Test product. Informational only. Not for sale.

Fitbit Charge 6 Fitness Tracker with Google apps, Heart Rate on Exercise Equipment, 6-Months Premium Membership Included, GPS, Health Tools and More, Obsidian/Black, One Size (S & L Bands Included) – For Sale – Price

Original price was: $159.95.Current price is: $135.84.



Description

Give your routine a boost with Fitbit Charge 6 the only fitness tracker with Google built in. Charge 6 has your essentials—like YouTube Music, Google Maps and Google Wallet—plus the fitness tools you need to crush your goals. From staying motivated and tracking your daily progress to tuning in and taking care*, running your day and your routine has never been easier. *Google apps and services are not available in all countries or languages. Data rates may apply.
Turn little habits into healthier routines with Fitbit Charge 6 and Google Pixel Buds Pro 2; get advanced health and fitness insights from Fitbit and power through your workouts with the most comfortable, secure earbuds
Pixel Buds Pro 2 and Fitbit Charge 6 cannot be connected to each other, but both are compatible with iOS and Android devices
Pixel Buds Pro 2 are small, light, and made to stay put; use the twist-to-adjust stabilizer to lock your earbuds in during workouts, or adjust the other way for all-day comfort
Made to keep up with you, Pixel Buds Pro 2 have up to 30 hours of listening time with ANC[1]; wireless charging helps keep your battery full, almost anywhere and anytime, and they’re IPX4 water resistant[2]
The first Google Tensor chip in an earbud, the Tensor A1 chip powers twice the Active Noise Cancellation and delivers premium sound on Pixel Buds Pro 2[3]
Fitbit Charge 6 tracks key metrics from calories and Active Zone Minutes to Daily Readiness and sleep[4]; move more with 40+ exercise modes, built-in GPS, all-day activity tracking, 24/7 heart rate, automatic exercising tracking, and more
See your heart rate in real time when you link your Charge 6 to compatible exercise machines, like treadmills, ellipticals, and more[5]; and stay connected with YouTube Music controls[6]
Explore advanced health insights with Fitbit Charge 6; track your response to stress with a stress management score; learn about the quality of your sleep with a personalized nightly Sleep Score; and wake up more naturally with the Smart Wake alarm
Find your way seamlessly during runs or rides with turn-by-turn directions from Google Maps on Fitbit Charge 6[7,8]; and when you need a snack break on the go, just tap to pay with Google Wallet[8,9]
Please refer to the “Legal” section below for all applicable legal disclaimers denoted by the bracketed numbers in the preceding bullet points (e.g., [1], [2], etc



9 reviews for Fitbit Charge 6 Fitness Tracker with Google apps, Heart Rate on Exercise Equipment, 6-Months Premium Membership Included, GPS, Health Tools and More, Obsidian/Black, One Size (S & L Bands Included) – For Sale – Price

  1. Farrow Tech

    My 4th Fitbit! Still love ’em!
    I’ve used a Fitbit for tracking my exercise and health goals for almost a decade now. I’m continually impressed with the newer features and improvements. My prior Fitbit was a Charge 4 which worked great, but had an unfortunate design flaw that eventually led to it dying…its band prongs on both sides of the bezel were somewhat flimsy and broke after a few years of wear. Now, one can expect to get about two to three years out of a Fitbit, so I wasn’t heartbroken, but the new Charge 6 eliminates this issue by moving the band prongs to the band side! Now, if anything were ro break under stress, it would be the band, not the bezel. This is a much more feasible solution to a relatively basic problem. Otherwise, not much to report other than the Charge 6 works extremely well, looks terrific, and is very easy to set up. Zero complaints from me!

  2. Margaret F.

    Wonderful tracker and helps with chronic conditions.
    I have had a Fitbit for so long at this point that when mine starts acting up, replacement is automatic. It does sleep tracking, pulse/ox, and so much more than just steps (which is how I originally used it). Just checking my sleep stats helps me realize the cause when my energy is tanked while setting a step goal just slightly out of reach is a real motivator. I have it set to prompt me when I haven’t walked 250 steps in hours that I am active and also when I am approaching my goal to get the last few steps before midnight. I might not do anything about either prompt if I’m not able to, but when I am, I’ll go for a short walk or jog on my rebounder exercise trampoline for a minute or two.
    Basically, I find the Charge 6 as successful at motivating me and tracking key points for my health as my previous Charge 5 (and I like that the charger and wristbands I had for the 5 work perfectly with the 6). The battery life at least so far is much better than the 5, however, so I’m charging about once a week instead of every 3 days.
    The only downside for me is the data access and view. Since Google bought Fitbit, the exports of my data that I used to give my doctor are no longer available. The raw data is easy to get, but you have to parse it and organize it yourself. The other downside is your data is no longer accessible on the computer. I’m not much for using my phone for anything beyond calls, texts, and games. I much prefer looking at stats and charts on a bigger screen. If you have been a Fitbit user before, you may miss these features. If not, going in you should know that the results of your efforts will be viewable primarily on the phone. If that doesn’t bother you, then you’ll be all set.
    Oh, and one other feature that either didn’t work on my 5 or I turned it off without understanding it is the notifications. I like being able to quickly read a notification on my watch regardless of the game or conversation I’m in on my phone. You can read, clear, or open the notifications. Open switches your phone to the app that sent the notification. Downside is that if the notification itself doesn’t say who sent it (app name or contact name if a text, voicemail, or messenger), so you have to check the phone for that.

  3. Mr. Picky

    I really liked this tracker, but…
    I really liked this tracker, especially for the heart and sleep monitoring. However, I found the face is too small and the touch interface unresponsive. It’s a tradeoff: it’s small, light, and easy to wear, but it obviously makes the screen small. The double tap didn’t always work, which is important when interacting with it. There are only four gestures: tap, double tap, swipe left-right, or swipe up-down.
    The sensors work well except for the SO2, which I never understood because it would say, “No measurements in the last 24 hours,” but then display a graph and sometimes a reading. Also note that the heart rhythm monitoring is not passive. That means you need to periodically run an app that records and evaluates the ECG.
    Other than that, it was great at tracking my heart rate and resting pulse. The sleep analysis is astounding.

  4. Tiffaney

    Inaccurate. Misleading. AWFUL.
    A family member had recently raved about her FitBit and I had a very old Apple Watch which needed replacing (due to terrible battery life) so I was convinced to give it a try. Unfortunately, my experience has been quite awful and I want others to be informed before they buy.
    My main reasons for using a smart watch are the health functions such as exercise logging, step counting, heart rate etc. So if these things are important to you please read further:
    1st disappointment: Inability to sync FitBit to Fitness app on iPhone. I had a pretty impressive streak in my Fitness app and it was a huge motivator for me to exercise daily (something I have always struggled with). It was QUITE the blow to see all my progress completely wiped away. (No more 200+day streak for me! I guess).
    Fitbit does have a free app to collect new data but I’m still disappointed that they cannot combine all your progress from both somehow.
    2nd disappointment: SEVERE Inaccuracy on distance. I head to the gym for my first workout with the Fitbit. I get on the elliptical and select the “elliptical workout” option on the watch and press start. As I’m warming up I notice the watch does little vibrations as my heart rate increases to different levels “light” “moderate” and then “vigorous” – which I think is a nice touch. When I get 1 Mile (on the machine) into my run I decide to check my progress (on the watch) but to my HORROR it says only 0.3 miles… How did it miss 70% of my workout!?! I cannot express how devastated I was to see that. I’m working so hard to change my life and watching the miles stack up day after day is my only reward so far. I’ve done lots of googling to solve this problem and tried manually adjusting the stride length to every length there was but nothing fixes it and I’ve read plenty from other people who report the same exact problem so I’m convinced it’s just their terrible calibration.
    3rd disappointment: Major exaggeration of calories burned. As I mentioned I have an Apple Watch I used every day for quite some time. I am very familiar with my typical calories burned daily. I also follow the amount on my exercise equipment as well. For some reason the FitBit consistently shows an abnormally high number for calories burned. For instance something that should burn about 200 calories suddenly burns 2 THOUSAND…?? This all makes EVEN LESS sense when you consider the aforementioned distance tracking issue; claiming I burned 2,000 calories by running 0.3 miles??? Ridiculous.
    This combination of discouragement from the “it won’t matter anyway” distance tracking, to the absurd number of calories I’ve “already burned” today is a recipe for disaster for me. Un-motivating my workouts and encouraging my laziness.
    Please DO NOT rely on this watch for your health goals.
    The final straw for me is the terrible battery life. To be completely clear – I have had this device for 4 days and I have already charged it 4 times. So please do not be mislead by claims of charging “once a week” or “once every other week”. NOT true. And, yes, I’ve tried all the different display settings.
    I hope someone takes the time to read this like I did not do. If Amazon returns weren’t such a headache I would’ve sent it back after that first workout. I’m actually stunned at HOW awful it is. There are many more issues I did not get into because they are mainly aesthetic and I wanted to focus on the ones that could genuinely cause someone harm but I’d be glad to elaborate on those other issues as well if anyone is curious.

  5. Shawn Chambers

    This closer-to-60-than-50 obese guy with Type 2 diabetes gets a call from his doctor saying “I need to see you sooner than later”. My glucose levels are spiralling out of control. That triggered a need to get real data on what’s happening with my body, especially the perception that my sleep cycles are suffering. I NEEEDED DATA! This particular Fitbit product went above and beyond expectations in terms of bio-feedback, especially in terms of a detailed break-down my no-sleep, REM, light-sleep & deep sleep stages each and every night. The food intake recording system in the app is as good as the paid service that Weight Watchers offers with a HUGE library of both grocery store (barcode lookups) and restaurant-menu items. And I can record my glucose levels in the app too. This is a TOTAL SYSTEM that truly feeds a data-oriented mind with EVERYTHING they need. The Fitbit device itself is easy to use and has USEFUL tools inside of it: a get-up-and-move-around reminder, timer, exercise distance/time/burn tracking, an actual ECG recorder (VERY KOOL), alarm, and real-time steps, calorie burn, BLUETOOTH messages from your phone (texts, call indicator, reminders, etc) WELL WORTH THE INVESTMENT – huge ROI ** IF ** you learn to use it and max out its features to inspire healthier behaviors. It won’t lose weight for you. It won’t correct your blood sugars for you. BUT it won’t lie to you either – figures don’t lie but liars figure, right? It comes with a free PREMIUM membership for a year giving you all kinds of additional resources such as vast library of workout, medication and wellness resources. YOU WON’T BE DISAPPOINTED as long as you WORK IT!!! OH, and I’ve lost almost 10 pounds in 30 days WORKING IT – and I’ll share that it’s not because I exercised more. It’s because I had REAL and TRUE data that showed my calories IN was more than calories OUT. It’s my health dashboard now – just like in your car. I know when I’m going beyond the speed limit and I need to slow down or stop altogether.

  6. mercedes kirby

    Dejo de funciona, no carga,se compro otro cable de cargador y no sirvió

  7. Lakshmi

    Nice product, very light weight

  8. Jason Teh

    Unable to charge on the 1st day after purchasing. Sent back with RMA but still cannot charge after replacement. worst charging design ever on a smart watch. Buy with caution!

  9. Bharatdeep Maan

    I have used multiple fitness trackers in the past – I really liked Fitbit Charge 6.
    Pros:
    Lightweight
    Accurate Tracking
    Automatic Activity Detection
    Google Wallet
    Good battery life with fast enough charging
    Points to note:
    – Google Wallet doesn’t work with AMEX (but that is more of a limitation from AMEX, as they don’t allow wallet use for their cards on the smart watch)
    – Proprietary Charging Puck (but that is the case with all the fitness trackers today)

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Fitbit Charge 6 Fitness Tracker with Google apps, Heart Rate on Exercise Equipment, 6-Months Premium Membership Included, GPS, Health Tools and More, Obsidian/Black, One Size (S & L Bands Included) – For Sale – Price
Original price was: $159.95.Current price is: $135.84.