FREE UTM Link Generator & Guide

Create clean, consistent tracking links for Google Analytics 4.

Please enter a valid https:// URL
The platform or site where the traffic originates (e.g., google, facebook, newsletter).
The type of traffic or marketing channel (e.g., cpc, email, social, display).
The specific promotion, product, or campaign name that you are running.
Auto-formatted: spaces become underscores. Lowercase only.
Campaign Name is required
Advanced Options (Term, Content, ID)
The unique campaign identifier. This is critical if you are importing Cost Data into GA4.
Used primarily for paid search to identify the targeted keywords (e.g., running+shoes).
Use to differentiate similar content or links within the same ad or email (e.g., logolink, textlink).

How to use this tool

1

Get your UTM link and log into Google Analytics

First, copy your full UTM link from the tool above. Also create a Google Analytics 4 property or log in to your existing GA4 account.

2

Open the Traffic acquisition report

Click Reports > Generate Leads > User/Traffic/Lead Acquisition (depending on what you're looking to find) > Click the grey pill that currently says something like “Session primary channel group”.

Open the Traffic acquisition report
3

Switch the dimension to Session source/medium

From the list that opens, select Session source/medium.

Switch the dimension to Session source/medium
4

Read your UTM data

The chart and table will reload.

You’ll now see rows such as: instagram / paid-media, google / organic, (direct) / (none)

  • The part before the slash comes from utm_source.
  • The part after the slash comes from utm_medium.

Use the columns (Sessions, Engagement rate, Conversions, Revenue, etc.) to see how each UTM source/medium pair is performing.

Read your UTM data
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What Are UTM Links and Why Is Everyone Talking About Them?

If you have ever clicked a link on social media and noticed a long string of gibberish starting with "?utm_source=" at the end of the URL, you have encountered a UTM link. UTM stands for Urchin Tracking Module, a legacy name from the software that eventually became Google Analytics.

In the modern digital marketing landscape of 2026, these links are the secret sauce that tells you exactly where your website traffic is coming from. Without them, you are essentially flying a marketing plane in a thick fog, unable to see which efforts are actually landing.

Why Should You Care About UTM Links?

In digital marketing, guessing is a recipe for a wasted budget. UTM links allow you to move from "I think Facebook is working" to "I know our Tuesday afternoon Facebook post generated 15 sales and $1,200 in revenue."

By tagging your links, you can attribute conversions to specific platforms, individual posts, or even specific buttons within an email. This level of granular data allows you to double down on what works and cut the fluff that doesn't, proving your ROI to clients or managers with cold, hard numbers.

The 5 Core UTM Parameters Explained

To build a UTM link, you append parameters to your base URL. There are five standard tags you can use, though you usually only need the first three:

1. Source (utm_source): This identifies the specific platform sending the traffic, such as "google," "facebook," or "newsletter."

2. Medium (utm_medium): This describes the high-level channel. For example, is it "paid-social," "organic," or "email"? Keeping this consistent helps your analytics software group your data correctly.

3. Campaign (utm_campaign): This is the name of your specific initiative, like "summer-sale-2026." It allows you to see the combined performance of a campaign across multiple platforms.

4. Term (utm_term): Mostly used for paid search to track specific keywords.

5. Content (utm_content): This is perfect for A/B testing. If you have two different images in the same ad, you can label them "blue-banner" and "red-banner" to see which one performs better.

Common UTM Questions Answered

Where do I see the data? Most marketers use Google Analytics 4 (GA4). You can find your UTM data under "Reports," then "Acquisition," and "Traffic Acquisition."

Change the primary dimension to "Session source/medium" to see your tags in action. This allows you to compare the performance of your Instagram bio link against your LinkedIn posts side-by-side.

Do UTM links hurt my SEO? No. Search engines are smart enough to recognize UTM parameters as tracking tools and generally ignore them when indexing your page. They do not cause duplicate content issues because they don't change the actual content of the page.

Can I use them for internal links? Absolutely not. This is a common mistake. Using UTMs on links within your own website will "break" the original session data, making it look like a new visitor just arrived. Save UTMs for external traffic only.

Best Practices for Perfect Tracking

To keep your data clean, follow these golden rules. First, always use lowercase letters. Analytics software treats "Facebook" and "facebook" as two different sources, which will split your data and make your reports a mess.

Second, use hyphens instead of spaces. Spaces in a URL turn into messy "%20" codes that are hard to read. Third, stay consistent. If you use "paid-social" as a medium today, don't use "social-ads" tomorrow.

Most successful teams keep a shared spreadsheet or use a dedicated UTM builder tool to ensure everyone is using the same naming conventions. This disciplined approach ensures your data remains clean, readable, and actionable for months to come.