Comparison

Amplitude vs Pirsch Analytics in 2026: Product intelligence platform vs cookieless site analytics

One is a full behavioral analytics and experimentation suite built for product teams. The other drops the cookie banner entirely and starts at $6 a month.

Updated July 3, 2026
Amplitude
Pirsch Analytics
Key takeaways
  • Pirsch is fully cookieless and stores no personally identifiable information, so sites can remove their consent banner outright. Amplitude relies on data governance controls and consent integrations rather than a no-cookie tracking method.
  • Amplitude Starter is free for up to 50K monthly tracked users; Pirsch Standard starts at $6/month for 10,000 page views. Pirsch is the cheaper entry point, but Amplitude gives more product-analytics depth on its free tier.
  • Amplitude Experiment ties A/B testing results directly into behavioral funnels, something Pirsch does not attempt. Pirsch's A/B testing on the Plus plan is tag-based segmentation for simpler split tests.
  • Pirsch offers white-label dashboards and custom domains on its Plus plan at $12/month, a feature Amplitude does not offer at any tier.
  • Amplitude added AI Agents that automate cohort discovery and funnel diagnosis on Growth and Enterprise plans. Pirsch has no equivalent automated-analysis layer, leaning instead on its open-source core for auditability.
  • Amplitude Growth and Enterprise pricing requires a sales conversation. Pirsch's Standard and Plus plans are self-serve with a 30-day free trial and no credit card required.

Amplitude and Pirsch Analytics both live under the analytics umbrella, but they solve different problems for different buyers. Amplitude is built for product teams who need behavioral event tracking, feature experimentation, session replay, and now AI Agents that automate recurring analysis, with pricing that runs from a free Starter tier to sales-negotiated Growth and Enterprise plans. Pirsch is a cookieless, GDPR-first web analytics tool hosted in Germany that lets site owners remove their consent banner completely, starting at $6 per month with an open-source core you can audit yourself. If your question is "how do I understand what users do inside my product and test changes to it," Amplitude is built for that. If your question is "how do I get accurate traffic data without a cookie banner and without Google," Pirsch is the more direct answer.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
AmplitudeFreeProduct teams instrumenting behavioral events, running experiments, and needing AI-assisted analysis inside one platform, with budget for Growth or Enterprise once past early-stage constraints.
Pirsch AnalyticsFrom $6/moPrivacy-conscious site owners, agencies, and small businesses who want accurate traffic data without a cookie consent banner, and who do not need behavioral-event product analytics.

Amplitude

AI-powered analytics platform combining behavioral data, experimentation, and session replay in a unified product intelligence suite

Full review →
Amplitude screenshot

Amplitude tracks user behavior as a continuous timeline of events rather than isolated sessions, which is what makes it a product analytics tool rather than a traffic analytics tool. Funnel analysis, retention curves, and path analysis all run off that same event graph, so a product manager can trace exactly where power users diverge from churned ones.

Beyond measurement, Amplitude bundles in Amplitude Experiment for feature flagging and A/B testing, session replay linked to the same behavioral timeline, and a data governance layer for schema enforcement across a growing warehouse of third-party integrations. The newest addition, AI Agents, can run recurring analytical queries and flag anomalies without a human writing the query each time.

None of this is aimed at basic site traffic reporting. Amplitude assumes you have a product with meaningful user actions to instrument, and the free Starter tier is generous enough to prove that out before the Growth plan's sales-negotiated pricing becomes a real conversation.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
Free
Plus
$49/month
Growth
Contact for pricing
Enterprise
Contact for pricing
Monthly tracked users50K1K-100KCustomCustom
Session replay
Feature experimentation
AI Agents
API access
Best for: Product teams instrumenting behavioral events, running experiments, and needing AI-assisted analysis inside one platform, with budget for Growth or Enterprise once past early-stage constraints.

Pirsch Analytics

Cookieless, GDPR-compliant web analytics made and hosted in Germany, with no consent banners required

Full review →
Pirsch Analytics screenshot

Pirsch identifies visitors from a hash of IP address and User-Agent, discards the source data immediately, and stores no personal identifiers. That is the whole compliance argument: sites running Pirsch can remove the cookie banner rather than configure their way around it, and visitors who reject cookies still show up in the traffic numbers.

The Standard plan covers page views, referrers, UTM tracking, and a real-time dashboard for $6 a month at 10,000 page views. Plus, at $12, adds funnels, tag-based A/B testing and segmentation, custom domains, and full white labeling, which is the plan most agencies land on once they need to present dashboards under their own brand.

