Meta Click Attribution Change: What Your Ad Reports Now Show

TL;DR

Meta now counts a “click” only when someone clicks the actual link in your ad. Interactions like shares, saves, and likes moved to a separate bucket called engage-through attribution. Your total attributed conversions shouldn’t change much — the reporting just got cleaner and lines up better with Google Analytics.

Your Meta ad reports may look a little different this month. The click count probably dropped. That’s not a bug, and it’s not bad news.

Meta redefined what counts as a click. The old definition rolled link clicks, shares, saves, likes, and other interactions into one number. The new definition only counts actual link clicks. Everything else moved to a separate category called engage-through attribution (renamed from engaged-view attribution).

Billing didn’t change. The math running your campaigns didn’t change. The reporting just got more honest.

What counts as a click now?

A click now means one thing: someone clicked the link in your ad. That’s it.

Shares, saves, likes, and other engagement actions still count — they just report under engage-through attribution. For video ads, engage-through now triggers after 5 seconds of watch time, down from the old 10-second threshold.

Here’s the short version:

Action Old bucket New bucket
Link click Click Click
Share / Save / Like Click Engage-through
10-second video view Engaged-view
5-second video view Engage-through

Why did Meta change how clicks are counted?

Meta’s own reason: most ad measurement was built for search, not social. Meta wants its numbers to line up with tools like Google Analytics.

If you’ve ever looked at your Meta report and thought “these conversion numbers don’t match GA4 at all,” this change is aimed at you. Meta isn’t claiming fewer conversions — it’s separating link-click conversions from everything-else conversions so the report tells a cleaner story.

What is engage-through attribution?

Engage-through attribution is where Meta now tracks conversions that came from non-link actions. Shares, saves, likes, and 5-second-plus video views all land here.

This isn’t a penalty box. On Reels, 46% of online purchase conversions happen within the first 2 seconds of a video. That activity is real — Meta just pulled it into its own column so you can see it separately from link clicks.

How will this affect my ad reports?

Two things to expect:

  1. Your click-through rate (CTR) may look lower. Fewer interactions count as clicks, so the number divides by a smaller pool.
  2. Your total attributed conversions probably won’t move much. Some conversions just moved from the click column to the engage-through column.

Your cost-per-click may look different too, because the click definition changed. Comparing this month’s CPC to last month’s isn’t apples to apples.

What should I check in my ad account?

Three quick checks:

Source: Meta for Business — Click Attribution Update

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Frequently Asked Questions

Meta now only counts a click when someone clicks the actual link in an ad. Shares, saves, likes, and other interactions moved to a separate category called engage-through attribution. The change began rolling out in 2026.

Meta wanted its ad reports to line up more closely with tools like Google Analytics. The old definition bundled too many actions into “clicks” and created mismatches between Meta’s reporting and third-party analytics.

Engage-through attribution is Meta’s reporting bucket for conversions that came from non-link actions — shares, saves, likes, and video views of 5 seconds or longer. It replaced the older engaged-view category.

Probably not by much. The conversions are still counted — some just moved from the click column to the engage-through column. Click-through rate may look lower, but total conversions should hold steady.

No. Billing wasn’t affected. Only the reporting changed.

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