Black Friday Sale: 50% off first month!Code: BLACKFRIDAY
Ends in:
00h:00m:00s
Free Tool

Bounce Rate Calculator

Calculate your website's bounce rate and compare it to industry benchmarks. See how well you're keeping visitors engaged.

Total number of sessions in the time period

Sessions with only one pageview (single-page visits)

Select your industry to compare with benchmarks

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bounce Rate?

Bounce rate is a key web analytics metric that measures the percentage of visitors who leave your website after viewing only a single page without taking any action. These visitors are called "bounced" sessions because they don't proceed to view additional pages or interact with your site in any meaningful way.

For example, if you have 1,000 sessions in a month and 450 of those visitors leave after viewing only one page, your bounce rate would be 45%. Understanding your bounce rate is critical to evaluating whether your content is meeting visitor expectations and whether your site provides a good user experience.

Why Does Bounce Rate Matter?

  • Indicator of Content Relevance: A high bounce rate often indicates that your landing page content doesn't match what visitors expect based on the link they clicked or search query they used. This mismatch can signal a need to improve your messaging, headlines, or targeting.
  • User Experience Signal: Visitors who bounce quickly may be experiencing poor user experience factors like slow page load times, confusing navigation, intrusive pop-ups, or mobile responsiveness issues. Monitoring bounce rate helps you identify these problems.
  • Conversion Opportunity: Reducing bounce rate means more visitors stay on your site longer and have the opportunity to convert into customers, subscribers, or leads. Even small improvements in bounce rate can significantly impact your bottom line.
  • Marketing Effectiveness: Bounce rates by traffic source (paid ads, email, organic search) reveal which marketing channels are driving quality traffic. High bounce rates from specific sources may indicate wasted ad spend or poor targeting.

Bounce Rate Formula

Bounce Rate = (Bounced Sessions / Total Sessions) × 100

To calculate your bounce rate manually, divide the number of sessions where visitors viewed only one page by your total number of sessions, then multiply by 100 to get a percentage.

Example: If your website had 10,000 total sessions last month and 4,500 of those were single-page sessions (bounces), your bounce rate would be (4,500 / 10,000) × 100 = 45%.

What's a Good Bounce Rate by Industry?

Bounce rates vary significantly by industry, page type, and traffic source. Here are typical benchmarks to help you understand how your site compares:

  • E-commerce - Excellent: 20-30% | Good: 30-45% | Needs Work: 45-70%: E-commerce sites benefit from engaged shoppers exploring multiple products. Lower bounce rates indicate successful product discovery.
  • Blog/Content - Excellent: 40-50% | Good: 50-65% | Needs Work: 65-90%: Blogs naturally have higher bounce rates since visitors often arrive for specific articles and leave once they've finished reading.
  • SaaS/Software - Excellent: 10-25% | Good: 25-35% | Needs Work: 35-60%: SaaS sites should have very low bounce rates. High rates indicate unclear value proposition or poor onboarding experience.
  • Landing Pages - Excellent: 60-70% | Good: 70-75% | Needs Work: 75-90%: Landing pages are designed for a single action, so higher bounce rates are normal and often expected.
  • Lead Generation - Excellent: 30-40% | Good: 40-50% | Needs Work: 50-70%: Lead generation sites need visitors to complete forms or take action. Good rates mean effective persuasion and targeting.
  • News/Media - Excellent: 40-50% | Good: 50-60% | Needs Work: 60-80%: News sites see high bounce rates because readers often come for specific articles via search or social media.

How to Reduce Your Bounce Rate

  1. Improve Page Load Speed: Slow-loading pages are one of the top reasons visitors bounce. Optimize images, leverage browser caching, minify CSS/JavaScript, and use a content delivery network (CDN) to ensure pages load in under 3 seconds.
  2. Ensure Mobile Responsiveness: More than half of web traffic is now mobile. Make sure your site is responsive and provides an excellent experience on smartphones and tablets. Test on real devices to identify usability issues.
  3. Create Compelling Content: Write for your audience with clear headlines, engaging introductions, and valuable information. Use subheadings, bullet points, and images to break up text. Ensure your content matches the search intent of visitors.
  4. Add Clear Calls-to-Action: Tell visitors what to do next. Use prominent, action-oriented buttons and clear instructions. Make it easy for interested visitors to take the next step, whether that's signing up, purchasing, or contacting you.
  5. Implement Internal Linking: Link to related content within your site. This gives visitors a reason to stay and explore more pages. Well-placed internal links improve both user engagement and SEO performance.
  6. Remove Distracting Elements: Reduce intrusive pop-ups, auto-playing videos, and excessive ads that frustrate visitors. If you must use pop-ups, make them easy to close and wait for visitors to show interest before displaying them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Track bounce rate in real-time with Rybbit

Monitor bounce rate by page, source, and device. Get started for free with up to 3,000 events per month.