rate, clicks, and social actions.

7. Google+ Influence

Google+ seemed to have removed its analytics and insights dashboard but you can still access some basic stats. Google+ calls it “Your Influence”, where it shows you basic stats of your posts and your reach.

To access Google+ Influence, log in at Google+ and go to your business page profile. Click on the three vertically-arranged dots by your cover photo and “Your Influence”.


Bonus: 6 paid social media analytics tools

1. Buffer

With Buffer’s Pro and Business plans, you get all the major engagement stats for every update you post on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, and LinkedIn. My favorite feature—and one I’m always stoked to see!—is the Top Tweet/Top Post badge that pops up when an update goes above and beyond the average performance.

Once you’ve researched all your options, we’d love to help you analyze your performance on social media — so you can continually improve and get better results!

2. SumAll

The analytics at SumAll come from a huge number of assorted, connected apps. You can wire up your unlimited social media profiles — Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and more — and SumAll will send out a weekly or monthly email with insights on how things have changed. All the info is saved to a web dashboard, too, for easy viewing anytime.

(Image from SumAll)

Price: $99/month with a 7-day free trial

3. Socialbakers

Some of our favorite social media studies have come from the team at Socialbakers. Their analytics tools include all the fundamental resources you might need—tracking of multiple profiles, key performance indicators, competitive intelligence, and automated reports. Beside analytics tools, Socialbakers also offers tools for publishing and optimizing your content.

(Image from Socialbakers)

Price: $24/month per page of analytics report with a 14-day free trial

4. Rival IQ

Rival IQ lets you track a number of different companies (up to 75 for their business plans) and compare performance across not only social media metrics but also SEO. The social media monitoring includes Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest, YouTube, and Instagram.

(Image from Rival IQ)

Price: Plans starting at $99/month with a 7-day free trial

5. Social Report

Social Report provides an overview of your activity on any of the 20 supported social networks, plus you can track new topics, measure ROI, and export the data into a handy report layout.

(Image from Social Report)

Price: Plans starting at $49/month with a free 30-day trial

6. Simply Measured

Simply Measured gives you the full picture of your social media efforts, from social media metrics to business value — something that many social media managers, including us, struggle with.

(Image from Simply Measured)

Price: Simply Measured does not share their pricing publicly. According to GetApp, the plans seem to start from $500/month.

Over to you

Which social media analytics tools do you use for your marketing? Do any on this list appeal to you?

I’d love to hear how you gain insights into what’s working. Feel free to share your best tips in the comments and ask any questions about how we get things done here at Buffer!

And once you’ve gotten a chance to research all your options, we’d love to help you analyze your performance on social media!