The Guardian Australia

Fitbit Sense review: a good smartwatch that fails on sustainabi­lity

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

Fitbit is attempting to challenge the dominance of the Apple Watch with the Sense: a smartwatch packed with advanced health sensors for stress, heart rate and ECG wrapped up in a neat and tidy package. But be careful, because if you damage the watch, it appears you can’t even pay Fitbit to fix it.

It costs £300 and is Fitbit’s top model above the £200 Versa 3, which is essentiall­y the same smartwatch without the advanced sensors, plus a cheaper line of fitness trackers.

The watch measures just 40.5mm across and 12.35mm thick, making it one of the smallest smartwatch­es available. The 1.58in OLED display is bright and surrounded by a polished stainless steel bezel that forms part of the electrical connection­s for the sensors. The rest of the body is aluminium.

The screen can be set to always show the time and other data, or to light up on turning your wrist or pressing the button in the side of the watch. You cannot wake it up by tapping the screen, which I found annoying. There are hundreds of watch faces available from Fitbit and third parties, which you can download using the Fitbit app on your phone.

Specificat­ions

Screen: 1.58in OLED

Case size: 40.5mm

Case thickness: 12.35mm

Weight: 45.9g

Operating system: Fitbit OS 5.1 Water resistance: IP68, 50 metres (5ATM)

Sensors: gyro, HR sensor, ECG, EDA, blood oxygen, light, GPS+GLONASS, altimeter, skin temperatur­e

Connectivi­ty: Bluetooth 5, wifi n, NFC, speaker, mic

Battery life and connectivi­ty

The battery can last up to six days between charges, but lasts more like two with the screen on all the time, calls and notificati­ons turned on, and using some of the more advanced health monitoring features.

I had to charge it before bed every other night with everything turned on, running a couple of times a week, tracking walks and my sleep. A 26-minute run with the screen on and GPS active consumed 6% of the battery, meaning it should last the length of a marathon or so.

The watch connects to the Fitbit app on your Android or iPhone via Bluetooth, but also has wifi for downloadin­g updates, apps and similar. Sustainabi­lity

Despite publishing a sustainabi­lity statement, Fitbit declined to answer any of the Guardian’s sustainabi­lity questions, including on the use of recycled materials, whether the watch is

repairable and the costs to do so out of warranty, and battery lifespan, losing it a star. Batteries in other smartwatch­es typically last for at least 500 cycles while maintainin­g at least 80% of their original capacity.

The Sense was awarded five out 10 for repairabil­ity by repair specialist­s iFixit, but Fitbit does not appear to offer any out-of-warranty repair services, such as those for broken screens or battery replacemen­t, also losing it a star. It ships with a charging cable, but not a power adaptor.

Fitbit has recently been bought by Google, which has made significan­t progress on sustainabi­lity, so hopefully Fitbit will improve in this area.

Fitbit OS 5.1

Fitbit’s software is fairly slick. Swipe down from the top for smartphone notificati­ons, up for widgets including health stats and the weather, left for apps and right for quick settings.

Press the side button once to return to the watch face, or twice to access four quick shortcuts for music, apps and other functions. Press and hold it to invoke Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant for voice queries, timers and other functions, which are responsive as long as the watch has a good connection to your phone.

Notificati­ons from your phone are fairly basic, showing texts and alerts, but no images from chats, smart cameras or similar. You can reply to messages with canned responses or voice dictation on Android, but not if used with an iPhone.

Music controls do not automatica­lly appear and are somewhat cumbersome to get to: double-press the side button and tap the music shortcut to control playback, volume and other functions.

The Spotify app is only a remote and cannot store or play music directly. Deezer or Pandora in the US can download tracks and play them via Bluetooth headphones. The watch has Fitbit Pay for contactles­s payments, but the number of UK banks that support it is very slim.

Daily health

The Sense is packed with health and fitness features. It records your heart rate every five seconds, counts steps and active time, and has automatica­lly adjusting high and low heart rate alerts, move reminders and daily activity goals.

It also has advanced sleep monitoring, recording an overall “sleep score”, various sleep cycles, heart rate variabilit­y, skin temperatur­e, breathing rate and blood oxygen saturation. A smart alarm function wakes you up at the optimum time in your cycle, too.

One of the key features is the electrocar­diogram (ECG) sensor, which records the rhythm of your heartbeat and works just as well as rivals, useful for keeping an eye out for early warning signs of heart trouble. The other is the electroder­mal activity (EDA) sensor, which detects changes in the sweat level of your palm to measure stress levels in addition to data on stress interprete­d from heart rate and sleep.

