Direct traffic is often interpreted as a sign of brand strength. When it increases, teams assume awareness is growing and customers are returning on their own. The metric frequently appears in board reports as evidence that people are seeking out the business directly rather than discovering it through search or ads. The logic is simple and appealing: people know us, so they visit us directly. But that explanation doesn’t tell the whole story. In GA4, direct traffic isn’t a well-defined channel like organic search or paid social. It doesn’t point to a specific marketing activity. Instead, it usually signals a lack of visibility. If GA4 can’t determine where a session originated, it labels it as direct. What looks like user intent is often just missing data. If we keep treating direct traffic as a clear sign of brand loyalty, we might end up basing our strategies and budgets on a misunderstanding of how users actually reach our site.…