Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS

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Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS Price History

Price History for Recertified - Fitbit FB417BKBK Charge 4 Fitness and Activity Tracker with Built-in GPS, Heart...

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Current Price $97.42 July 10, 2024
Highest Price $97.42 July 10, 2024
Lowest Price $97.42 July 10, 2024
Since July 10, 2024

Last price changes

$97.42 July 10, 2024

Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS Description

In the ever-evolving world of fitness technology, the Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness and Activity Tracker stands out as a versatile and comprehensive tool for those looking to elevate their health and fitness game. Launched on March 31, 2020, this tracker boasts a plethora of features designed to monitor and enhance your daily activities, workouts, and overall well-being.

Built-in GPS for Outdoor Enthusiasts

One of the standout features of the Fitbit Charge 4 is its built-in GPS. This allows users to see their pace and distance directly on the screen during outdoor runs, rides, hikes, and more. Post-workout, you can view a detailed workout intensity map in the Fitbit app, which shows your heart rate changes along your route. This is an invaluable tool for those looking to analyze and improve their performance over time.

Active Zone Minutes and Heart Rate Monitoring

The Fitbit Charge 4 introduces Active Zone Minutes, a feature that alerts you with a buzz when you reach your target heart rate zones during exercise. This real-time feedback helps you make the most of your workouts and celebrates milestones when you earn extra minutes outside of exercise. Coupled with 24/7 heart rate monitoring, the device provides accurate tracking of your resting heart rate and better measures calorie burn.

Comprehensive Health Tracking

The device doesn’t stop at just fitness tracking. It offers a comprehensive suite of health monitoring tools, including:

  • SpO2 Monitoring: See your nightly average and range on your wrist and analyze trends over the past week in the Fitbit app. Note that this feature is not available in all markets and is not intended for medical use.
  • Skin Temperature Tracking: Monitor your skin temperature each night to see how it varies from your baseline. This feature is also not available in all markets and is meant for wellness purposes only.
  • Sleep Tracking: Track your sleep stages and review your Sleep Score in the app, offering an easy way to see how well you slept and identify areas for improvement.

Durability and Battery Life

The Fitbit Charge 4 is designed to keep up with your active lifestyle. It is swimproof and water-resistant up to 50 meters, making it ideal for tracking swims or wearing in the shower. With a multi-day battery life that lasts up to 7 days, and up to 5 hours when using built-in GPS, you can rely on the Charge 4 to stay powered throughout your busiest days.

Compatibility and Additional Features

The tracker syncs seamlessly with mobile devices via Bluetooth LE and requires an internet connection for full functionality. It is compatible with Mac OS X 12.2 and later, iPhone 5S and later, iPad 5th gen. and later, and Android 7.0 and later. Additionally, new users can enjoy a 90-day free trial of Fitbit Premium, which offers personalized guidance to help you stay active, sleep well, and manage stress.

Specifications

Here are some key specifications for the Fitbit Charge 4:

  • Product Dimensions: 9.72 x 1.13 x 0.49 inches
  • Weight: 3.53 ounces
  • Item Model Number: FB417BKBK
  • Batteries: 1 C batteries required (included)
  • Operating Temperature: -20° to 60° C

With its robust feature set and user-friendly design, the Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness and Activity Tracker is an excellent choice for anyone serious about tracking and improving their fitness and health.

Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS Specification

Specification: Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS

Product Dimensions

3.53 ounces, 9.72 x 1.13 x 0.49 inches

Item model number

FB417BKBK

Batteries

1 C batteries required. (included)

Date First Available

March 31, 2020

Manufacturer

Fitbit Inc

Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS Videos

Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS Reviews (9)

9 reviews for Fitbit Charge 4 Fitness Tracker with GPS

4.9 out of 5
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  1. Amy Miller

    I had had the Charge 2 for about 2 1/2 years; it was starting to act weird, and I had read that the life expectancy for those was 2 years, so I decided to upgrade.

