After a month of daily wear, here's how Google's influence makes Fitbit's flagship tracker better than ever.
Best Value
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The Charge 6 maintains Fitbit's familiar fitness band form factor with a slim, rectangular AMOLED display. At 30 grams, it's light enough to sleep in comfortably – something bulkier smartwatches struggle with.
The aluminum case feels premium for the price, and the silicone band is soft and breathable. Multiple band options let you customize the look, from sporty to slightly more dressy (though it always looks like a fitness tracker).
The side button returns after the Charge 5 controversially removed it. Physical controls during sweaty workouts are essential, and Fitbit listened to feedback.
This is the headline story. Google Maps turn-by-turn directions on your wrist during runs is genuinely useful – no more stopping to check your phone at intersections. The small display limits detail, but directional arrows and street names work well.
YouTube Music control and offline playback (with Premium subscription) lets you leave your phone behind on runs. Pair with Bluetooth earbuds and you have a complete running setup.
Google Wallet enables contactless payments, working reliably at every terminal I tried. The NFC integration feels seamless.
Core fitness tracking is excellent. Heart rate monitoring is accurate within 3-5 BPM during steady-state exercise, with some drift during intervals (typical for wrist-based sensors). The new ECG sensor detects AFib, though this is for awareness rather than diagnosis.
Built-in GPS tracked my runs accurately, with minimal drift in open areas. Urban canyons with tall buildings caused occasional wandering, but nothing worse than smartphone GPS.
Workout auto-detection recognized walks, runs, and elliptical sessions after a few minutes. 40+ exercise modes cover most activities, with customizable stat screens showing relevant metrics.
Sleep tracking breaks down light, deep, and REM stages with reasonable accuracy. The Sleep Score provides a quick nightly assessment, while detailed breakdowns in the app offer more insights.
Stress management via EDA sensor is interesting but not scientifically validated. It's more useful for encouraging mindfulness breaks than quantifying stress levels.
SpO2 monitoring runs overnight, and skin temperature tracking can flag potential illness – though both require Fitbit Premium for full analysis.
Seven days of battery life is achievable with GPS workouts a few times per week. Heavy GPS use drops this to 5 days, which is still excellent. The always-on display option would be nice but would impact battery significantly.
Fast charging reaches 80% in about an hour – enough to track a day's activities with a quick top-up.
The $9.99/month Premium subscription unlocks detailed insights, guided workouts, and advanced sleep analysis. Basic tracking works fine without it, but you'll see constant prompts to upgrade. For casual users, the free tier is sufficient. Fitness enthusiasts wanting deeper insights should factor subscription costs into the purchase decision.
| Display | AMOLED touchscreen |
|---|---|
| Battery Life | Up to 7 days |
| Water Resistance | 50 meters |
| GPS | Built-in |
| Sensors | Heart rate, SpO2, ECG, EDA, skin temperature, accelerometer |
| Connectivity | Bluetooth 5.0, NFC |
| Weight | 30g |
| Compatibility | iOS 15+, Android 9+ |
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The Fitbit Charge 6 is the best fitness tracker for most people. Google integration adds genuinely useful features without complicating the core experience. At $159, it offers excellent value with accurate tracking, week-long battery life, and a comfortable design you can wear 24/7.
The Premium subscription push is annoying but not a dealbreaker – core features work fine without it. If you want smartwatch features, look at Apple Watch SE or Galaxy Watch. For pure fitness tracking, the Charge 6 is tough to beat.