Imagine a customer browsing your food delivery app at midnight, craving pizza. They tap on a promo for half-price pepperoni, and instead of a delicious pizza, they see a 404 error. What do they do? They close your app and order from the competitor instead. That one broken link just cost you a sale.
Why 404 Errors Matter for Food Delivery
Tracking 404 errors is critical for food delivery businesses for several reasons.
Lost orders directly impact revenue. Each broken link is a missed opportunity. Customers who encounter errors while browsing menus or promotions often abandon their intent entirely.
Mobile users are especially sensitive. Food delivery apps see high mobile traffic. A single broken link on mobile can frustrate users who have limited patience when hunger strikes.
Menu changes create frequent broken links. Updating menu items, removing discontinued dishes, or changing promotional landing pages all generate new 404 errors if redirects are not set up properly.
SEO penalties hurt discoverability. Google downranks sites with excessive 404 errors, making it harder for new customers to find your delivery service in search results.
How to Check in GA4
Here is how to monitor 404 errors in Google Analytics 4.
First, go to your GA4 property and click on Explore in the left sidebar. Create a new exploration. In the Dimensions field, search for “Page path and query string” and add it to the Rows. Then search for “Event name” and add it to the Columns. Filter to show only events containing “page_not_found”.
This gives you a table showing which specific pages are returning 404 errors and how many times each was encountered. You can also add “Session source” to see where users are coming from when they hit dead links.
For ongoing monitoring, set up a custom alert in GA4 to notify you when 404 errors exceed a certain threshold.
The Easier Way
While GA4 gives you raw data, making sense of it takes time. ClawAnalytics simplifies 404 tracking for food delivery businesses.
ClawAnalytics automatically captures every 404 error and groups them by the broken URL. You can see at a glance which menu items or promotions are broken. The tool also tracks which referrers send traffic to dead links, so you know where to fix redirects.
For example, ClawAnalytics can show you:
- How many orders you lost last week due to broken promo links
- Which menu item pages are most frequently returning 404 errors
- Which marketing channel sends the most traffic to broken landing pages
This context helps you prioritize fixes based on actual revenue impact.
Quick Wins
Here are actionable steps to reduce 404 errors in your food delivery business.
Audit your menu pages weekly. Every time you remove or rename a dish, set up a 301 redirect to a similar item or your main menu.
Check your marketing links. If you run SMS promotions or social media ads, test every link before the campaign goes live.
Monitor your app updates. New app versions sometimes break deep links. Test thoroughly after each release.
Use descriptive 404 pages. When a user lands on a broken page, show a friendly message with links to popular menu items or your main ordering page.
Track over time. Set a goal to reduce 404 errors by 50% each month. Use your baseline data to measure progress.