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Meta is overhauling how advertisers measure performance on its platforms, redefining what counts as a click and introducing a new category to capture social engagement that doesn’t involve direct link visits.
In a blog post, the company said it will soon limit click-through attribution to only link clicks that take a user to an advertiser’s website or destination. The update, expected to begin rolling out later in March, is aimed at reducing long-standing discrepancies between Meta’s ad reporting and third-party analytics tools such as Google Analytics.
But what does this mean?
Previously, interactions such as likes, comments, shares or saves could sometimes be counted within click attribution if a user later converted. The change means that a conversion will only be attributed to a click if the user actually followed a link to the advertiser’s page. Meta said the shift is meant to make its reporting easier to compare with other measurement systems used by marketers.
“Our hope is that this new definition will significantly reduce measurement misalignment, allowing your Meta reporting to align better with third-party tools like Google Analytics,” the company said in its announcement.
The update affects campaigns optimised for website and in-store conversions across Meta’s advertising ecosystem, including Facebook and Instagram.
Alongside narrowing the definition of clicks, Meta is introducing a new reporting metric called “engaged-through attribution.” This category captures conversions that occur after a user interacts with an ad in ways unique to social platforms such as liking, commenting, sharing, saving, or bookmarking it.
The company argues that such interactions often play a role in purchase decisions, even if the user does not immediately click through to a website. In its blog post, Meta pointed out that people engage with social ads in multiple ways. A user might click a link and visit an advertiser’s site, but they might also share the ad with friends, save it to return later, or simply like the post before making a purchase at another time.
By separating these interactions from link clicks, the company says advertisers will get clearer insights into how campaigns drive results.
The update is part of a broader effort by Meta to refine advertising measurement and reduce reporting inconsistencies that marketers have flagged for years. The new framework effectively divides attribution into three categories: click-through attribution (link clicks), engaged-through attribution (social interactions), and view-through attribution, which tracks conversions after someone sees an ad without interacting with it.
The company has also adjusted video engagement metrics as part of the change, lowering the threshold for a qualifying engaged view from 10 seconds to 5 seconds.
Meta said the goal is to better reflect how advertising works in a “social-first” environment, where users often interact with content rather than immediately clicking through to external sites. For advertisers, the shift could slightly reduce reported click-through conversions while moving some of that activity into the new engagement-based category. But Meta maintains that the updated framework will ultimately provide a clearer picture of how ads perform across its platforms.