Coupler.io Blog

How to Track Shopify Orders As a Shop Owner: The Ultimate Guide

Whether you’re launching your first Shopify store or managing an established business, Shopify order tracking is essential for both customer satisfaction and business intelligence. It serves two critical purposes: 

This guide covers both aspects to help new store owners get started and experienced merchants optimize their analytics. By the end of this article, you’ll know exactly which tracking approach fits your store size, budget, and growth goals.

The challenge of Shopify order tracking

Shopify order tracking has evolved from a nice-to-have feature to a business-critical necessity that directly influences revenue, customer retention, and competitive positioning. However, is the native Shopify implementation of order tracking useful and reliable? While Shopify provides basic functionality, merchants consistently face three critical challenges that can seriously impact their business performance:

1. Manual process and communication gaps. If you fail to add tracking information to an order, your customer won’t be able to discover the status of their shipment at all. Or they won’t see the shipping status after clicking a link in an email notification they’ve received from you. The stakes are high: In DispatchTrack’s 2024 consumer research, 90% of respondents wanted the ability to track orders on Shopify or another store, and “if you can’t (provide that), more than 60% will consider looking for another retailer. For a store processing 100 orders monthly, this could mean losing 60 potential repeat customers.

2. Insufficient tracking transparency. If the Shopify shipment tracking information you provide is insufficient or imprecise, your customers are likely to ask the so-called WISMO (“Where’s my order?”) questions much more often, which in general erodes trust in your eshop. Industry data shows that 50% of all ecommerce customer service calls are WISMO inquiries – time that could be spent on growth activities instead.

3. Technical tracking issues & GA4 integration problems. Updates to tracking mechanisms, challenges with cookie consent, GA4, or ad blockers can break order tracking events, further reducing transparency for both you (the merchant) and your clients. These technical failures often go unnoticed until customers complain, by which time trust has already been damaged.

These challenges compound as your store grows. What works for 20 orders monthly becomes unmanageable at 200+ orders, making early planning for scalable solutions crucial for long-term success.

Understanding Shopify order tracking limitations

Being a mature ecommerce solution, it allows you to track Shopify order fulfillment. However, the native Shopify order tracking features come with several limitations.

Reporting gaps

These aren’t just minor inconveniences—they’re business-critical data accuracy issues that affect your ability to make informed decisions:

Quick-fix solution: The Shopify orders dashboard eliminates these limitations by connecting directly to your raw Shopify data. It provides accurate reporting with no discrepancies, unlimited filtering options, and seamless historical comparisons. Store owners can see their orders’ data from different angles (e.g., totals, averages, statuses, products, etc.) to easily gain accurate and valuable insights. As a result, you save 5-10 hours weekly on manual reporting tasks.

Problematic integration with Google Analytics 4 (GA4)

Shopify suffers from widespread underreporting of purchase events in Google Analytics 4 (GA4). Even about 20-30% of orders fail to get tracked in GA4. Users on the Shopify forum complain that only every 3rd or 4th purchase is counted. For a store spending $10,000 monthly on advertising, this could mean misattributing $2,000-3,000 in sales, leading to incorrect budget allocation decisions.

This poses a serious problem with revenue attribution, preventing you from accurately measuring the performance of your marketing campaigns and evaluating customer acquisition costs.

Manual tracking headaches

The manual input of Shopify order tracking information that you, as an ecommerce merchant, get from carriers is a serious problem, resulting in such disadvantages as: additional time investment, labor cost increase, and the risk of human error. Even at just 2 minutes per order, a store processing 500 orders monthly spends over 16 hours on manual data entry—equivalent to a part-time employee dedicated solely to administrative tasks.

To remediate the problem, shop owners can use some automation solutions, ranging from CSV based bulk-import apps, through Shopify API Integrations, to comprehensive fulfillment automation platforms like, for example, AutoDS. However, most of these solutions address only part of the problem, focusing on shipment tracking while ignoring performance analytics needs.

