







🚀 Elevate your fitness game with Fitbit Charge 4 — where data meets determination!
The Fitbit Charge 4 is a sleek, swimproof fitness tracker featuring built-in GPS, continuous heart rate monitoring, and advanced sleep tracking. Designed for professionals who demand precision and convenience, it offers up to 7 days of battery life, Active Zone Minutes for optimized workouts, and smartphone compatibility via Bluetooth. Includes both small and large bands for a perfect fit.
| ASIN | B08GYSZJBV |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. |
| Batteries Included | No |
| Batteries Required | Yes |
| Battery Average Life | 7 Days |
| Battery Description | lithium-ion |
| Battery cell composition | Lithium Ion |
| Best Sellers Rank | #155,349 in Sports, Fitness & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports, Fitness & Outdoors ) #764 in Activity Trackers |
| Brand | Fitbit |
| Charging Time | 2 Hours |
| Compatible Devices | Smartphone |
| Connector Type | Bluetooth, GPS, NFC |
| Country of Origin | China |
| Customer Reviews | 3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars (1,403) |
| Date First Available | 1 May 2020 |
| Device interface - primary | Touchscreen |
| Display Technology | LED |
| Display Type | Digital |
| Does it contain liquid? | No |
| Generic Name | fitness tracker |
| Includes Rechargeable Battery | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 42 x 103 x 225 Millimeters |
| Item Weight | 30 g |
| Item model number | FB417BKBK |
| Manufacturer | Fitbit |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 6400 MB |
| Model | FB417BKBK |
| Model Name | Charge 4 |
| Mounting Hardware | Fitbit Charge 4, Classic wristbands (both small & large), Charging cable |
| Number of Ports | 4 |
| Number of items | 1 |
| Operating System | android 7, mac os |
| Product Dimensions | 4.2 x 10.3 x 22.5 cm; 30 g |
| Resolution | 240 x 280 |
| Special Features | GPS |
| Standing screen display size | 1.5 Inches |
| Wattage | 180 Watts |
| Wireless Type | Bluetooth |
P**R
SMART WATCH
NOT WORTH BUYING . VERY DISAPPOINTING THE STRAP BREAKS THEN THE STRAP HINGES BREAK SO THE STRAP CANNOT BE FIXED. IF YOU CAM FIX THE STRAP THE DISPLAY GOES AND THEN THE BATTERY DOES NOT CHARGE , ITS GREAT FOR ABOUT A YEAR.
R**E
The strap is of low quality
The watch works fine but the buckle n strap already tore off within a short span.. quality is very bad.
A**E
Super Tracker, trage ich jeden Tag. Akku hält lange, bequem am Handgelenk. Preis Leistung unschlagbar
K**L
Fitbit provides poor quality bands. Mine broke after just 3 months! Searching online, many experience this issue. But what does Fitbit do to fix - zip nothing!
R**I
Amazing watch! Fits great!
S**T
I had a charge HR fitbit from 2016 until 2022, which worked perfectly. After a few years the band (not replaceable) came off, and I re-glued it, device still worked perfectly. In 2022 I decided to upgrade to the Charge 4 due to SpO2, sleep stage, etc. monitoring. The Charge 4 has worked perfectly since then. My only complaint is the band, which is stiff and not too comfortable (I wear it 24/7/365). That was solved by use of a fabric velcro wrap band (AVOD, reviewed elsewhere). Since I got that band I absolutely love the Charge 4. I bought more as backups, but they haven't been needed. Gave one to my wife, who likewise likes it. There are some caveats about accuracy, which I'll discuss in a minute, but I find them not to be an issue as long as you're aware of them. My issue is Google, which bought Fitbit. Before that, everything worked like clockwork. Give username, password, log into Fitbit, use app, stay logged in for months, easy-peasy. But for a couple of months Google is telling me that as of 2/2/2026 I can no longer use the app unless I switch the account to Google. No more email login. OK, pain in the butt, but OK. EXCEPT: The link Google gives DOES NOT WORK. It tells me my email is "already in use for a different device" so I can't move it. [the Charge, maybe? Who knows. They give zero details, and zero ways to remediate.] They also won't let me move it to a new email. Zero stars for the Google experience is too generous. My "backup plan" is to use one of the brand new Charge 4s and try to set it up on Google when they shut off "my" three year old one. Based on the experience so far, I give that about a 5% chance of working, but if it does, I'll try to update the review. [Or if a miracle happens and I can get the current one switched to Google.] So: Charge 4, top notch except limitations below. Google: For such an advanced outfit with so many brilliant people and such great AI and search, their customer interface on this SUCKS. Accuracy limitations/caveats on Charge 4. Basically, I have found it to be extremely accurate, but there are