Google Fitbit Air Review: Barely There, Always Running
Recorded: May 26, 2026, 1:11 p.m.
| Original | Summarized |
Google Fitbit Air Review: Barely There, Always Running | WIREDSkip to main contentMenuSECURITYPOLITICSTHE BIG STORYBUSINESSSCIENCECULTUREREVIEWSMenuAccountAccountNewslettersBest Power BanksBest Smart RingsRouters vs. ModemsChoose the Right LaptopSmart SprinklersDeals DeliveredSecurityPoliticsThe Big StoryBusinessScienceCultureReviewsChevronMoreExpandThe Big InterviewMagazineEventsWIRED InsiderWIRED ConsultingNewslettersPodcastsVideoLivestreamsMerchSearchSearchBoutayna Chokrane GearMay 26, 2026 9:00 AMReview: Google Fitbit AirGoogle’s latest Fitbit strips away the screen without sacrificing features, delivering the most approachable and affordable wearable yet.Courtesy of GoogleTriangleUpBuy NowMultiple Buying Options Available$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyRating:8/10Open rating explainerInformationWIREDLightest, most comfortable Fitbit yet. Full suite of wellness metrics across fitness, sleep, and health. Customizable and user-controlled app experience. AI Health Coach adds motivational value.TIREDAutomatic activity detection can misclassify workouts. AI Health Coach sometimes defaults to shallow prompts. Overemphasis on proprietary Google scores.After two weeks with the new Fitbit Air, what's most remarkable is how little you notice it. At just 12 grams with the band attached, it's the lightest Fitbit to date, so unobtrusive it fades into your life while actively logging it. It doesn't announce itself, prompt you, or interrupt; it simply stays on your body, collecting health data in the background.The Air is the most complete expression yet of Google's vision for ambient health: always-on tracking that never demands attention. That's both its appeal and its drawback. For individuals who want structure and gentle guidance, it functions as a low-maintenance accountability partner. For those who prefer health tracking to episodic rather than continuous, it can feel like a step toward a future where your body is constantly translated into data.Designed to Be ForgottenPhotograph: Boutayna ChokraneThis isn’t Fitbit’s first screenless tracker. Longtime users may remember the discontinued Fitbit Flex, the company’s original display-free wristband from 2013, which launched at the same $99 price as the new Air. But this is the first screenless Fitbit since Google’s acquisition in 2021, and the refinements are obvious the moment you put it on.Google Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleThe Air lands as one of the most affordable devices in Google’s tracker lineup. It’s sleeker and more comfortable than its predecessors, while remaining equally approachable for elite athletes and anyone trying to foster healthier habits. The most obvious advantage is weight. Google says it’s 20 percent lighter than the discontinued Luxe, and compared to bulkier competitors like Whoop’s latest bands—which weigh closer to 27 grams—the 12-gram Air is almost imperceptible on my slim wrist.The inevitable comparison here is Whoop, but Fitbit’s advantage isn’t only weight. I’ve found Whoop’s attachment system maddening, with metal clasp pegs that loosen, detach, or occasionally pop open while adjusting the fit. The Air is much simpler. The sensor stays put, the band snaps into place without any fiddling, and swapping straps takes seconds. Most importantly, I never worried that the tracker might fall off somewhere during the day.Photograph: Boutayna ChokraneThe Air ships with the default Performance Loop Band, a lightweight woven strap made from recycled materials with a micro-adjustable Velcro closure. It’s soft and breathable. For an additional $30, you can opt for the special-edition band designed in collaboration with NBA champion Stephen Curry, who is also a performance adviser for Google's AI Health Coach. Google also sells an Active Band separately, a sweatproof silicone strap for workouts that is easy to wipe down, and the Elevated Modern Band, which gives the Air a jewelry aesthetic. I found all of them comfortable, but I ended up using the Performance Loop most days. The Air is meant to stay on all day, adapting to your life rather than being constantly taken off or on.You can wear a smartwatch with a screen alongside the Fitbit Air or switch between them without disrupting your data history, but the caveat is that the smartwatch needs to be the Google Pixel Watch, at least for now. Google says broader compatibility with other watches will come later. The nice thing is you can enjoy your fancy mechanical watch collection and wear the Fitbit Air on the other hand, with no one the wiser that you're wearing a fitness tracker.Google Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GooglePhotograph: Boutayna ChokraneThe battery lasts up to seven days, which is standard for most Fitbits. A full charge from zero takes about 90 minutes, and just five minutes plugged in gets you roughly a full day of use. Its quick-charging capability comes in handy before a workout, a travel day, or going to bed. However, the charger is proprietary, so try not to lose it (maybe grab a spare).Because there’s no screen, checking battery life isn't very intuitive. You can double-tap the top of the sensor to check the status, though I sometimes had to try more than once to get