    Overall, I’m happy with the Charge 4. I’ve had it about a month, if I remember correctly. It tracks steps and flights of stairs with about the same accuracy as the Charge 2 – which kind of disappoints me. I get steps for washing/drying my hands, brushing my teeth, labeling post cards with address labels at work, and sometimes even when I’m sleeping. However, when I’m carrying something while walking and can’t swing my arms, it does not count the steps. This is the 21st Century… maybe I’m off base, but I expect better technology.

    I have tracked many outdoor walks with it and I do Refit Dance Fitness every week. If you turn on the tracking either in the app or on the device itself, it seems to track very well. If you wait for it to auto-recognize that you’re exercising, you’re going to lose a good 10-15 minutes of your workout before it starts. (LAME!)

    The band is comfortable. Maybe it’s just mine, but it seems like the band does not fit to the device very snugly, like it wants to pull away from the tracker (I am using the original band that came with the device). I’m not sure if that effects the accuracy of the counting.

    It’s easy to use. You can customize the display pretty easily, lots of different options there.

    Battery life…depends on how you use it. If you use the watch’s GPS or have it use your phone’s GPS while tracking on the actual watch and not in the app, the battery drains FAST. I have always used the app to track exercises that would use GPS, so I get a week out of the battery. I do not use the Spotify feature, since I don’t have an account, and I do not get text/email/other app notifications sent to the watch (that’s not why I bought a fitness tracker), so I don’t know how those functions would effect battery life. I try to charge it when it gets down to 20-25% battery. It charges up to 99% in about an hour. I’ve left it on the charger for up to an hour and twenty minutes and have never gotten it past 99% charged.

    So it gets 4/5 stars – When you wrap your head around the fact that it’s not going to be completely accurate, but give you a general picture of your steps and calories burned throughout the day, it’s a good watch.

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  2. Dalia

    Cumple bien con las características princiaples que indica.
    Dura perfectamente 7 días su bateria, lo probe con el GPS, y duro 4’18”, aunque no lo llevaba al 100% de bateria (72%), muy util la información que daba del recorrido realizado.
    Tiene un buen tamaño, se ven perfectamente los números, los avisos son utiles y se sincroniza bien con el movil (IOS).
    ¿Podría tener una pantalla con colores?, pues sí, pero no han dado aún ese paso.
    Lo compre muy por debajo de su precio de referencia.
    Me piden que valore el “sabor”, aún no me ha dado por chupar el reloj, ja, ja.

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  3. Dalia

    La verdad es que me ha funcionado bastante bien, la correa es muy cómoda y literalmente hablando no me lo quito ni para dormir y la batería dura de 5 a 7 días, dependerá del uso que se le de en cada caso, pero yo en lo personal estoy muy contenta con mi smart band. Ya hasta le compré sus protectores de pantalla.
    Me avisa cuando ya estuve mucho tiempo sentada y me pide dar unos pasos para lograr mi objetivo.

    Simplemente genial

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  4. Peter Bonner

    Write a bad review and they promise you the moon! And then you don’t hear from them.
    Bought Jan 24, 2024, return policy stops Feb 24 and now the Fitbit has quit. I won’t have another although supplier promised money return and new priduct. No thanks!

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  5. sharri

    Quit working after 7 weeks. WEEKS.

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  6. K. Andrea

    I purchased this when my Charge 2 started having issues tracking my heart rate during cardio/peak exercise and no longer showed my stats “live” in the phone app (I had to track by looking at the watch each time or forcing a sync). I had a few issues getting the new one to work well with my heart rate too but once I figured it out it worked well. I’ll go into what worked and what didn’t at the end of my review, because without the heart-rate feature I would rate this a 2… but WITH it, I love the thing and give it a 5.

    Spotify: I have not used this feature and have no interest in it. I tend to watch streaming shows during my workouts because it’s 8,000 degrees outside most days in Texas and I would rather be inside with the AC.

    Swimming: I am very excited about this feature, but with the current COVID situation I haven’t gotten to test it out yet. I like the idea of being able to track my swims as well as my runs though and can hardly wait to try it out. That said, I HAVE worn it in the shower a few times because I forgot to take it off and it survived that with no issues.

    Comfort and Weight: This thing is significantly lighter than the Charge 2, and the band is easier to change out. It makes it more comfortable to wear while sleeping.

    Sleep Tracking: This is one of my favorite features, and I like the addition of the oxygen variation tracking. I was hoping that the oxygen tracking would be more than just sleep, but hey, it’s nice to know I don’t have sleep apnea. The feature basically tells you if you have “high” or “low” variations in your oxygen, and for the most part mine are low. The rest of the sleep feature tracks Awake time, REM time and Light vs Deep sleep. It provides an average trend for your sleep over time, plus a “benchmark” and a “sleep score” so you know how you did. It’s helped me be more mindful of my sleep and improve the quality.

    Heart rate: This tracks my heart rate well and tends to align closely with my treadmill’s tracker. I had trouble getting it to read me consistently at first at higher zones, but keeping the watch just below the wrist bone one notch tighter than I normally wear it + using the phone app to look at my heart rate rather than regularly checking the watch helped. That, and I use the watch’s exercise app to track the workout now rather than letting it auto-detect like I used to. No issues since.

    Cardio fitness score: I like knowing where I rank with average and seeing my numbers slowly improve as I get more fit. I wish that there was a feature I could turn on to track pregnancy, however, because your resting rate goes up significantly when pregnant and it lowers your score.

    Female health tracking: I used to use Fitbit for this. It works well if you keep up with it, but I have another app (Ovia) that I preferred to use once I was trying to conceive.

    Active Zone Minutes: This feature annoyed me at first. You get twice the minutes for being in Cardio or Peak, and I didn’t care to know how many “extra” minutes I got, I wanted to watch my “actual” minutes of workout. Well, at the end the app tells you how many “actual” minutes you get for the workout anyway and as long as you somewhat pay attention to the time (or use your treadmill to track it) you’ll know while you’re working out too. I get why this is a feature – being in cardio or peak is better than being in fat-burn for calories and workout quality so it encourages you to beef up the exercise, but I was being cranky and resistant to change.

    GPS: If you do go out and run, GPS eats your battery for lunch. But it’s cool to see where you’ve been

    Battery: When not using GPS, it’s awesome. SO much better than my previous fitbit.

    Texting and Calendar: I like having the texts in a block instead of scrolling by like on the Charge 2, and the Calendar is always nice. Sometimes you’re not with your phone and a tap from your watch to remind you you’ve got a meeting or an appointment is really handy.

    Hourly reminders to move: I used this less when I was in the office every day but now that I am pretty much perma-telework it’s great. Even if I’m in a meeting I can get up and move and I feel accomplished when I get 9/9!

    Customizable clock face: Being resistant to change, I liked that I could put the “classic” watch face on my new Charge 4. I appreciate being able to see my step count, heart rate, date and time all at the same time and none of the “new” ones did that for me. The closest one had a sort of circle thing that tracks how close you are to your step count goal but that’s not a feature I care as much about so I went back to my old ways.

    Automatic exercise recognition: I used to use this all the time, but when the Charge 4 was also losing my heart rate, I started using the exercise tracking apps and that seems to help. While it does auto-recognize my exercise that only works if it can read my heart rate properly.

    Fitbit losing my heart rate:
    So, when I do my treadmill runs I like to be able to have the app open and watch my count and heart rate there rather than having to look at the watch over and over. When my Charge 2 stopped doing that, I got into the habit of checking my wrist regularly only to find that my heart rate had stopped tracking and I wound up spending most of the workout adjusting the watch to get it to read. It was disappointing to do the full workout and not get “credit” for that work. Yeah, I know, I exercised anyway but I like seeing the trend and the data.

    So, I bought the new Charge 4 to fix that issue, only to find that it had issues tracking my heart rate as well. After much finagling, I figured out that my new habit of constantly checking my watch was the issue. To resolve that problem, I eventually found that if I used the “exercise” watch app and set it to “treadmill” plus use the Fitbit phone app to watch my heart rate rather than the watch, I have 0 issues getting it to continue tracking my heart rate. I also tighten the band one notch each time and leave it snug just below my wrist bones so it doesn’t move so much, even when I sweat.

    Here’s the stuff I tried that didn’t work, just to save you some time:
    1) Turning the watch upside down
    2) Moving the watch higher on my arm and tightening it. My watch tended to slip around more the further it was from my wrist
    3) Moving the watch lower on my arm and tightening it. My wrist bends made it lose my heart rate less frequently here, but it still lost it

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  7. ArrowHead

    I bought this as a replacement for my old Charge 2 which was pretty beaten up after 4 years of use. Some of the upgrades are more modest than others. Personally I like how the screen resolution is higher than their previous offerings and they’ve added a shade or two of gray. It’s very easy on the eyes.

    As for the fitness tracking features, I haven’t put them through any hard tests but they seem to be as accurate as ever.

    The Charge 4 works just fine with the app on my phone even though my old Charge 2 is also still paired. In fact I can wear my old Charge 2 at work and then wear my Charge 4 the rest of the time, and everything synch up and works just fine. So big points to Fitbit when it comes to connectivity!

    One word of warning: You may see a weird graphical aberration in the upper left corner of the display from time to time. That’s not a fault. It turns out that that’s just a strange little “low battery” indicator.

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  8. Manuel

    Aggiorno la recensione dopo che Fitbit ha finalmente rilasciato l’aggiornamento con la funzione Smart Wake (sveglia nel momento di sonno leggero), quindi posso dare tranquillamente 5 stelle.
    Evoluzione della linea Charge che guadagna il GPS e diverse funzionalità software, non starò a fare una recensione delle caratteristiche perché ne trovate a milioni online. Vi dirò quello che va e che non va.
    E’ un Fitbit, quindi è caro, ma il design è molto curato e non sfigura quando dovete uscire la sera.
    Rispetto a Charge 2 e 3: la cassa è in plastica, probabilmente necessario per la ricezione GPS. Purtroppo questo significa che la sensazione è di prodotto un po’ meno premium, dall’altra parte se ne apprezza la maggiore leggerezza, al polso è estremamente comodo.
    E’ in definitiva un prodotto ben fatto e curato sotto tutti gli aspetti. Vari miglioramenti rispetto ai predecessori sia hardware che software. Con il Pixel, nessun problema di accoppiamento o disconnessioni. Funziona perfettamente, le nuove caratteristiche rispetto alle serie precedenti lo portano quasi alla perfezione per quanto riguarda le feature di una smart band “generalista”, quindi non dedicata all’allenamento sportivo agonistico, ma a un po’ di fitness, ricezione notifiche ecc, per chi non vuole le dimensioni di uno smartwatch. Durata della batteria di qualche giorno, rispetta le aspettative per il tipo di prodotto.
    Lo consiglio a chi vuole un tracker che funzioni bene e che sia anche un accessorio bello da indossare. Si accoppia bene con un orologio tradizionale (orologio a sinistra e tracker a destra).

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  9. Tommy

    Bisher hatte ich die Fitbit Alta HR, da ich so globige Smartwatches und Fitnesstracker nicht mag.
    Ich mag es schlicht und unauffällig.
    Ich bin der Typ „wenn ich meine Fitbit nicht anhabe, weil sie lädt, fühle ich mich nackig!“.

    Die Fitbit Charge 4 ist nicht so groß wie die anderen üblichen Tracker und recht schlank.
    Der Tracker und das Armband sehen in schwarz sehr hochwertig aus und das Silikonarmband lässt sich angenehm tragen. Gelegentlich schwitzt man mal darunter, das finde ich jedoch nicht schlimm.

    Da ich bereits ein Fitbitkonto habe, war die Charge 4 schnell in meinem Konto hinzugefügt.

