
The various watch faces at Fitbit’s software app (left) and workout tracking. Thanks to having adapted Google's "Fast Pair" feature, the Luxe now pairs with Android devices in under 10 seconds. The Fitbit Luxe even fixes one of my biggest gripes with previous Fitbit software-that the pairing process was unreliable and often took over 10 minutes. It has the best-in-class sleep tracking-accurately detecting when I've fallen asleep and when I've woken up-and accurate heartrate tracking that report similar numbers as the Apple Watch's.
Fitbit's software is clean looking, intuitive and unintrusive.

This makes the text look cramped, and navigating the UI is slightly trickier because it’s all done via swipes and taps.ĭespite Google's recent announcements that future Fitbit and Samsung wearables will run the search giant's WearOS platform, the Fitbit Luxe here, announced before that Google event, is still running on Fitbit's own software. The Fitbit Luxe next to the Apple Watch Series 6 Ben Sinīut that dainty size has drawbacks-the OLED display, while vibrant and sharp, is tiny at just 0.76-inches.
