You’re running WooCommerce Subscriptions, billing is working fine, and renewals are going out on schedule. But when someone asks what your MRR trend looks like over the last six months, or how much renewal revenue is landing next month, you open your WooCommerce admin and find nothing. The numbers exist somewhere in your database. Getting them into a report is the hard part.
There’s a cleaner way to see this data.
Analytics for WooCommerce Subscriptions is the WordPress-native plugin that puts subscription metrics inside the modern WooCommerce → Analytics panel, where you are already looking. It tracks MRR, churn, customer LTV, upcoming renewal revenue, and per-product and per-variation subscription reports, all self-hosted on your own server.
This guide compares the realistic options for WooCommerce subscription analytics in 2026, where each one fits, and how to pick the right one for your store.
What to look for in a subscription analytics tool
Before comparing tools, here is what actually matters when you evaluate a WooCommerce subscription reporting plugin or platform.
- Recurring revenue metrics Look for MRR at minimum, ideally with ARR and a net MRR breakdown across new, expansion, and churned revenue.
- Upcoming renewal forecast Can the tool show you what renewal revenue is coming in the next 30 days, not just what already happened?
- Churn metrics Churn rate is the baseline. Some tools add attribution or cancellation reasons on top.
- Customer LTV Per-subscriber economics tell you how much a customer is worth over their full lifecycle.
- WooCommerce integration depth Native connector, or a third-party middleware pipeline? This is the single biggest differentiator in this category.
- Pricing model Flat pricing, order-volume scaling, revenue-metered billing, or per-event fees. The model matters as much as the number.
- Delivery options Dashboard only, or scheduled email and Slack digests as well?
- Where your data lives Self-hosted on your server, or shipped to an external cloud. This decides GDPR posture and multi-language fit.
The options compared
1. Analytics for WooCommerce Subscriptions, the native WooCommerce pick
Vendor: Zorem Pricing: Flat annual, via the WooCommerce.com Marketplace Requires: WooCommerce Subscriptions Tested up to: WooCommerce 10.7, WordPress 6.9.4, HPOS compatible
Analytics for WooCommerce Subscriptions reads your WooCommerce database directly and surfaces subscription metrics inside the modern Analytics panel. It ships MRR trend tracking, upcoming renewal revenue forecasting at day, week, and month granularity, cancellation monitoring, plan-switch detection that separates upgrades from downgrades, per-product and per-variation reports, customer LTV, and CSV export across every report. A nightly aggregation cron recomputes the last 30 days from source data, so your reports self-correct from any drift, and a “Repair Last 30 Days” button lets you trigger that recomputation manually.
Because it runs at the database layer with no external sync, your customer and transaction data never leaves your server.
Where it sits: the native, self-hosted option built specifically for the WooCommerce plus WC Subscriptions stack, with flat pricing rather than usage-based billing. It does not yet ship ARR, cohort retention curves, multi-currency normalization, or scheduled email reports, all of which are on the public roadmap.
Best for: any WooCommerce store running WC Subscriptions that wants subscription metrics inside its own admin, with self-hosted data and predictable flat pricing.
2. Metorik, the broadest premium SaaS
Vendor: Metorik Pricing: $20 to $25 per month at the entry tier, scaling to $200+ per month by order volume, with custom enterprise tiers Native WooCommerce + WC Subscriptions: yes
Metorik is the most feature-complete platform in this comparison. It tracks MRR and ARR across signup cohorts, builds cohort retention curves, maps subscription lifecycle timelines, and runs churn attribution. Its Engage add-on layers in email automation, dunning, and dynamic coupons, and it normalizes multi-currency data across multi-store WooCommerce setups. It connects natively to WooCommerce, Shopify, Stripe, and PayPal.
Where it sits: the depth option. Metorik trades flat pricing and self-hosting for the widest analytical feature set and multi-channel reach, with usage-based pricing that scales as your order volume grows.
Best for: stores with the budget for premium SaaS and a real need for cohort retention, multi-channel consolidation, and email automation in one place.
