
Google Fitbit Air
pros and cons
- Affordable
- Comprehensive health tracking
- Google’s AI Health Coach improves the experience
- The AI isn’t perfect, and can hallucinate
may / 2026
, its Whoop competitor, available now. Whoop may have kick-started the screenless wristband craze, but Google is proving that an affordably priced health tracker can be just as commercially successful, especially if it’s comfortable, useful, and long-lasting — with its $100 price tag.
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The Fitbit Air’s announcement came with a few software updates, including an app name change from Fitbit to Google Health and the global launch of Google’s Health Coach, the AI companion that powers the premium app experience.
I’ve been testing the device over the past week as I’ve gone running, lifted weights, done yoga, and logged hours on the elliptical. I’ve asked the AI coach for help in planning my workout routine, understanding my recovery, and nutrition advice. After stress-testing the Fitbit Air, I’m well-positioned to tell you whether it’s a worthy buy. Spoiler alert: it absolutely is.
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Your experience with the Fitbit Air will differ depending on whether you’re subscribed to Google Health Premium. The bulk of the Fitbit Air’s functions are the same across tiers, but some in-app features, like logging a meal by messaging the AI coach, are slightly more seamless in the membership tier.
Out of the box, the $100 Fitbit Air comes in four colorways: lavender, berry, obsidian, and fog (a blue-gray). It’s a thin band that takes up less space around my wrist than my Whoop or Apple Watch. It’s also lighter.
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It has an optical heart rate monitor, three-axis accelerometer and gyroscope, SpO2 monitoring sensors, a temperature sensor, and a vibration motor (used for Fitbit Air’s wake-up alarm). It doesn’t have a GPS for location tracking, but since it’s a screenless device, the Fitbit Air uses your phone’s location monitoring instead. If you want to log a phone-free run around the block, you’ll have to use one of Google’s other devices (like its Pixel Watch).
Fitbit Air’s screenless design allows it to foster a healthier relationship with activity tracking. I love my Apple Watch, but it’s made me a little obsessed with getting my steps in, thanks to the constant reminders of my activity goals on the screen. A screenless tracker, on the other hand, is far less invasive; with all the data housed in the app, I can check when I want to.
Out of all the wearables I’ve tested, this one blended into nice outfits the best. On the flip side, when I was working out, I would find myself glancing at the band out of habit, checking my heart rate zones or calories burned, only to realize I’d have to dig into my app to find them.
The battery lasts around a week. I began wearing the device on a Saturday morning, and by the following Saturday morning, its battery was around 20%. Not too bad, right?
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You can log a variety of activities through the Google Health app, whether you’re trail running, practicing Bikram yoga, or doing ballet. It displays your overall cardio load, calories burned, and heart rate as you log an exercise. On the Google Health home screen, you’ll see a weekly cardio load (adjusted each week based on your activity goals and habits), sleep, steps, and a recovery score.
I like having the weekly target front and center — it serves as a nice exercise pacer. I know when to ramp up my cardio during a slower week, or rest on the weekends if I’ve already jam-packed the front of my week with runs and high-intensity workouts.
Just be aware that I’ve seen the AI hallucinate, as AI tends to do. For example, one night it mentioned a 52-minute elliptical session I had done that morning. But I didn’t exercise that day (unless it confused my ten-minute coffee walk with a 52-minute elliptical session).
When I asked a Google spokesperson about this issue, they explained that the Coach is designed to spot patterns but can sometimes connect dots that aren’t there. “We put our Coach through rigorous evaluations – every time a mistake like this is flagged, we turn it into a strict new test question that the AI must pass before we release new updates to the app.
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This is a continuous process, so our system gets smarter, safer, and more accurate every day,” a Google spokesperson told ZDNET. If any presented datapoint or fact looks off, a Google spokesperson recommended asking the Coach, “Are you sure?” or from where the Coach got the data. This makes the Coach redo its work.
These helpful, seamless touches available through the Health Coach provide a holistic activity and wellness-tracking experience for the Fitbit Air. The Health Coach helps me further understand the data Fitbit Air is already collecting, and in doing so, encourages me to ask it more questions or use it in new ways.
ZDNET’s buying advice
The subscription-free tier and the Google Health Premium tier are a perfect example of a company knowing exactly how to sell its products to different groups. The Fitbit Air
Source : ZDNet
