
If you want a focused fitness and sleep tracker with multi-day battery life and an affordable entry price, a Fitbit is usually the better fit. If you want a full-featured smartwatch that handles calls, apps, payments, and advanced safety features—and you already use an iPhone—the Apple Watch is the stronger choice. The catch worth knowing up front: the Apple Watch only works with iPhone, while Fitbit pairs with both iPhone and Android. Below we compare the two platforms using official manufacturer specifications, published expert reviews, and common user feedback so you can match a watch to how you actually live.
[[AFFDISCLOSURE]]- Apple Watch is iPhone-only; Fitbit works with both iPhone and Android
- Fitbit trackers and entry watches generally last days per charge, while most Apple Watch models need daily charging
- Apple Watch does more (apps, calls, payments, safety) at a higher price point
The short version: what each brand is built for
Fitbit, now owned by Google, built its reputation on approachable wellness tracking: steps, heart rate, sleep, and stress, presented in a friendly app with a clear daily activity and readiness picture. Its lineup spans simple bands (the Inspire and Charge series) up to full smartwatches (the Sense and Versa series).
Apple Watch is a wrist-worn extension of the iPhone. Beyond fitness, it runs a large app ecosystem, takes calls and texts, supports Apple Pay, and includes safety tools like fall detection and crash detection. It rewards people already invested in Apple’s ecosystem and willing to charge more often.
- Works with iPhone and Android
- Multi-day battery on most models
- Lower entry price, fitness-first
- Apple Watch: iPhone only, deep iOS integration
- Apple Watch: Large app store, calls and payments
- Apple Watch: Advanced safety and health sensors
Side-by-side comparison
The table below summarizes the practical differences buyers ask about most. Exact figures vary by specific model and generation, so treat these as general guidance and confirm current specs on each brand’s official page before purchasing.
| Feature | Fitbit (typical range) | Apple Watch (typical range) |
|---|---|---|
| Phone compatibility | iPhone and Android | iPhone only |
| Battery life | Several days to a week+ on bands and entry models | About a day on most models; longer on the Ultra line |
| Core strengths | Steps, sleep, heart rate, stress, readiness | Fitness plus apps, calls, payments, safety tools |
| Health sensors | Heart rate, SpO2, skin temperature, ECG on select models | Heart rate, SpO2 on select models, ECG, fall/crash detection |
| Apps and calls | Limited; notifications and basic apps | Extensive app store; calls and texts from the wrist |
| Cellular (LTE) option | Limited across the lineup | Available on most current models |
| Subscription | Fitbit Premium unlocks deeper insights (optional) | No subscription required for core features |
| Starting price | Lower; bands are budget-friendly | Higher across the lineup |
Health and fitness tracking
For everyday wellness—counting steps, monitoring resting heart rate, and reviewing sleep—both brands do a capable job, and many users find Fitbit’s sleep and stress summaries especially easy to interpret. Higher-end models from each brand add an ECG feature and blood oxygen readings, though it’s important to understand what these sensors can and can’t do.
An ECG on a smartwatch can flag signs of an irregular rhythm, but it is a wellness tool, not a diagnostic device; our explainer on what a smartwatch ECG actually measures covers the limits. The same goes for blood oxygen—see how accurate SpO2 readings are—and for the energy estimates both platforms display, which we unpack in how accurate smartwatch calorie counts are.
Battery life and charging
This is one of the clearest dividing lines. Fitbit’s bands and several of its watches are designed to run for multiple days—sometimes a week or more—between charges, which makes them well suited to continuous sleep tracking because you rarely have to take them off to top up. Most Apple Watch models, by contrast, are built around roughly a day of use, so overnight wear means fitting charging into your schedule (the Ultra line lasts longer). If multi-day endurance is a priority, see our broader look at which smartwatches last the longest.
Apps, smart features, and ecosystem
If you want your watch to act like a small phone, the Apple Watch is in a different category. It handles calls and messages, runs thousands of third-party apps, supports Apple Pay, and adds safety features such as fall and crash detection. With a cellular model you can leave your phone at home—though that requires a plan, which we explain in our guide to whether you need a data plan for a smartwatch. Fitbit keeps things simpler: you’ll get notifications and a handful of apps, but it is fundamentally a tracker first and a smartwatch second.
Price and value
Fitbit generally wins on upfront cost. Its bands are among the most affordable ways to get reliable activity and sleep tracking, and even its full watches tend to undercut the Apple Watch. Apple Watch pricing starts higher and climbs quickly with cellular and premium models. One nuance to weigh: Fitbit reserves some of its richest insights for the optional Fitbit Premium subscription, while the Apple Watch delivers its core features without an ongoing fee.
Who should buy which
Use this quick guide to decide.
- Buy a Fitbit if you use an Android phone, want multi-day battery life, care most about sleep and activity tracking, or want to spend less.
- Buy an Apple Watch if you own an iPhone and want a do-everything smartwatch with apps, calls, payments, and advanced safety tools—and you don’t mind charging daily.
- Either works well if your main goal is general fitness and heart-rate tracking; in that case, pick on price, battery, and whether you prefer simplicity or a full app ecosystem.
New to the Apple side? Our walkthrough on setting up an Apple Watch for the first time can help you get started.
Frequently asked questions
Does a Fitbit work with an iPhone?
Yes. Fitbit devices pair with both iPhone and Android through the Fitbit app. The Apple Watch is the one with a restriction—it only works with iPhone, not Android.
Is the Apple Watch more accurate than a Fitbit?
Neither brand is uniformly “more accurate.” Both use optical heart-rate sensors and accelerometers that perform well for general trends but have known limits, especially for derived metrics like calories and detailed sleep stages. For a closer look, see our piece on how accurately smartwatches track sleep stages.
Can either watch detect AFib?
Select models from both brands offer ECG and irregular-rhythm features that may flag signs of atrial fibrillation, but these are screening aids, not diagnoses. We cover this in detail in can a smartwatch detect AFib. Always confirm any alert with a healthcare professional.
Which has better battery life?
Fitbit, in general. Its bands and entry watches commonly last several days, while most Apple Watch models are designed for about a day of use. The Apple Watch Ultra extends that, but Fitbit remains the easier choice for uninterrupted multi-day and overnight wear.
Sources
- Apple Watch — official product page
- Fitbit — official trackers and watches
- American Heart Association — heart health topics
- U.S. FDA — medical devices
