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GA4 for e-commerce: 12 events you must configure

Іван Че Гевара
Іван Че Гевара Author
2 min read
GA4 for e-commerce: 12 events you must configure

The default GA4 setup only tracks page_view and a handful of auto-events — useless for an e-commerce funnel. Below are 12 events you need to configure manually if you actually want to optimise.

TL;DR — enable enhanced e-commerce, configure the 12 events below via GTM, mark purchase + add_to_cart + view_item as conversions. Total setup time: 1 working day.

The 12 events (in funnel order)

1. view_item_list

Fires when a user sees a product listing (category page, search results). Pass the array of items with name, id, price, position.

2. select_item

Fires on click of a product from the listing. Critical for analysing category-page conversion.

3. view_item

Fires when a product detail page loads. Should be a conversion goal.

4. add_to_cart

Fires when “Add to cart” is clicked. Should be a conversion goal.

5. view_cart

Fires when the cart page or drawer opens. Helps identify cart abandonment drops.

6. remove_from_cart

Fires when an item is removed from the cart. Sentiment signal — flagging UX issues.

7. begin_checkout

Fires when the checkout starts. Major funnel step.

8. add_shipping_info

Fires after shipping address is entered. Often the highest drop-off step.

9. add_payment_info

Fires when payment method is selected. Penultimate friction point.

10. purchase

Fires on successful order. Primary conversion goal. Pass transaction_id, value, items.

11. refund

Fires when a refund is processed (push from your backend). Lets you calculate true revenue.

12. generate_lead

For B2B or hybrid stores — fires on quote requests or contact form submissions.

Implementation via GTM

Use the GA4 Enhanced Ecommerce variable template in GTM. Push the dataLayer object on every page state change. Test in GA4 DebugView before pushing live.

Common mistakes

  • Counting page_view on checkout as the conversion — misses people who left mid-flow.
  • Not setting currency in event params — GA4 silently drops the revenue value.
  • Missing transaction_id — duplicate purchases inflate metrics.

Takeaways

Without these 12 events properly fired, GA4 is essentially a glorified page counter. Configure them once, validate in DebugView, and your data becomes actually useful for optimising the funnel.

Іван Че Гевара
Іван Че Гевара

GoodWeb blog author.