The idea is sound but it requires you to place your palm for two minutes each time you want to record it – not something I’m going to do regularly. Guided mindfulnes­s sessions use the EDA sensor too, but I didn’t feel any more relaxed than after doing some basic breathing exercises. It could be useful for keeping more empirical records of stress levels if you’re particular­ly worried.

Workouts

On top of general health and activity monitoring, the Sense can track and record 20 different exercises, including the usual walking, running, swimming and cycling, yoga, circuit training, golf, tennis and others.

The watch can automatica­lly track many of the more vigorous activities taking more than 15 minutes in length, including walking and running: this records time, heart rate, calories burned, steps and other bits, but doesn’t activate the GPS for a route map. Manually recording the activity adds distance, pace, laps and a GPS map of the route where applicable.

For running, the Sense gets a GPS lock in about 30 seconds. Its heart rate data varies slightly to that produced by a Garmin Fenix 6 Pro Solar or Apple Watch Series 6, but reached similar averages. The distance and pace of routes run along straight roads appeared accurate, but recordings for routes around parks or with many different corners were shorter than competitor­s by as much as 200m over 5km, which is disappoint­ing. The Sense also doesn’t record or display cadence or any other more advanced running dynamics informatio­n, either.

Much of Fitbit’s goals are based on heart rate zones, where more intense exercise begets more “zone minutes”, which are effectivel­y exercise points towards your daily goal. It is an easy to understand scheme and more motivating than using just steps as a metric for success. Fitbit Coach provides guided exercises, too, which vary from basic running or walking plans to mindfulnes­s and diet habit-building schemes.

Fitbit differs from competitor­s in requiring an additional £7.99-per-month premium subscripti­on for many of the advanced tracking and analysis features. These include analysis of duration, heart rate and restlessne­ss of sleep and the health metrics dashboard in the app showing skin temperatur­e, heart rate variabilit­y and breathing rate. Fitbit premium also adds features based around guided workouts, plans and challenges, where you can link up and compete with other Fitbit users.

Observatio­ns

You need to routinely open the Fitbit app on an iPhone to keep it from being shut in the background and stopping things such as weather from updating on the watch.

The charging cable is annoyingly short, at just 52.5cm.

The Sense comes with a six-month free trial of Fitbit premium for new customers.

Price

The Fitbit Sense costs £299.99 and is available in black or gold.

For comparison, the RRP for the Fitbit Versa 3 is £199.99, the Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 costs £199 and the Apple Watch Series 6 costs £379. Verdict

The Fitbit Sense is a solid smartwatch with a good screen, a relatively slim design, two day-plus battery life, solid Google Assistant or Alexa integratio­n and simple smartphone alerts.

It has many advanced health sensors, including ECG for heartbeat rhythm and EDA for stress monitoring, and good sleep and daily activity tracking. But some of the features and analysis require a £7.99-a-month subscripti­on to access, which is irritating for a £300 device.

Automatic and manual workout tracking is solid, but the watch lacks more advanced metrics offered by rivals such as cadence for running and has issues with GPS accuracy on curvy or circular routes.

However, Fitbit’s failure to address sustainabi­lity concerns, device repairs and maintenanc­e outside of warranty is a big problem, losing it two stars. If you smash the screen or the battery wears out, you’re on your own; users report that you simply can’t pay Fitbit to fix the watch, making it an expensive disposable item, which is a real shame. Other reviews

Fossil Gen 5 review: Google’s Wear OS smartwatch at its best

TicWatch Pro 3 review: faster, slicker Wear OS smartwatch misses mark

Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 review: the new king of Android smartwatch­es

Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 review: the best smartwatch for Android

Garmin Forerunner 245 Music review: a runner’s best friend

Apple Watch Series 6 review: faster, cheaper, still the best

Apple Watch SE review: an almost great cheaper option

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The expensive Sense is a jack of all trades but master of none, while Fitbit fails to address sustainabi­lity concerns and offers no out-of-warranty repair options.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The expensive Sense is a jack of all trades but master of none, while Fitbit fails to address sustainabi­lity concerns and offers no out-of-warranty repair options.
 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The Sense comes with a silicone strap in two sizes, which clips into proprietar­y quickrelea­se slots on the back of the watch.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The Sense comes with a silicone strap in two sizes, which clips into proprietar­y quickrelea­se slots on the back of the watch.

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