How to track orders on Shopify: The methods overview

Now, let’s discuss in detail what options you have to track orders on Shopify — both in terms of analyzing order performance and providing shipment visibility to customers. Understanding these options upfront will save you from costly migrations later as your business grows.

Coupler.io and its Shopify orders dashboard. Coupler.io is a data reporting and visualization platform that lets you collect and organize your Shopify data into insightful reports. Moreover, the platform provides ready-to-use reporting solutions in the form of dashboards to track orders on Shopify, traffic, customer acquisition, etc. The Shopify orders dashboard is designed for shop owners who process more than 50 orders monthly and want to make data-driven decisions rather than guessing. While other solutions require technical expertise or expensive custom development, Coupler.io provides pre-built dashboards designed specifically for ecommerce success metrics.

The Orders Dashboard for a global orders’ view — it’s your Shopify go-to place for configuring shipment tracking. Unfortunately, from the order performance perspective, this native dashboard is mostly a list of orders, providing little insights with the summary widget at the top and the list filtering options. Note: You can also use the Analytics section, which we discuss in detail in the article on Shopify dashboard. However, it suffers from a siloed approach and very limited personalization.

The Order Status Page for an individual view — this customer-facing interface lets your clients easily track order status. Sadly, it’s of no use when you think about global orders’ overview, not to mention orders’ performance analysis.

Shopify orders dashboard by Coupler.io

Best for: Store owners processing 50+ orders monthly who want data-driven insights rather than manual reporting.

With the free Shopify orders dashboard from the Coupler.io team, you not only get a list of all orders but also lots of insights into the performance of your orders from different standpoints. 

Why store owners choose this over native Shopify analytics:

What you can do with the Shopify orders dashboard

You can set up the dashboard directly in Coupler.io. However, if you prefer one of the popular data visualization tools, you can use a Shopify orders tracking template for Looker Studio, Power BI, and Google Sheets. Regardless which one you choose, you’ll be able to benefit from easy setup and automation provided by the Coupler.io connector that does all the data reporting magic in the background. Setup takes just 15 minutes, and you’ll have insights instantly with no technical skills required.

The native Orders Dashboard in Shopify for global tracking

Best for: New stores processing fewer than 50 orders monthly who need basic shipment tracking functionality.

The Orders Dashboard in Shopify admin is the hub to manage your online store orders. To access the Orders Dashboard and track your orders, proceed as follows:

The list view showing all orders dominates the dashboard. For each order, you can see the most important details, such as the Shopify order number, price, payment status, fulfillment status, etc.

In addition, at the top, you have:

Using the dashboard, you can track orders on Shopify in the following two ways: 

How to add tracking to Shopify order natively step by step?

Using the Orders Dashboard, store owners can initiate the order tracking process both when fulfilling an order or after an order has already been fulfilled.

To add tracking experience to an order when you fulfill it:

Note: This option is available only when your customer has provided their email address.

To add the tracking functionality for an already fulfilled order, do as follows:

The Shopify Order Status Page for individual tracking 

The Shopify order status page is the post-purchase interface that lets your customer track its order. It’s a self-service web page that reduces customer support on your part. 

Note: If you want to use the status page functionality, you need to set up the status page template in advance—some coding skills are required. Once your template is ready and saved, every time someone places an order, it will get automatically populated with the order details, and the customer will be able to access it through a link you send to them via email.

In addition to showing basic order information, such as order number, status, items, shipping address, etc., the page can detail shipping status updates, order history, real-time tracking info, estimated delivery date, as well as include the link that takes you to the shipping carrier’s order tracking page for more details.

Here’s how a sample status page might look like:

Being the store owner, you can also access the status page. To do it:

While you can still see some order details, you won’t be able to see all of them because you’re simply not the target customer. For example, you can’t see information such as customer’s name, shipping and billing addresses, payment methods, shipping method, and tracking number.

Consequently, the status page is of no use for you for the purposes of shipping tracking. It also won’t do if you want to track performance of your orders because it offers just an isolated and data limited view.

However, if you really want to know what’s going on regarding your store orders performance, there’s a much better and insightful way to do that.

Expanding your tracking capabilities with Coupler.io

For serious store owners ready to scale beyond guesswork and into data-driven growth, Coupler.io features 100+ free dashboards that are both easy & quick to configure and provide instant insights. 

Inventory management integration: Connecting orders to stock levels

Critical for: Stores struggling with stockouts, overstock situations, or seasonal demand planning.

Is a stockout an issue that haunts you as a shop owner? You don’t want your customers to experience backorders? With this dashboard, controlling your stock levels and ensuring the fast expeditions of shipments will be a piece of cake!

Use the Shopify inventory dashboard to:

Thanks to the in-built Coupler.io connector, you’ll load and visualize your Shopify data in Looker Studio, a popular business intelligence (BI) tool, easily and in no time. Setup requires just 10 minutes, and you’ll immediately see which products are trending toward stockouts.

Marketing funnel analysis: From impression to conversion

Essential for: Stores spending more than $1,000 monthly on advertising or struggling to understand which marketing channels actually drive profitable sales.

In a hugely competitive ecommerce market, running ad campaigns for an online shop is anything but out of the ordinary. This dashboard lets you observe the results of all your marketing efforts and see how they impact your store performance.

With this dashboard, you’ll be able to:

The dashboard is available for Looker Studio and Power BI, two very popular business intelligence (BI) and data visualization platforms. Thanks to the integrated Coupler.io connector, you can consolidate data from about a dozen of platforms in a couple of minutes and with no extensive analytics background. Choose the version that works the best for you, and follow the simple setup steps on the Readme / Setup dashboard tab.

Customer behavior insights: New vs. returning customer patterns

Crucial for: Understanding customer lifetime value and optimizing the balance between acquisition and retention spending.

If you run analytics for your online store website, you can get lots of valuable data to back up decisions that’ll drive you more new customers or let you retain existing ones. Use this dashboard to get the full picture and take only these steps that truly boost your bottom line. We highly recommend you to try it out, considering that the native integration of GA4 and Shopify might provide data that’s far from accurate.

Implement the Shopify store traffic dashboard to:

You can set up the dashboard in both Looker Studio and Power BI. The built-in Coupler.io connector will make sure that all the data is properly and accurately extracted and brought to the visualization. Be sure to check out easy setup steps on the Readme / Setup dashboard tab of the dashboard.

What’s the best way to approach Shopify order tracking?

The key to successful order tracking lies in choosing the right tools for your current stage while planning for future growth. Here’s how to make that decision:

For new store owners (0-50 orders monthly)

When you’re beginning your store owner journey, native tools should be sufficient to cater for your shipment tracking and performance analysis needs. Start here to keep costs low while you validate your business model:

For growing stores (50-200 orders monthly)

This is the critical transition phase where manual processes become bottlenecks. Partial automation becomes essential:

For established stores (200+ orders monthly)

Once you’ve become an established store, it’s time to evaluate automation ROI and choose tools that easily integrate with your existing workflow to save time and labor. At this volume, manual tracking consumes 15-25 hours monthly—equivalent to hiring part-time staff just for data entry.

Full automation becomes not just helpful, but essential:

Once you’ve become an established store, it’s time to evaluate automation ROI and choose tools that easily integrate with your existing workflow to save time and labor. Here, Coupler.io can be of help again by providing automation, reliability, and insight, regardless of scale or order complexity. 

When making decisions about moving from native Shopify solutions to more automated tools, consider these order number thresholds as your compass:

Number of orders per monthYour toolsetMonthly time investmentRecommended next step
<50Native tools2-5 hoursMonitor growth and prepare for upgrade
50-200Partial automation (native + Coupler.io)5-10 hours without automationImplement analytics dashboards
>200Full automation (Coupler.io and beyond)10-25 hours without automationInvest in comprehensive automation

Ready to eliminate manual reporting tasks and gain the insights that drive profitable growth? Most store owners see their first actionable insight within an hour of setup.

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