3. Putler, the multi-platform consolidator
Vendor: Putler Pricing: revenue-metered tiers Native WooCommerce + WC Subscriptions: yes
Putler’s strength is consolidation. It pulls WooCommerce, Stripe, PayPal, and Braintree into one unified dashboard. Its subscription view tracks MRR with a new, expansion, and churned breakdown, projects ARR from MRR, reports both user churn and revenue churn as separate metrics, and adds LTV and ARPPU. It also offers write-back actions, letting admins refund, cancel, or suspend subscriptions from inside Putler.
Where it sits: built for breadth of billing sources rather than depth of WooCommerce-native admin integration. Its pricing scales with your monthly revenue rather than a flat fee.
Best for: stores whose revenue is spread across WooCommerce plus Stripe, PayPal, or other billing platforms, where the priority is one unified view.
4. Glew.io, the e-commerce analytics suite
Vendor: Glew Pricing: custom quote Native WooCommerce: yes
Glew is an e-commerce analytics platform with a dedicated subscription dashboard. It tracks MRR, net MRR, churned MRR, average revenue per subscription, and subscriber LTV, with native WooCommerce and Shopify integrations.
Where it sits: a broader e-commerce analytics suite where subscriptions are one module among many, with quote-based pricing rather than a published rate. It has less public documentation and independent review coverage than Metorik or Putler.
Best for: stores that want subscription metrics as part of a wider e-commerce analytics platform and are comfortable requesting a custom quote.
5. WooCommerce Analytics (built-in), the free baseline
Vendor: WooCommerce / Automattic Pricing: free, bundled with every install
WooCommerce Analytics is the free baseline every store already has. It handles transaction-level reporting well across orders, products, customers, taxes, and revenue, and the data stays local on your server. Out of the box it carries zero subscription-specific metrics. Adding WooCommerce Subscriptions brings subscription reports, but they land in the legacy WooCommerce → Reports menu rather than the modern Analytics panel, with no MRR, ARR, churn, or cohort tracking.
Where it sits: the starting point, not the destination. It covers transactional reporting for free, but needs a bridge plugin or a SaaS to deliver modern subscription metrics.
Best for: stores not ready to spend yet, with a plan to add dedicated subscription reporting as recurring revenue grows.
Adjacent platforms: ChartMogul and Baremetrics
Both are well-known subscription analytics platforms, and both are built primarily for SaaS businesses on Stripe, Recurly, Chargebee, or Braintree. Neither ships a native WooCommerce connector. ChartMogul depends on the third-party SaaSync pipeline, and Baremetrics depends on Zapier or a custom API integration.
Where they sit: a different category. They are excellent for Stripe-based SaaS startups, but for a WooCommerce store the lack of native integration puts them outside the realistic head-to-head.
Best for: Stripe-first SaaS companies rather than WooCommerce merchants.
Quick comparison
| Plugin / platform | Where it sits |
|---|---|
| Analytics for WooCommerce Subscriptions | Native, self-hosted, flat-priced |
| Metorik | Broadest feature set, usage-priced SaaS |
| Putler | Multi-platform consolidation, revenue-metered |
| Glew.io | Wider e-commerce suite, custom quote |
| WooCommerce Analytics (built-in) | Free transactional baseline |
| ChartMogul / Baremetrics | Stripe-first, no native WooCommerce |
How to choose
If you run WooCommerce Subscriptions and want subscription metrics inside your own WordPress admin with flat, self-hosted pricing, Analytics for WooCommerce Subscriptions is the closest fit. If you need cohort retention curves, multi-channel consolidation, and email automation and budget is not the constraint, Metorik covers the most ground. If your billing is split across WooCommerce, Stripe, and PayPal and you want one dashboard, Putler is built for that. And if you are not ready to spend, the built-in WooCommerce Analytics plus the legacy subscription reports will get you started.
Conclusion
The right tool depends on where your store sits today, how many billing sources you run, and whether you want your data on your own server or in an external cloud. For a WooCommerce-only store running WC Subscriptions, a native, flat-priced, self-hosted plugin keeps the setup simple and the data close. For broader multi-channel or cohort-heavy needs, a premium SaaS earns its price.
Get MRR, churn, LTV, and upcoming renewal forecasts in the Analytics panel you already use, with your data staying on your own server.
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee. HPOS Compatible. Self-Hosted. Priority Support.