it to respond. A tiny LED on the side blinks white when the battery is above 20 percent, blinks red when it’s below 20 percent, and stays solid red when you’ve fully run out of juice. The Google Health app sends a notification when you’re down to about a day of battery life, and the tracker vibrates once it dips below 20 percent.Ambient ComputingSince there's no screen, much of the Fitbit Air experience revolves around the redesigned Google Health app. It supports both Health Connect and Apple HealthKit, keeping the Air compatible with iOS and Android. The redesign is cleaner and more flexible than Fitbit’s old software, with an emphasis on adapting to your habits instead of forcing you into predefined routines. You can customize the dashboards, pin the metrics you care about the most, set weekly targets, and follow guided workouts through videos or step-by-step instructions.Courtesy of GoogleGoogle Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleSetup begins with an onboarding chat with the new AI Health Coach, powered by Gemini. It asks about your goals, routines, and obstacles before generating a personalized wellness plan. Depending on how much detail you share, including the option to upload medical records, the process takes around five minutes. From there, the app generates a weekly plan with suggested workouts and targets that you can tweak manually or refine through follow-up chats with the Coach. The experience feels approachable rather than prescriptive or overly clinical.I was surprised by how central the AI Health Coach becomes to the experience. More than the tracker itself, it was the Health Coach that kept pulling me back into the app throughout the day. It sends you check-ins in the morning with sleep recaps, post-workout summaries after exercises, and nightly overviews that connect your activity, recovery, and stress levels into something more coherent. Most of these messages also end with a question about how you’re feeling, which naturally opens into a chat rather than feeling like another notification to dismiss.Automatic activity detection is solid overall. The Air consistently recognized walks and even generated useful summaries about intensity and recovery afterward. I haven’t run into any workout hallucinations (yet), though there were occasional misreads. On one day, for example, the Air logged a walk as a run but then immediately followed with a note pointing out that my heart rate data suggested it was probably a walk. It was an odd moment of the system partially correcting itself in real time.The detection algorithms also noticeably improved with feedback. During my first three days of testing, the Air missed a recurring high-intensity workout class. But after I manually logged the sessions a few times, it began recognizing them automatically. Like the Oura Ring, the Air gets smarter the more context you give it.If you start a workout from the app beforehand, you can follow live stats in real time, including heart rate, elapsed time, and the Cardio Load metric, which estimates the strain on your cardiovascular system during exercise. The AI Health Coach generates a weekly cardio target based on your health data. Like most readiness-style scores, I’d treat it more as guidance than fact; they’re ultimately based on Google’s proprietary algorithms.Courtesy of GoogleGoogle Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleSleep tracking was also solid. Google says its updated model is 15 percent more accurate, with improved sleep-stage detection, better nap tracking, and a new restlessness bar. The presentation is detailed enough to feel useful without overwhelming you with excessive graphs and wellness jargon.What I appreciated most was how the system handled uncertainty. One night, the Air slipped off my wrist a few hours into sleep because I hadn’t secured the band properly. The next morning, the app understandably gave me a poor sleep score based on only three recorded hours. After manually correcting the sleep window, the Air didn’t try to generate a corrected score or fabricate missing metrics. It simply acknowledged that it didn’t have enough information.Beyond fitness and sleep, the Air also folds in cycle tracking, nutrition logging, and mental health features. You can set mindfulness goals, log your mood throughout the day, and track resilience trends that connect your emotional state with your physical one; the idea is to treat health less as separate categories and more as an ongoing feedback loop. Similar to readiness scores, it's useful context, but not something I'd take as absolute.That said, this level of self-monitoring may not appeal to everyone. For some people, constant prompts, scores, and check-ins can encourage overtracking that ultimately becomes counterproductive. Still, I found the Air does a good job of letting you opt out of features and ignore the check-ins without persistent nudges. The company also emphasizes data autonomy: You can export or delete your health data at any time through your Google account settings.Courtesy of GoogleMost of the Google Health app experience is powered by Google Health Premium, which costs $10 per month or $100 annually. Buying the Fitbit Air (or any new Fitbit device) gets you a three-month trial. Without the subscription, you still get the basics, but much of the deeper analysis, coaching, and contextual insight disappears. And that’s ultimately the real value of the platform: not just collecting data but translating it into something actionable.Google Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleThe subscription also feels reasonably priced compared to competitors. Whoop's memberships range between $199 and $359, depending on the tier. Google is comparatively accessible, especially with how much functionality is packed into the app. In some ways, the Air feels like a preventative health service, though it’s important not to mistake it for actual medical care. No amount of health tracking or AI summaries replaces a doctor, but the platform is clearly designed to help users become proactive and informed between appointments.At its best, the Air feels like a centralized health companion that quietly encourages healthier habits. For anyone who wants a more proactive relationship with their health, especially in a healthcare system that often feels reactive and inaccessible, it's empowering to have this much insight available on your own terms. The Fitbit Air is one of the most approachable ambient wearables available today.Google Fitbit AirRating: 8/10$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at Google$100 at Amazon$100 at Best Buy$100 at GoogleCommentsBack to topTriangleBoutayna Chokrane is a product writer and reviewer at WIRED, covering consumer products and online trends. She specializes in fitness equipment, beauty tech, apparel, and more. Before joining the Gear team, she was a music editorial fellow at Pitchfork. She also worked as a freelance journalist, covering fashion, arts, and ... Read MoreProduct Writer & ReviewerInstagramLinkedInTopicsShoppingreviewReviewsGooglefitnessgearFitness TrackersfitbithealthWearablesWIRED is obsessed with what comes next. 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The Google Fitbit Air is presented as a highly approachable and affordable wearable that achieves a balance between comprehensive wellness tracking and unobtrusive design. Physically, the device is remarkably light, weighing only 12 grams with the band, positioning it as one of the lightest Fitbits available and almost imperceptible on the wrist. This design philosophy centers on ambient health tracking, aiming to collect data in the background without demanding user attention. Despite this unobtrusiveness, the device offers a full suite of wellness metrics spanning fitness, sleep, and overall health. The software experience, centered around the redesigned Google Health app, emphasizes customization and adaptability. It supports integration with Health Connect and Apple HealthKit, ensuring broad compatibility across different operating systems. A core feature is the integration of an AI Health Coach powered by Gemini, which engages users through personalized onboarding chats to generate tailored wellness plans, suggesting workouts and targets. The system strives to be guidance-oriented rather than purely prescriptive, allowing users to set personal goals and refine routines through ongoing interaction with the coach. Automatic activity detection is generally solid, providing useful summaries of intensity and recovery, though the experience is not entirely flawless; issues like misclassifications or occasional errors demonstrate the ongoing refinement of the detection algorithms based on user feedback. The system also shows an ability to learn from manual inputs, improving recognition of recurring activities. Sleep tracking is reported as solid, with the updated model offering improved accuracy in detecting sleep stages, nap tracking, and restlessness, while presenting detailed information without overwhelming the user with excessive data. Beyond physical activity and sleep, the Fitbit Air incorporates features for cycle tracking, nutrition logging, and mental health monitoring, fostering an interconnected feedback loop between physical and emotional states. The system manages uncertainty effectively; for instance, when data is incomplete, the application acknowledges the lack of information rather than fabricating scores, promoting data integrity. The platform also grants the user data autonomy, allowing full control over exporting or deleting health data through Google account settings. Power management is adequate, with the battery lasting up to seven days, supported by quick-charging capabilities. However, the proprietary nature of the charger requires users to maintain it. While the lack of a screen means checking battery life is not immediately intuitive, status can be gleaned through sensor indicators, and notifications alert users when battery levels dip below a certain threshold. The platform leverages Google Health Premium for deeper analysis and coaching, which is accessed via a subscription. This premium service transforms raw data into actionable insights, positioning the device as a preventative health companion designed to encourage healthier habits. While the cost is accessible compared to some competitors, the ultimate value lies in the contextual insight and guidance provided, rather than just the data collection itself. Ultimately, the Fitbit Air is characterized as one of the most approachable ambient wearables, offering comprehensive, contextualized health insight in a way that supports proactive self-monitoring. |