How to Track 404 Errors for Nonprofits
Imagine a potential donor clicks your email campaign link to make a one-time gift, lands on a 404 error page, and never completes the donation. That single broken link just cost your nonprofit hundreds or thousands of dollars in lost funding.
Tracking 404 errors is critical for nonprofits because every broken link is a missed connection with donors, volunteers, and the communities you serve.
Why 404 Errors Matters for Nonprofits
Donor trust erodes quickly. When visitors encounter broken pages, they question how professional your organization manages its operations. For nonprofits relying on public trust, this perception matters.
Email campaign links break over time. You link to landing pages in newsletters, event invitations, and fundraising appeals. As you update your site, those links sometimes stop working. Without tracking, you never know.
Grant reporting requirements. Many grants require functional websites. Repeated 404 errors could affect future funding opportunities.
Volunteer onboarding suffers. Broken links in volunteer signup flows mean fewer people successfully complete their applications.
How to Check in GA4
Open GA4 and navigate to Reports > Life cycle > Engagement > Pages and screens. Look for pages with “404” or “not found” in the page path. Check the Event count column to see how many times each broken page was encountered.
You can also create a custom report by going to Configure > Custom definitions and marking “page_location” as a dimension, then filtering for pages containing “404.”
The downside: GA4 shows you the broken page but not what linked to it. You get the symptom, not the cause.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics makes 404 tracking painless. It automatically groups 404 errors and shows you exactly which pages link to each broken URL.
Example questions ClawAnalytics answers:
- “Which broken donation page links are costing us the most lost gifts?”
- “Are any event registration pages returning 404s right now?”
- “Which external sites link to our old landing pages?”
With this context, you fix the root cause, not just the symptom.
Quick Wins
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Set up alerts. Configure notifications when 404 error spikes occur so you can fix issues within hours, not weeks.
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Audit your donation flow. Test every link in your donate button journey monthly.
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Clean up old campaigns. When ending fundraising campaigns, redirect those URLs so visitors land on current pages.
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Monitor your sitemap. Submit your sitemap to Google Search Console and review 404 crawl errors weekly.
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Use ClawAnalytics. The dashboard shows 404 trends over time, helping you spot patterns before they become donor-facing problems.