If you have checked your Google Analytics recently and noticed a sudden spike in direct traffic from China & Singapore, you are not alone. Website owners across the world have seen the same thing. In many cases, traffic has jumped 10 times or even 100 times overnight.
At first, this looks like great news. More traffic usually means more potential customers. But when you look closer, the reality is very different.
Most of this traffic is not real people. It is bot traffic.
What is actually happening
Over the past few months, a new wave of automated bots has been hitting websites globally. These bots appear as direct traffic and often come from Chinese IP addresses, sometimes through Singapore servers.
The common pattern looks like this:
• Traffic spikes suddenly
• Bounce rate is close to 100 percent
• Session duration is near zero seconds
• No clicks, no engagement, no conversions
This behaviour is a strong sign of scraping bots rather than real users.
These bots are likely collecting data for AI training. With new AI models being developed at speed, large amounts of website content are being harvested automatically.
Why it shows as “Direct” traffic
In Google Analytics, traffic is labelled as direct when no referral source is detected. Bots often hide their true source using VPNs, proxies or direct IP requests, so Analytics has no choice but to log them as direct visits.
This is why your reports suddenly look distorted.
How to check if this is affecting your site
To confirm whether this traffic is fake, you can:
• Filter traffic by country in GA4 and check China
• Look for session durations of 0 seconds
• Check engagement and conversion data
• Compare with Google Search Console to see if real organic traffic has grown
If your traffic is rising but your business results are not, bots are the likely cause.
What you can do about it
You cannot stop all bot traffic, but you can reduce the impact.
- Turn on GA4 bot filtering
- Create filters to exclude suspicious locations or user agents
- Use Cloudflare or similar tools such as Wordfence to block traffic by country
- Add rate limiting or basic human checks where needed
- Monitor your data weekly and export clean historical reports
These steps will not remove every bot, but they will help restore cleaner data.
Why this matters
Bot traffic does more than inflate your numbers. It damages the accuracy of your reports, makes it harder to track real performance, and can even affect site speed and user experience.
Your marketing decisions should be based on real data. Letting bot traffic skew your reports can lead to poor strategy and wasted budget.
Final thoughts
If your direct traffic from China has exploded recently, it is very unlikely to be real users. It is almost certainly automated scraping.
The good news is that once you clean up your data and add some basic protection, your analytics will start to make sense again. And when your data is clear, your marketing decisions become much stronger.



