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Google’s taking a big swing at AI health with the Fitbit Air

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Why This Matters

Google’s Fitbit Air represents a return to simple, user-friendly wearable devices aimed at broad audiences, including kids and seniors. Its modular design and focus on ease of use could help expand the adoption of health tracking technology, making it more accessible and less intimidating for everyday consumers.

Key Takeaways

It’s a Whoop dupe. That was my first thought when I saw the new $99 Google Fitbit Air. You can hardly blame me. The band is screenless with a metallic fabric clasp. My eyes flickered between the Fitbit Air and my wrist, where I’m wearing a Whoop MG. Was I not seeing double?

But as my press briefing went on, my opinion started changing. The Air is sort of like the OG Fitbits that Whoop then duped once Fitbit went all in on smartwatches. Think back to 2012, when the Fitbit One could clip to your pants, be turned into a pendant, or dangle from a keychain. That device was mostly a pedometer, whereas the Air is more of a modern, modular sensor that can be popped out of one band and stuck into one of three others. But in many ways, this feels like a return to Fitbit’s roots — a simple band for casual tracking.

“The reality is right now, wearables have made huge advancements, but for a lot of people, they’re still either too complicated, too bulky, or too expensive,” Rishi Chandra, Google’s vice president of Health and Home, tells The Verge. “That’s where the Fitbit Air came in. We wanted something you could give to your kids and parents that they could just put on their arms. They don’t have to learn anything new.”

The sensor pops out of the band, allowing you to swap straps. Image: Google

Compared to previous Fitbit trackers, the Air is 25 percent smaller than the Luxe and 50 percent smaller than the Inspire. It weighs a mere 12g with the band, and 5.2g without. There are no buttons, though there is an LED charging light and haptics for silent alarms. Sensor-wise, it’s not as high tech as the Pixel Watch, but it’s got the staples: an optical heart rate sensor, gyroscope, accelerometer, blood oxygen sensor, and skin temperature sensor for sleep tracking. You can dunk it in water up to 50 meters, and the battery lasts seven days on a single charge. That’s somewhat disappointing, but it was typical for old-school Fitbits, too. At least this one purportedly gets you one day of juice with a five-minute charge. It’ll also work concurrently with a Pixel Watch — meaning that if you’d prefer to wear the latter during the day and an Air for workouts and sleep, you can now. (Recently, Fitbit hasn’t supported multiple devices.)

But the Air is not a signal that Google’s reviving Fitbit as it was. This is Fitbit’s first hardware product in nearly four years, but it comes alongside the death of the Fitbit app. Starting May 19th, the Fitbit app and Android’s Health Connect app will be consolidated into the single Google Health app. The Fitbit Premium subscription? That’s also being rebranded as Google Health Premium, though the price won’t change. To top it all off, its AI-powered Health Coach is leaving beta and rolling out to the public.

This is hardly surprising. Since Google acquired Fitbit for $2.1 billion in 2021, it’s been slowly but surely integrating Fitbit into the overarching Google umbrella, much as it did with Nest. The transition hasn’t always been smooth. Longtime Fitbit users were enraged by multiple widespread outages, deprecated features like challenges, and a confused wearable lineup once the Pixel Watch was introduced. Then, in early 2024, Fitbit’s original leadership was laid off.

Here’s what you get with a subscription versus what you get for free. Image: Google

“I know it will be hard for people. It was hard for us internally,” says Chandra, referring to the rebrand. “But as we think about the future, where the health app needs to go, the health app is not going to be specific to Fitbit hardware … We want to be a health coach to an Apple Watch user, too. That’s why we had to make the brand change.”

Another reason, Chandra says, is that the current health data market is entirely too fragmented. Before now, Google itself had two separate apps: Fitbit and Health Connect. Before that, it was the Google Fit app. Many wearable users have their data stored across a hodgepodge of apps, including Strava, Garmin, Peloton, etc. Their medical records are often stored on other systems. In some cases, health app data can be siloed depending on your phone’s operating system. Which is why, Chandra says, Google Health will be iOS compatible and eventually work with third-party wearables like Garmins, Whoops, and Oura. (To start, however, it’ll be limited to Pixel and Fitbit devices.) This platform-agnostic approach also harkens back to the Fitbit of yore. It’s just that this time, it’s under Google’s name.

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