Pirsch is open-source at its core, so a technical team can read exactly what gets collected rather than trust a privacy policy. What it does not try to be is a product analytics platform: there is no session replay, no experimentation engine tied to behavioral cohorts, and the integration catalog is thinner than Amplitude's warehouse and CDP connectors.

Pricing
Feature
Standard
From $6/mo
Plus
From $12/mo
Enterprise
Custom
Websites50UnlimitedUnlimited
FunnelsNoYesYes
A/B testing and segmentationNoYesYes
White labelingNoExtensiveExtensive
RESTful API and SDKsYesYesYes
Best for: Privacy-conscious site owners, agencies, and small businesses who want accurate traffic data without a cookie consent banner, and who do not need behavioral-event product analytics.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Amplitude
Pirsch Analytics
Primary focusProduct and behavioral analyticsPrivacy-first web traffic analytics
Cookieless / consent-free trackingNoYes, fully cookieless
Session replayYes, linked to behavioral eventsNo, session analysis only
A/B testing or experimentationYes, tied to funnels (Growth plan+)Yes, tag-based (Plus plan)
AI-assisted analysisYes, AI Agents (Growth plan+)No
Open-source auditabilityNoYes
White-label dashboardsNoYes, Plus plan
API accessYes, all tiersYes, all tiers
Starting priceFree (Starter)$6/mo (Standard)

Neither tool goes deep on AI answer-engine visibility

AI Peekaboo dashboard

Amplitude added a basic AI visibility feature that tracks brand mentions in ChatGPT and Perplexity, but it is a young bolt-on rather than a dedicated monitoring product. Pirsch does not track AI referral or citation data at all. If AI Overviews and LLM citations matter to your reporting alongside site or product analytics, AI Peekaboo is built specifically for that layer, with prompt-level tracking and competitive benchmarking neither of these tools offers.

Read the AI Peekaboo review →

Which should you choose?

Product teams instrumenting user behavior and running experimentsAmplitude
Site owners who want to remove their cookie consent banner entirelyPirsch Analytics
Agencies needing white-label dashboards under their own brandPirsch Analytics
Teams needing AI-assisted anomaly detection on recurring reportsAmplitude
Budget-conscious teams needing a self-serve plan with no sales callPirsch Analytics
Enterprises needing warehouse connectors and data governance at scaleAmplitude

This comparison mostly answers a question of category rather than a head-to-head feature fight. Amplitude is product analytics with experimentation and AI Agents built in; Pirsch is compliance-first site analytics with a genuinely lower price and a genuinely simpler feature set. Teams that need both often end up running both, since they are not really substitutes for each other.

Bottom line

Pick Amplitude if you have a product with meaningful user actions to instrument and budget for Growth-tier pricing once the free Starter plan runs out. Pick Pirsch if your priority is dropping the cookie banner and getting accurate traffic numbers for $6 to $12 a month without a sales call. Agencies serving multiple clients who need white-label delivery should start with Pirsch Plus; product teams running A/B tests against retention curves should not try to make Pirsch do that job.

Frequently asked questions

Is Pirsch a real replacement for Amplitude?

No, not for product analytics use cases. Pirsch is a strong replacement for Google Analytics on traffic and referrer reporting, but it has no behavioral event timeline, no experimentation engine, and no session replay tied to user cohorts, all of which are core to what Amplitude does.

Can I drop my cookie banner if I switch from Amplitude to Pirsch?

Yes, that is the entire point of Pirsch's design. Amplitude is not built around cookieless tracking, so switching purely for that reason makes sense if traffic reporting, not product analytics, is your primary use case.

Which tool is cheaper for a small team?

Pirsch is cheaper at every comparable tier: Standard starts at $6/month versus Amplitude Plus at $49/month. But the comparison is not apples to apples since Amplitude Plus includes session replay and warehouse connectors that Pirsch does not offer at any price.

Does Amplitude offer white-label reporting for agencies?

No, Amplitude does not offer white labeling at any tier. Pirsch's Plus plan at $12/month includes custom domains, custom themes, and extensive white labeling, which is why agencies managing client dashboards tend to land on Pirsch rather than Amplitude.

Do either of these tools track how my brand appears in ChatGPT or Perplexity?

Amplitude has a recently added, fairly basic AI visibility feature that tracks brand mentions in AI search results. Pirsch has no equivalent. Neither is a substitute for a dedicated AI visibility platform if that tracking matters to your reporting stack.

Found this useful? Share it: