If you read our previous article, you already know the problem.
Most dealerships have GA4 installed. Very few have it set up correctly.
This is where things start to shift.
This checklist is not theoretical. It is based on what dealerships actually need to track in order to make better marketing decisions and measure real performance.
If your current setup does not align with this, there is a good chance your data is incomplete or misleading.
Step 1: Confirm GA4 Is Installed Correctly
Before anything else, make sure GA4 is firing on every page of your site.
That sounds obvious, but common issues include:
Missing tags on key pages
Duplicate tags causing inflated data
Hardcoded GA4 conflicting with Google Tag Manager
What to check:
Use Google Tag Assistant
Verify only one GA4 property is firing
Confirm tracking across all page types including SRP, VDP, and service pages
If this step is wrong, everything else is compromised.
Step 2: Set Up Proper Conversion Events
This is where most dealership setups fail.
GA4 does not automatically know what a “lead” is.
You need to define it.
At a minimum, your dealership should be tracking:
Form submissions (contact, lead forms)
Phone call clicks
Finance application submissions
Service appointment bookings
Each of these should be:
Tracked as an event
Marked as a conversion in GA4
If everything is a conversion, nothing is.
Step 3: Track Phone Calls Correctly
Phone calls are one of the highest-value conversions for dealerships.
And they are often missing or misconfigured.
Common issues:
Only tracking click-to-call, not actual calls
No integration with call tracking platforms
Calls not tied back to source or campaign
What to do:
Use a call tracking provider if possible
Ensure events fire when a call is initiated
Tie call data back to GA4 using proper event tracking
If you are not tracking calls accurately, your cost per lead is wrong.
Step 4: Fix Cross-Domain Tracking
Dealership websites rely heavily on third-party tools.
Examples:
Credit applications
Trade-in tools
Payment calculators
Service schedulers
If cross-domain tracking is not configured:
Users appear as new sessions
Conversions get misattributed
Campaign performance looks worse than it is
This is one of the most overlooked issues in GA4 for car dealerships.
Step 5: Track Inventory Engagement Properly
Your inventory is your product.
But most GA4 setups treat all pageviews the same.
You should be tracking:
SRP views
VDP views
Clicks on “Get ePrice” or similar CTAs
Time spent on VDPs
This helps you understand:
Shopper intent
Inventory performance
Drop-off points in the buying journey
Without this, you are blind to how users interact with your inventory.
Step 6: Eliminate Duplicate and Inflated Events
Bad setups often inflate performance.
This happens when:
Events fire multiple times
Third-party tools send duplicate conversions
Page reloads trigger repeat events
The result:
Conversion rates look better than reality
Cost per lead appears lower than it actually is
Audit your events and validate counts against real lead volume in your CRM.
If they do not match, trust your CRM.
Step 7: Align GA4 With Your CRM Data
This is where most dealerships stop short.
GA4 should not exist in a vacuum.
You need to compare:
GA4 conversions
CRM leads
Sold units
If GA4 says you generated 200 leads but your CRM shows 120, something is wrong.
This alignment step is what turns GA4 from a reporting tool into a business tool.
Step 8: Build Reports That Reflect Reality
Out-of-the-box GA4 reports are not built for dealerships.
You should create custom reports that show:
Leads by source and medium
Cost per lead
Conversion rates by channel
Performance by campaign
Focus on metrics tied to revenue, not vanity metrics.
Common Red Flags Your GA4 Setup Is Wrong
If any of these are true, your setup needs attention:
Your lead count seems too high or too low
You cannot clearly track phone calls
Third-party tools are not tracked
Your agency cannot explain how conversions are defined
GA4 numbers do not match your CRM
These are not small issues. They directly impact your marketing decisions.
Final Thought
GA4 setup for car dealerships is not about installing a tag.
It is about building a measurement system that reflects how your dealership actually generates revenue.
If your current setup does not give you confidence in your numbers, that is not a reporting problem.
It is a setup problem.