    Wieso habe ich mir die Charge 4 gekauft?!
    Meine Kaufanreize waren hauptsächlich das im Gerät verbaute GPS und Fitbit Pay.
    Das GPS ist eine super Sache, wenn man mal sein Handy nicht dabei hat.
    Fitbit Pay konnte ich leider nicht nutzen, da meine Kreditkartenbank nicht gelistet ist. Wenn meine Bank aufgenommen wird, werde ich sofort meine Karte hinterlegen und diesen Service nutzen.
    Der Gedanke mit seiner Fitbit zum zahlen zu nutzen ist einfach genial!
    Ich denke da an den Urlaub, wenn ich am Strand meine Runden drehe, kein Geldbeutel dabei habe und dann hinterher mein Fischbrötchen beim Imbiss mit meiner Fitbit bezahle. Toll!

    Ich habe mir damals eine Fitbit gekauft, um meinen Puls zu überwachen. Der Pulssensor ist sehr genau.
    Da ich Herzrhythmusstörungen habe, kann ich jederzeit den Wert meines Pulses sehen und auch in der App einsehen und ggf. mit dem Arzt besprechen.
    Achtung, das ersetzt natürlich kein EKG beim Arzt! Für mich ist es jedoch eine enorme Hilfe.

    Was für mich neu ist, ist die „Voraussichtliche Sauerstoffabweichung“, die ich in der App einsehen kann.
    Hier wird die Sauerstoffsättigung vom Blut geschätzt. Ich weiß, dass ich ab und zu schnarche (wache sogar davon auf 🙂 ) und das sehe ich dann auch als Abweichung in der App.
    Ansonsten schaue ich mir auch die Schlafphasen an, wie gut oder schlecht ich geschlafen habe. Im Großen und Ganzen stimmt das überein. Manchmal, wenn ich TV schaue, bin ich so ruhig, dass mein Fitbit denkt ich schlafe. 🙂 Finde ich jetzt aber nicht schlimm! Ein Grund mehr, mich zu bewegen. Haha.

    Mit der Charge 4 gibt es auch eine Relax-Funktion. Hier kann ich eine 2 oder 5 Minuten geführte Atemübung machen. Wenn es stressig um mich ist, brauche ich das ab und zu. Bisher hatte ich das nämlich noch nie gemacht… Einfach ruhig da sitzen und atmen. 🙂 Das finde ich super.

    Was mich ein kleines bisschen stört, ist, dass ich beim Zifferblatt zwar aus vielen Designs wählen kann, aber ich kann das Schnellmenü bzw. Display nicht mehr anpassen.
    Bei meiner Alta HR konnte ich entscheiden welche Werte angezeigt werden und vor allem in welcher Reihenfolge. Z.B. ich drehe meinen Arm, da sehe ich die Uhrzeit, das Datum und den Puls.
    Manchmal hüpft der aber Wert unbemerkt weiter und ich sehe dann nicht mehr den Puls wenn ich meinen Arm drehe, sondern die Schritte. Will ich wieder den Puls sehen, muss ich so lange weiter tippen, bis er wieder da ist. Da sind viele Sachen, die mich beim Schnelldurchlauf nicht interessieren. Wie z.B. Treppen oder aktive Minuten. Die kann ich im Menü oder in der App mir anzeigen lassen. Aber im Schnellmenü mag ich eigentlich nur 3 Werte: Puls, Schritte und Km. Und das kann ich leider nicht so einstellen wie ich es mag.

    Positiv:
    – Schlankes Design
    – Angenehmes Armband
    – Genauer Puls
    – Verbautes GPS
    – Fitbit Pay (wenn die eigene Bank gelistet ist!)
    – Gutes Touchdisplay
    – Relax (Atemübung)

    Negativ:
    – Kann das (Ziffernblatt-)Display nicht anpassen

    Fazit:
    Die Fitbit Charge 4 ist ein sehr guter Tracker.
    Es gibt so viele Möglichkeiten die eigene Fitness und Gesundheit zu verbessern und die Charge 4 ist ein guter Begleiter!
    Ich möchte sie nicht mehr missen und kann sie uneingeschränkt weiterempfehlen.

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