View-through attribution is a measurement method that gives credit to an ad impression when a user sees an ad, does not click it, but later converts within a defined attribution window. In simple terms, it helps marketers understand whether ads may have influenced a conversion even when the ad did not generate a direct click.

This matters because not every ad works by driving an immediate action. Display, video, and social ads often create awareness first, then users return later through another channel, direct visit, or branded search. In that context, view-through attribution can add useful visibility to broader campaign influence and support more complete attribution reporting.

How view-through attribution works

A typical setup starts when a user is served an ad impression. If that same user completes a conversion later, the platform may assign partial or full credit to that impression, as long as the conversion happens within the attribution window set by the platform or advertiser.

For example, a user sees a paid social ad for a software product on Monday, does not click, then visits the website directly on Thursday and books a demo. If the conversion tracking setup includes a view-through window, that ad impression may receive credit for influencing the conversion.

This is why view-through attribution is often used in channels where impressions matter as much as clicks. It helps marketers evaluate upper-funnel campaigns that may not produce immediate traffic but still contribute to performance. For teams trying to improve attribution reporting, it can be a helpful input alongside click-based models and other conversion tracking methods. If you want to understand how these touchpoints connect across channels, exploring Attributy’s Features can help clarify what deeper attribution visibility looks like in practice.

When to use view-through attribution and what to watch out for

View-through attribution is most useful when you are measuring campaigns designed to build awareness or assist conversion indirectly. This includes display advertising, video campaigns, programmatic media, and some paid social activity where users often convert later through another source.

Still, it should be used carefully. Because the user did not click, view-through attribution can overstate the impact of impressions if your attribution window is too long or your tracking setup is not well controlled. It is best treated as one signal, not the only measure of campaign success.

A practical approach is to compare view-through data with click-through performance, assisted conversions, and overall pipeline outcomes. That gives a more balanced view of true campaign influence. For marketers looking to connect impression-level influence with real revenue outcomes, a dedicated marketing attribution platform can help make that analysis more reliable.