limitations. When you first stand up and walk, it misses the first few steps...several more than the Charge missed. Not really an issue. I might miss 50 steps a day that way. If your only "walking" is moving from a couch to an electric wheelchair, you might lose a good fraction of your few steps. If you take walks, it is with 1% of GPS distance. And the step count is extremely accurate. If I manually count steps walking around the house, it's within 1 or 2% of the manual count. A+ on that. [Likewise, if I run on a treadmill, it agrees with the treadmill within 1-2%] It does NOT, in general, for me, respond to wrist motions as "steps" although you can learn to move your wrist in such a way as to make it sometimes count a "step". I find that a non-issue. If I get a dozen fake steps a day from wrist motion, it balances the steps I miss when first standing up/walking. A+ overall on distance, steps. Pu;se rate: There is an issue with pulse rate. The issue is that when it changes dramatically (say from walking to running) the pulse registered is inaccurate. If I go from walking around the house to running up and down stairs, for example, the Charge 4 will tend to read about 20 beats/min high. It will record random spikes of 50 beats too high, so the "max" pulse during exercise needs to be taken with a grain of salt (pulse rate based on comparison to pulse oximeter or ECG heart rate monitor). But, if I sit in a chair, or walk at a steady pace, the fitbit, pulse oximeter, and the ECG all agree (again, 1-2%). I sleep with a pulse oximeter every night, the Charge 4 is within one or two beats of the pulse/ox every night. It averages a fraction of a beat different. A+ for accuracy on pulse WHEN you are in a steady state condition, particularly resting. So: Don't trust the instantaneous pulse readout IF you have just changed level of exertion. Don't trust the spikes. Otherwise, pretty good. Calories: Fitbit Calories are based on pulse rate, so the errors in pulse rate tend to overstate calories burned. I keep a record of calories based on distance walked, run, basal metabolism, etc. and the Charge 4 tends to overstate daily calorie burn by 20% or so, for me. You could determine how much it is for you, and if you like, adjust the number. For a given exercise session, the numbers are roughly credible say 10-15% of independent measurement, sometimes right on the independent measurement. That's all close enough for me. YMMV. Sleep: I had a professional sleep study under medical supervision. I wore my pulse/ox and the Charge 4 at the same time. As mentioned, the Charge 4 agrees with my pulse ox for pulse rate overnight, and is pretty close (tends to be 1-2% low) on SpO2. My pulse/ox (Sleepu) and Charge 4 likewise agreed with average pulse and SpO2 from the professional study (2% ish difference). Remarkably, I thought, the SLEEP STAGE durations reported by the Charge 4 were close (to my mind) to the professional device, which has far more input data. The Charge 4 underestimated Deep Sleep by 25% or so, but showed each stage at the time the professional unit showed it. I considered that to be pretty amazing. Overall: Fabulous for a cheap device with such limited input. Will be sorry to lose it to Google's messing about.
N**B
I work in a hospital and have access to a ton of devices that accurately measure heart rate, in addition to simply counting my HR with a stopwatch. Upon comparison Charge4 is off by 15 to 20% about most of the time and has inexpiable spikes that claim my HR is 200% or more higher than it actually is that last minutes at a time. The pedometer picks up normal hand movements as steps. After spending 6 hours on the couch and only getting up 3 times it claims I have gone up 9 flights of stairs and walked over 7000 steps equaling over 3 miles. Even rotating your wrist to get the display to turn on can sometime count up multiple steps. The health metrics in the app are largely based upon heart rate and steps taken. When both of these are wildly inaccurate it cannot give you a clear picture of even the number of calories you have burned in a day much less anything more in depth. The sleep metrics are a cute idea but largely anecdotal and not really useful as the advice they foster from the app are the exact same suggestions you would tell every single person in the world regardless of their specifics as to what will give them the best sleep. Keep a regular bedtime, don't work out right before bedtime, etc... The never-on-when-you-need-it display that is invisible in sunlight is not a big selling point either. And the cherry on top? Tech support's only suggestion was to try restarting the watch followed by absolute silence and zero help or suggestions. This thing fails spectacularly.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago