Best Fitness Tracker of 2025
Looking for a fitness tracker that doesn’t suck?
I’ve spent way too many hours researching the top options so you don’t have to.
Let’s dive into the 5 best fitness trackers of 2025 – what they do well, where they fall short, and which one deserves your wrist (or finger) real estate.

Cubitt Jr. Smartwatch (Arctic Blue)
This little blue wonder packs a 1.75″ AMOLED screen and is basically indestructible with IP68 waterproofing (your kid can dunk it in water for 30 minutes and it’ll survive).
![Fitpolo Smart Watch for Women Android & iPhone, Alexa Built-in [1.8" HD Screen] IP68 Waterproof Fitness Watch with Bluetooth Call (Answer/Make), Heart Rate/Sleep/SpO2 Monitor, 105 Sports Trackers](https://lifecrosstraining.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/71lEB27d6wL._AC_SL1500_.jpg)
Fitpolo Smart Watch for Women
It tracks heart rate, blood oxygen, sleep, and has 105 sports modes – because apparently the difference between “power walking” and “regular walking” needed to be quantified.

RingConn Gen 2 Air Smart Ring (Dune Gold)
This ultra-thin smart ring is for people who want health data without broadcasting to the world that they’re tracking their vitals.

Cubitt Aura Pro Smartwatch
With 60+ sports modes, you can track everything from your neighborhood run to your quarterly attempt at tennis.
1. Cubitt Jr. Smartwatch (Arctic Blue)

This little blue wonder packs a 1.75″ AMOLED screen and is basically indestructible with IP68 waterproofing (your kid can dunk it in water for 30 minutes and it’ll survive).
It counts steps, tracks sleep, monitors heart rate, and has six sport modes for when your child suddenly decides they’re the next Olympic athlete for exactly 7 minutes.
The real gem? It has 8 brain games that might actually teach your kid something while they’re wearing it. Plus parental controls so they can’t order $500 worth of Robux.
Pros: Battery lasts 5-7 days (aka you won’t be charging it every night), actually waterproof (unlike your kid’s promises to be careful with it), and educational games that aren’t completely boring.
Cons: Only 8 default watch faces (100+ in the app, but who’s counting?), and doesn’t have all the fancy features that would be wasted on a 10-year-old anyway.
2. Fitpolo Smart Watch for Women

It tracks heart rate, blood oxygen, sleep, and has 105 sports modes – because apparently the difference between “power walking” and “regular walking” needed to be quantified.
With a 1.8″ HD screen and sleek design that actually fits women’s wrists (revolutionary, I know), the Fitpolo brings Alexa to your wrist along with the ability to take calls without touching your phone.
Pros: Alexa integration for when typing is too much work, Bluetooth calling for those “I’m on my way” conversations, and enough sport modes to cover activities you didn’t know existed.
Cons: The app might be as stable as your ex, and customization options are limited unless you enjoy the default aesthetic.
3. RingConn Gen 2 Air Smart Ring (Dune Gold)

This ultra-thin smart ring is for people who want health data without broadcasting to the world that they’re tracking their vitals.
The 10-day battery life means you’ll forget it needs charging until it’s dead, and it tracks fitness, sleep, heart rate, and stress using AI that’s allegedly smarter than most fitness influencers.
Pros: Doesn’t scream “I’m counting my steps!” like a watch does, comfortable enough to forget you’re wearing it, and tracks health metrics without needing to be charged every other day.
Cons: No screen means no instant gratification when checking stats, and good luck getting compliments on your tech since it looks like a regular ring.
4. Cubitt Aura Pro Smartwatch

With 60+ sports modes, you can track everything from your neighborhood run to your quarterly attempt at tennis.
The Aura Pro features a 1.43″ AMOLED screen in an aluminum case that can handle swimming (3ATM waterproof). It’s like the Swiss Army knife of fitness trackers with built-in GPS, compass, and heart rate/blood oxygen/sleep/stress monitoring.
Pros: 10-day battery life (because nobody likes a dead watch), built-in GPS (so you can leave your phone at home), and enough tracking features to make your doctor uncomfortable.
Cons: Watch face options are more limited than your dating pool at 35, and it occasionally refuses to play nice with third-party apps like MyFitnessPal. Also struggles in direct sunlight, just like your motivation.
