

Rounding out its capabilities are water resistance up to 50 meters, silent alarms, a timer and stopwatch, phone notifications, and support for contactless payment through Fitbit Pay.Įven with all of these features, the Fitbit Charge 5’s battery life is rated at up to seven days, and in our experience with the tracker, you can sometimes stretch beyond that. In addition to step tracking, continuous heart-rate monitoring, and sleep tracking, the Charge 5 offers automatic exercise tracking, the ability to map your run or bike route via on-board GPS, and sensors for monitoring oxygen saturation, ECG readings, and EDA scanning. This latest iteration of the Charge line upgrades to a color display and adds in more health sensors for a full treasure trove of data. You get much of a smartwatch’s experience without having to pay a smartwatch price-or give up a ton of real estate on your arm. It packs in a wide range of features, ultimately offering the best of fitness trackers and devices like the Apple Watch in a single, affordable device. It’s a step backward from the original Inspire’s cable, which magnetically attached, but not a dealbreaker.Īs hybrid smartwatches go, the Fitbit Charge 5 is hard to beat. Our only quibble is the charging cable, which secures with small plastic clips. If you don’t need advanced features like on-board GPS, an altimeter, and extra health tracking sensors, you don’t have to shell out for them. Overall, the Inspire 2 amply covers the basic tracking sought by people looking to get and stay active. Add in the current promotion of one free year of Fitbit Premium, Fitbit’s subscription service that provides more detailed metrics and access to workout and meditation sessions, and you get quite a bit of bang for your buck for $100 MSRP.

So if you happen to take it off and misplace it, you can easily locate it.

You can even track the device via Tile’s app (yes, the company that makes Bluetooth trackers), a feature wholly unique to the Inspire 2 among Fitbit devices. (The Charge 5 can only be navigated via its touchscreen.) The monochrome display also goes easier on battery life-the tracker is officially rated for up to 10 days depending on your activity level, as opposed to the Charge 5’s rating of up to seven days. You still get side buttons to control the device, which is useful when you can’t flip your wrist or easily tap the screen. In addition to basic tracking, you get automatic exercise tracking, silent alarms, a timer and stopwatch, reminders to exercise, water resistance up to 50 meters, and the ability to read your phone’s notifications on your phone.Īnd despite having fewer features than the Fitbit Charge 5, the Inspire 2 has several advantages of its own. If all you want is a device that records steps, sleep, and heart rate accurately, the Fitbit Inspire 2 provides all that and more in a compact, slender tracker.
