List of Fitbit products

This is a list of products by Fitbit, a line of activity trackers, smartwatches, and other electronic health and fitness devices.

Launched in March 2018, the Fitbit Ace is essentially a version of the Alta for children aged 8 and above.

[5] Fitbit Luxe is an advanced "early Google-Fitbit" fitness band with smartphone notifications, released on 30 April 2021.

The Tracker measures steps taken as well as user data to calculate distance walked, calories burned, floors climbed, and activity duration and intensity.

[16] A wireless base station is included to receive data from the Classic and to charge its battery.

The Fitbit Classic tracked only steps taken, distance traveled, calories burned and sleep.

At the TechCrunch50 during the "Mobile" session on September 9, 2008,[17] Fitbit received positive reactions during its panel from experts like Rafe Needleman, Tim O'Reilly, and Evan Williams who cited its wearability, price, and lack of subscription fees.

[18] The new features included: The Fitbit Ultra is powered by a small lithium polymer battery.

[19] The Fitbit Ultra suffered from a small design flaw: the unit had a permanently curved shape in order to clip directly onto any piece of clothing.

The plastic used in the unit was inappropriate for the strain experienced at the looped end, and with time would become brittle, and crack.

Announced on September 17, 2012, the Fitbit Zip is about the size of a United States quarter and tracks steps taken, distance traveled and calories burned.

[26] It includes a specialized USB charger; the battery lasts 5–7 days, and it takes 1–2 hours to charge.

The LED lights function similarly to the original Flex, with the number of illuminated dots indicating progress toward the set goal.

The Force tracks the number of statistics in real-time, including steps taken, distance travelled, calories burned, stairs climbed and active minutes throughout the day.

On January 13, 2014, it was reported that an unconfirmed number of Fitbit customers had complained about skin irritation after wearing the Force for extended periods of time.

[29] On March 12, 2014 the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) made the recall official.

The Charge automatically tracks users' steps, sleep, flights of stairs, and an approximation of the distance travelled.

[38] It shares the same form factor as the Charge 3, but includes additional features such as in-built Spotify controls, Active Zone Minutes[39] and Fitbit Pay Support.

The wristband offers a full OLED screen that can be tapped for reminders, a clock and smartphone notifications.

It features a heart-rate monitor and the ability to track pace, distance, and elevation using the GPS on the device.

Released in January 2016[42] the Fitbit Blaze is a smartwatch made to compete with the Apple Watch, Pebble, and Android Wear.

Like the Surge, the Ionic uses built-in GPS, using GLONASS to tap into global satellites and provide better accuracy when recording exercises, with the antenna being integrated into the watch case for a stronger connection.

The Ionic also features SmartTrack, which auto-recognizes user activity and records it in the Fitbit app.

The most notable change from OS 1.0 is the addition of a new app called Fitbit Today, a dashboard displaying the user's health and fitness data.

On March 2, 2022, Fitbit announced a recall for the Ionic units due to a burn hazard risk.

In the United States, the Special Edition of the Versa is the only version of the watch to ship with Fitbit Pay.

The Lite Edition has a more limited feature set and comes in silver with a white or lilac band, marina blue, or mulberry.

Fitbit Charge 3 displaying time, heart rate, and steps
Fitbit Ultra activity tracker in teal clipped to pocket
A white Fitbit Zip, showing the distance in miles covered by the wearer
Fitbit Flex with accompanying wristband
Fitbit Charge HR
Fitbit Alta HR fitness tracker wristband showing heart rate monitor display
Fitbit Surge
Fitbit Blaze