Polar
An eCommerce analytics hub unifying data sources, attribution, and retention metrics.
What is Polar?
Polar Analytics is an eCommerce intelligence and analytics platform designed for Shopify, Amazon, and multi-channel brands. It serves as a centralized hub to unify data from over 45 sources, offering an alternative to manual setups in Looker Studio or tools like Triple Whale, Triplewhale, Hyros, Northbeam, and Lifetimely. By combining server-side tracking (Polar Pixel) with automated KPI calculations, it enables brands to gain clear insights into customer acquisition, retention, and multi-channel marketing performance.
Category
Best Polar use cases by task, role, industry, and platform
These use cases show where Polar fits best, ranked by fit score before popularity or pricing.
Polar Pricing Plans
Compare Polar free options, Polar paid pricing plans, and usage notes before you choose the best way to use this AI tool in 2026.
Starts at $300/mo
Includes platform access, Business Intelligence features, Ask-Polar AI assistant, benchmarks, alerts, goals, unlimited users, and dedicated onboarding. Billed at $250/mo when paid annually.
Includes everything in Analyze, plus intraday refreshes, Polar first-party pixel, sales forecasts, and a dedicated Slack support channel. Billed at $292/mo when paid annually.
Includes everything in Analyze & Enrich, plus Conversion API (CAPI) Enhancer, Klaviyo Flow Enricher, priority support, and a dedicated implementation engineer. Billed at $333/mo when paid annually.
Includes Snowflake Database access, custom automation workflows, ongoing strategy audits, and a 99% SLA.
Pricing updated:Jun 12, 2026
Polar AI Features
Polar Pros and Cons
Pros
- Quick setup with one-click data integrations
- Consolidates marketing, attribution, and financial data in one hub
- AI assistant simplifies the creation of custom reports
- Helps improve ad platform performance with first-party tracking
Limitations
- Primarily built for Shopify, which may limit options for other e-commerce platforms
- Pricing scales with annual Gross Merchandise Value (GMV), which may increase costs for high-volume stores