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How to choose the best fitness tracker (UK, 2026)

A good tracker is the one you'll actually wear. Here's what matters and how to pay a fair price.

Independent guide · written by Savvey · reviewed June 2026

What actually matters

Typical UK price bands (2026)

BudgetWhat you get
£20–£60Basic bands: steps, heart-rate, sleep, notifications. Excellent value for getting started.
£80–£160The sweet spot: built-in GPS, better screens and richer health metrics.
£200+Crossover sports watches with advanced training, mapping and long battery.

Common mistakes to avoid

SAVVEY'S LIVE PICKS

See today's top fitness trackers — with live UK prices

Savvey Search reads the latest expert reviews and shows current, in-stock picks for your budget, each with a live verified UK price. 2026 round-ups lead with Fitbit, Garmin and Samsung/Xiaomi bands — but check what's current, whether it needs a subscription, and its price right now.

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Is it actually a good price?

The same model can swing a lot between UK retailers, and “sale” prices are often just the normal price with an inflated RRP beside it. Savvey checks 40+ UK retailers and shows the lowest verified price with the market average alongside, so you can see at a glance whether the price in front of you is a genuine deal or just the going rate.

Standing in a shop holding the box? Snap it with Savvey and we'll tell you in seconds whether the shelf price is a good one — or where it's cheaper.

FAQ

Do fitness trackers need a subscription?

Some do for their best insights. Always check before buying — it changes the true cost.

Tracker or smartwatch?

A tracker for cheap, lightweight, long-battery health monitoring; a smartwatch for apps, payments and notifications too.

How accurate are they?

Steps and heart-rate are good; calorie burn is a rough estimate on any device — use it for trends, not gospel.