Amazfit’s collaboration with Hyrox, the latest CrossFit alternative, is prominently featured, highlighted by advertisements in the app and a top recommended workout on the tracker. I opted to pay for a subscription to Wild.AI ($6 per month), a platform that helps women tailor their workouts based on their menstrual cycles. While cycle tracking on the watch is complimentary, Amazfit does not integrate with Natural Cycles, a popular period-tracking app. Zepp Coach, which provides a daily suggested workout, is now also available for free, having previously been known as Zepp Fitness and priced at $30 annually.
A notable improvement from my last experience with an Amazfit watch is the transparency regarding its privacy policy. Previously obscured, the policy is now prominently displayed on the product page, along with mentions of data protection through Amazon Web Services and compliance with GDPR regulations.
The battery life is advertised as lasting up to 10 days; however, with all continuous health monitoring features active—the sleep breathing monitor, low blood oxygen alerts—I experienced closer to five days of use. Similar to Garmin devices, it greets you in the morning with a cheerful report, though Zepp’s version is often hilariously inaccurate. Additionally, the weather app within Zepp can be notably off, sometimes reporting temperatures as much as 20 degrees higher or lower than the actual conditions outside. It also displays Zepp’s PAI fitness metric, which aggregates heart rate, age, and gender but lacks real-world relevance, fading increasingly into the app as its utility declines.
Screenshots courtesy of Adrienne So