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Google Fit: Activity Tracking

4.0
CategoryHealth & Fitness
Download100M+
PriceFree
RatedEveryone
RequiresAndroid 9.0+
DeveloperGoogle LLC

Screenshots

Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot
Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot
Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot
Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot
Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot
Google Fit: Activity Tracking screenshot

About this app

Google Fit is an app in managed decline, and anyone installing it today should know that first. Google has said its long-term fitness home is the Fitbit app, the developer APIs behind Fit have been deprecated in favour of Android's Health Connect, and new feature work has visibly slowed. The app still functions, still syncs steps from your phone and compatible watches, and still costs nothing.

What it does, it does simply. Fit counts steps and estimates Heart Points, a metric developed with the World Health Organization and the American Heart Association that rewards activity intense enough to raise your pulse rather than raw step totals. There are no subscriptions, no ads inside the app, and no locked screens. For a casual user who wants a free pedometer with sensible goals, it remains serviceable — just not something to build years of fitness history on.

Passive step counting

Install it, grant activity permission, and your phone's sensors do the rest. No wearable is required, and the home screen's two rings — steps and Heart Points — give a readable daily summary without any manual logging.

A hub for other fitness apps

Fit historically served as the place where running, cycling, and gym apps deposited their workouts. That role is passing to Health Connect, but many established apps still write to Fit, so existing setups keep working for now.

Gentle goals for inactive users

The Heart Points model was designed around public-health activity guidelines, so hitting the default weekly target roughly corresponds to recommended exercise minimums. For someone starting from sedentary, that framing is more encouraging than a 10,000-step cliff.

Heart Points

Rather than counting steps alone, Fit awards points for minutes of moderate activity and doubles them for vigorous effort. It is the app's best idea: a brisk ten-minute walk registers as progress even on a low-step day.

Phone-only tracking

Steps, distance, and rough calorie estimates come from the phone's own sensors, so the app is useful with no hardware purchase. Accuracy is adequate for trends, less so for precise distances.

Workout logging and journal

You can start tracked sessions for dozens of activity types or add past workouts manually. The journal view lines up workouts, sleep (from connected apps), and daily metrics in one scrollable history.

Wear OS integration

On compatible watches, Fit provides on-wrist goal rings and workout tracking that sync back to the phone. Newer Google watches, however, centre the Fitbit app instead, which tells you where investment is going.

Privacy & Data Safety

Fit ties your activity history to your Google account, alongside everything else Google knows about you. The company states fitness data is not used for ads, and there is no third-party ad layer inside the app, but the consolidation itself is the consideration: location-tagged workouts and daily movement patterns live with the same provider as your email and search history.

  • All data syncs to your Google account by default; you can review and delete activity history from the app or via Google account controls, and deleting the account data removes it from Fit.
  • Workout routes recorded with GPS are location traces — worth remembering if you start runs from home and share screenshots.
  • Third-party apps you connect can read and write Fit data; audit connected apps in settings occasionally and revoke ones you no longer use.
  • With the Fit APIs deprecated, migration paths matter: Health Connect stores its data on-device, a different model from Fit's cloud sync, so understand which system a new app is actually using.

Advantages

  • Completely free with no ads or subscription tier
  • Heart Points is a genuinely well-designed activity metric
  • Works with just a phone — no wearable required
  • Clean, uncluttered interface that is easy for non-technical users

Updates

Update cadence has slowed noticeably compared with the app's earlier years, which fits its transitional status. Releases now lean toward maintenance, compatibility, and bug fixes rather than new capability, while Google's fitness feature development shows up in the Fitbit app and in Health Connect at the platform level instead.

  • Maintenance and stability releases rather than headline features
  • Adjustments around Health Connect as it replaces the deprecated Fit APIs
  • Compatibility work for newer Android versions and Wear OS devices

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

Google Fit still earns a recommendation for exactly one audience: people who want a free, simple step and activity tracker today and do not care about years of continuity. The app works, the Heart Points model is smart, and nothing is paywalled. But Google's own signals point at the Fitbit app and Health Connect as the successors, so anyone invested in their data should periodically export it and keep an eye on migration announcements rather than assume Fit will exist indefinitely.

What works

  • Completely free with no ads or subscription tier
  • Heart Points is a genuinely well-designed activity metric
  • Works with just a phone — no wearable required
  • Clean, uncluttered interface that is easy for non-technical users

What to know

  • Google is winding it down in favour of the Fitbit app, so its future is limited
  • Developer APIs are deprecated, and third-party integrations are gradually moving away
  • Analysis is shallow: no sleep staging, recovery, or training-load insight of its own
  • Long-term fitness history may need manual export before any eventual shutdown

FAQ

Is Google Fit being shut down?

Not fully, as of this writing — the Android app continues to work — but Google has deprecated the Google Fit developer APIs and directed the ecosystem toward Health Connect and the Fitbit app. Treat it as an app in wind-down: fine to use now, unwise to depend on for long-term records without exports.

What are Heart Points?

Heart Points measure activity intensity. You earn one point per minute of moderate activity, such as brisk walking, and two per minute of vigorous activity. The metric was developed with the World Health Organization and the American Heart Association so that weekly targets align with public-health exercise guidance.

Do I need a smartwatch to use Google Fit?

No. The phone's built-in sensors handle step counting, distance estimates, and activity detection on their own. A Wear OS watch adds heart-rate data and on-wrist tracking, but the core experience — daily rings, goals, and workout logging — works fine phone-only.

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