If you don’t want to buy a fully-fledged smartwatch, then a fitness tracker is an excellent option: they’re simpler, cheaper, and often have much better battery life, so you don’t have to remember to charge them every day.
Despite that, the best fitness trackers still pack all the same activity tracking tech as their more expensive cousins. Any fitness tracker will record your steps, check your heartrate, and track your exercise – while the latest models can monitor your sleep, stress, and blood oxygen levels too.
The big brand is obviously Fitbit, but we review fitness trackers from a variety of companies – and in fact often find that rivals deliver better value, with similar tracking features for a lower price.
You might also want to consider a different form factor. Withings makes trackers including some of the best health tech on the market, packed into devices that still look like regular analogue watches, while Whoop makes an even sleeker tracker that doesn’t have any screen at all.
Every tracker in this ranking has been reviewed by the Tech Advisor team, and you can click through to our full reviews for more details on why they’ve made the cut. We’re always reviewing new models too, so check back for an updated ranking if nothing takes your fancy right now.
If you are looking for something with a little more functionality, check out our best smartwatches roundup too.
Best fitness trackers 2023
1. Xiaomi Mi Band 7 – Best fitness tracker
Pros
- Feature-packed
- All-day heart rate, blood oxygen and stress tracking
- Support for 120 types of exercise
- Large always-on display
Cons
- Always-on display comes at a big cost to battery
- Not the smartest wearable
- No built-in GPS
The Xiaomi Mi Band 7 is the best fitness tracker around, with a tempting price tag and an impressive array of sensors to track your health, fitness, and workouts.
The large always-on display is a particularly nice addition, helping showcase the vivid watch faces on offer while making it easier to read text at a glance, though the always-on tech comes at a heavy cost to overall battery life.
Fitness tracking includes all-day SpO2 monitoring, new workout metrics (including VO2 Max), and the ability to track more workouts than ever before.
The lack of built-in GPS may irk fitness fanatics, but this is a great little inexpensive tracker for keeping an eye on your general health and fitness.
Xiaomi has launched the follow-up Band 8 in China, which features a new design meaning it can be worn as a necklace or elsewhere, but for now there’s no word on when the Band 8 will go on sale in Europe and elsewhere worldwide.
Read our full
Xiaomi Mi Band 7 review
2. Fitbit Charge 5 – Best Fitbit
Pros
- Top fitness features
- GPS
- Colour display
Cons
- Occasionally laggy
- Some features missing
Price When Reviewed:
$149.95
The Charge 5 is easily Fitbit’s best tracker, which is enough to make it a safe choice for anyone looking for an activity band.
It covers all the basics – tracking steps, distance, calories burned, hourly activity, heart rate, swim-tracking and advanced sleep; not to mention it has most of the company’s exclusive top-end exercise features too, including Active Zone Minutes.
Its built-in GPS and health measurements mean it closely matches the more expensive Fitbit Versa 3 smartwatch too, though bear in mind that the most comprehensive tracking features are locked behind the paid Fitbit Premium plan.
Our only complaints are very occasional performance stutters, the removal of an altimeter (to count floors climbed) and a few features that Fitbit has been slow to add, but those shouldn’t put you off grabbing the Charge 5, as it’s constantly getting improved upon (thanks to frequent software updates from Fitbit).
If you don’t mind a monochrome display, you can also always check out the older
Charge 4 and save some money too.
Read our full
Fitbit Charge 5 review
3. Withings Move – Best design
Pros
- Elegant design
- Well-rounded app
- 18-month battery life
Cons
- Limited feature set
- No continuous heart rate
Price When Reviewed:
From $69.95
When it comes to design, the Withings Move is so classic and simple that it could pass as an everyday watch. It has the longevity of one too, using a standard watch battery that will last for a whopping 18 months.
On the fitness tracking side, the companion Health Mate app does almost everything you need it to and more, combining basic fitness tracking with sleep tracking too.
If you love the sound of the Move but want that little bit extra, check out the Move ECG too, which takes the same design but squeezes in an electrocardiogram sensor.
Read our full
Withings Move review
4. Fitbit Inspire 3 – Cheapest Fitbit
Pros
- Always-on colour screen
- Stylish & comfortable
- Comprehensive tracking
- Good battery life & charging
Cons
- Tiny screen
- Premium needed for some features
- Short charging wire
- No GPS
Price When Reviewed:
$99.95
The Inspire 3 is the cheapest model in the current Fitbit line-up, making it an excellent entry point to tracking.
It’s still more expensive than rivals like the Xiaomi Mi Band 7, but Fitbit’s software experience and ecosystem are both excellent, so for some it may be worth paying a little extra – though paying more for a smaller display does sting a little.
It helps that you get up to 10 days of battery life (though a little less if you use the new always-on display feature), 24/7 heart rate monitoring now bolstered by SpO2 data, and sleep tracking. Just bear in mind that there’s no built-in GPS support, and that, as with all Fitbits, you’ll need to subscribe to the paid Fitbit Premium plan to get every bit of data out of it.
Read our full
Fitbit Inspire 3 review
5. Withings ScanWatch – Best health tracking
Pros
- Elegant design
- Well-rounded app
- Great battery life
Cons
- No GPS
- No continuous heart rate
Price When Reviewed:
$279 (38mm) | $299 (42mm)
Aside from a lack of GPS, Withings’ ScanWatch is a compelling hybrid tracker, with a classic design and rich tracking capabilities.
The name relates to its ability to more accurately get a read on your heart health than any other tracker here, albeit for a premium that makes it more of a niche proposition.
AFib detection, an SpO2 sensor, and detection of breathing disturbances like sleep apnea are smart inclusions, while the small PMOLED display grants some degree of smartwatch-like functionality on top of its fitness-tracking skillset.
If you can spend a little more, the ScanWatch Horizon offers the same excellent health features in a heftier dive watch design.
Read our full
Withings ScanWatch review
6. Amazfit Band 7 – Best on a budget
Pros
- Good selection of features
- 5 ATM water resistance
- 120 sports tracking modes
- Heart, SpO2, stress and sleep tracking
Cons
- No auto-brightness
- No NFC
- Software needs some polish
With good looks, sturdy construction, a big display, lengthy battery life, and solid exercise tracking, the Amazfit Band 7 makes a great first impression.
The software could do with some polish and some kind of home button would make life easier, but for the price it is more than good enough.
If you are looking for a good value smart band today, the Amazfit Band 7 should be near the top of your list.
Read our full
Amazfit Band 7 review
7. Polar Pacer – Best for runners
Pros
- Very comfortable
- Excellent battery life
- Accurate tracking with GPS
Cons
- Notification experience irks
- Manual syncing to app
- No on-board music storage
If you want a running watch that lasts several days on a charge, tracks your workouts effortlessly, spits out insightful data, and won’t bug you with notifications, the Polar Pacer is it.
The Pacer supports a variety of exercise types but the focus is on running, with GPS tracking and a post-workout ‘running index’ to let you know how you’ve performed across a variety of metrics.
If you’re trying to get into running, or even if you’re already hitting the trails, the Pacer will prove an excellent addition to your kit with strong battery life, a superbly readable display, lightweight construction, and the smarts to show you how you are performing and to help you improve.
Read our full
Polar Pacer review
8. Garmin Vivomove Trend – Wireless charging hybrid
Pros
- Attractive design
- Good mix of fitness tracking and smartwatch features
- Qi wireless charging
Cons
- Can get most features for less
- Battery life good but not great
- UI takes a bit of learning
Price When Reviewed:
$269.99
The Garmin Vivomove Trend is a smartwatch hybrid similar to the Withings ScanWatch, pairing analogue and digital design elements along with some basic smartwatch functionality.
If you care mostly about steps, sleep, monitoring heart rate 24/7, and being motivated to move more each day, then that is absolutely where the Trend impresses. It can do more, but this is where its strengths as a hybrid smartwatch lie.
It also impresses by including wireless charging using the common Qi standard, meaning you can drop it onto almost any wireless charger to top it up – a level of convenience few other trackers can match.
Crucially, it delivers those features with an analogue look that rarely feels like it’s getting in the way of that digital display behind it showing off your stats and notifications.
Read our full
Garmin Vivomove Trend review
9. Fitbit Ace 3 – Best for kids
Pros
- In-app Parent and Kid Views
- Hardy, colourful design
- Family challenges
Cons
- Underpowered compared to adult Fitbits
- May not appeal to every kid
Price When Reviewed:
$79.95
The Fitbit Ace 3 is built to suit childrens’ rough-and-tumble lifestyle, providing both kids and parents with simple but insightful activity and sleep tracking data.
The Ace 3 serves as a way to motivate kids to get more active, but in a roundabout way, could also incentivise the whole family to get fitter together (provided everyone involved has a Fitbit of their own to wear).
Older kids might want to look for a tracker with a little more oomph, however, as the Ace 3 offers a cut-down range of fitness and notification features compared to Fitbit’s ‘adult’ trackers. It counts steps, logs Active Minutes, and monitors basic sleep patterns, but lacks heart-rate tracking.
Read our full
Fitbit Ace 3 review
10. Whoop 4.0 – Best for cutting screentime
Pros
- Lightweight
- Multi-day battery
- Deep data insights
Cons
- Requires expensive subscription
- Only measures strain and recovery
- Not much guidance
Price When Reviewed:
Subscription costs from $20 per month
The Whoop 4.0 is something a little different: with no display and not even any step count tracking, this is far from a traditional fitness tracker. Instead it’s a simple tracker that you can slip into a watch-esque wristband or strap onto workout clothing, and which is primarily intended to measure your strain and recovery, to tell you how hard you pushed your body and when to take a break.
There’s sleep tracking too, along with run recording – though with no GPS, you’ll need to take your phone with you. The Whoop is also best for those who focus on cardio, as it doesn’t always detect strain accurately in workouts like strength training that don’t spike your heart rate.
The big downsides are that you do miss out on basic tracking features you might expect elsewhere – yes, including a step count – and that the pricing structure is unusual. You get the Whoop tracker for free, but only if you sign up for a subscription, which at its cheapest is $20/£18 per month if you commit to two years in advance.
Committing to pay so much to try out a relatively basic fitness tracker will put some people off, but if you want a tracker that focuses on cardio data and makes you more mindful about strain and sleep, it’s a good choice.
Read our full
Whoop 4.0 review
Buying advice for the best fitness trackers
What is a fitness tracker?
Fitness trackers help you measure and log a myriad of activities each day; from a simple step count to weights sessions, swimming and more. Advanced models include sleep tracking, stress detection, and can even help monitor specific health problems.
Some users will want something that counts steps and doesn’t require frequent charging, others might be in the market for a new marathon companion.
Do you want to be able to log your routes using integrated GPS or is tethered GPS (pulling location data from your phone in real-time) enough? Do you need constant heart-rate monitoring? Does your tracker need to be water-resistant? Is integration with other fitness services, like Strava, essential? These are all additional aspects to consider before buying.
Find out how we test wearables.
What’s the difference between fitness trackers and smartwatches?
There’s no strict line here. But, broadly speaking, we define a smartwatch as a more advanced wearable with additional apps and functionality.
You should expect a smartwatch to allow you to install and run apps – including some of the ones you’d find on your phone – as well as check notifications, reply to messages, and perhaps even take calls. Some smartwatches even support eSIM for their own independent data connection.
Should I just buy a Fitbit?
Fitbit dominates the conversation and while the company’s wares are undoubtedly competent, there are lots of other trackers out there that excel in areas your average Fitbit doesn’t.
More importantly, many of Fitbit’s rivals deliver similar specs at much lower prices – so you’ll be paying a bit of a premium for the Fitbit brand and software if you want to go for it. That said, Fitbits are reliable, have great compatibility with other services, and if you’re used to their software and experience then you can skip the learning curve of new hardware.