Free Consent Banner Cost Calculator
See how many visitors your cookie consent banner is silently losing every month, and what that costs you.
Last updated: July 2026
Enter Your Site Data
Consent behavior varies sharply by country and banner design.
Total visitors per month to pages with a cookie banner.
Average revenue per visitor, if you want to estimate lost revenue.
Your Results
Enter your visitors to see your results
We'll estimate how many are invisible to your analytics right now.
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What Does This Calculator Measure?
Every visitor who rejects or ignores your cookie consent banner is excluded from cookie-based analytics like Google Analytics. This calculator estimates how many of your visitors that is, using real consent-rate studies by market.
Why a High Rejection Rate Hurts You
It's not just a privacy footnote, it quietly breaks four parts of your marketing.
Broken Analytics
Your traffic, funnels, and attribution reports are undercounted by exactly your rejection rate, often 30-65%.
Wasted Ad Spend
You can't retarget or measure ROAS for the visitors who rejected tracking, so ad budget gets allocated on incomplete data.
Slower Site, Worse Core Web Vitals
Consent management scripts are often render-blocking and add real weight before a visitor decides anything.
Compliance Risk
Banners with pre-ticked boxes or a hidden reject option are exactly what regulators fine first.
Cookie Consent Rejection Rates by Market (2026)
Compliant banners with an equally visible "Reject" button see rejection rates this high.
| Market | Rejection Rate |
|---|---|
| United States | 15%+ |
| United Kingdom | 30%+ |
| EU Average | 45%+ |
| Germany | 65%+ |
| France | 65%+ |
Source: CookieYes Global Cookie Consent Trends (2026) and Advance Metrics cookie behavior studies (2025-2026). Rates reflect visitors who explicitly reject or never interact with a compliant banner.
Cookie-free, privacy-first analytics tools don't process personal data, so under GDPR/ePrivacy guidance they don't require a consent banner at all for analytics purposes, closing this gap entirely.
How to Stop Losing These Visitors
You don't need to break the law to fix this, you need fewer things that require consent in the first place.
1. Switch Analytics to a Cookie-Free Tool
Tools that don't set cookies or store personal identifiers don't need visitor consent to track pageviews, so every visitor counts, not just the ones who click accept.
2. Stop Gating Core Metrics Behind Consent
Pageviews, referrers, and country-level traffic are core business metrics. They shouldn't depend on a visitor's cookie choice at all.
3. Reserve Cookies for What Actually Needs Them
Ad retargeting and personalization genuinely need consent. Keep those behind the banner, but don't force your baseline analytics through the same gate.
4. Audit Whether You Still Need a Banner
If your analytics is cookie-free and you drop third-party ad pixels, many sites can remove the consent banner entirely, and the friction that comes with it.
5. Track Every Visitor Without Asking Permission
UseClick's website analytics never sets a cookie or stores personal data, so there's no banner, no rejected visitors, and no gap in your numbers.
Privacy-first, cookie-free, and GDPR-compliant by design, not by consent management.
Start Free →Real-World Loss Examples
How the math plays out for different kinds of sites.
E-Commerce Store
SaaS Website
Content Blog
Frequently Asked Questions About Consent Banners
If your analytics tool doesn't set cookies or store personal data, it doesn't need consent under GDPR/ePrivacy guidance. You'd still need a banner for any ad pixels, embedded videos, or other cookie-setting tools you keep.
Rejected means a visitor actively clicked "Reject" or similar. Ignored means they closed the tab, scrolled past, or never interacted at all. Both groups are typically excluded from cookie-based analytics, which is why real-world data loss is often higher than accept/reject numbers alone suggest.
Only if you use cookies or similar technology to process personal data, such as advertising trackers or cookie-based analytics. Tools that don't store personal identifiers fall outside that requirement for their own tracking.
Yes. Google Analytics sets cookies and processes personal data such as IP addresses and device identifiers, so it requires informed consent in the EU/UK before it can track a visitor.
The rejection rates use published 2025-2026 industry studies by market, but your actual rate depends on your banner design, industry, and audience. Treat the result as a directional estimate, not an exact figure.
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