STAY ON TRACK - Effortlessly monitor workouts and daily activity.
SILENT WAKE UP - Rise and shine with a gentle alarm that won't disturb others.
STAY CONNECTED - Receive call notifications right on your wrist.
SYNC WITH EASE - Automatically sync stats to your devices for seamless tracking.
SLEEP LIKE A PRO - Automatically track your sleep patterns for optimal rest.
The Fitbit Charge HR Wireless Activity Wristband is a versatile fitness tracker that monitors your heart rate, tracks workouts, and provides insights into your sleep patterns. With a sleek design and wireless syncing capabilities, it keeps you connected while helping you achieve your fitness goals.
¿Tienes una pregunta? Mira lo que otros preguntaron
what's difference between new orange color and old black one?
Has anyone compared it to a chest strap heart rate monitor to check for accuracy? That is primarily what I want this for.
I'm a female with a wrist measuring 6.5 inches. The small goes up to 6.7. Large starts at 6.3. Any suggestions on which would be better?
Has anyone compared the accuracy of the heart rate monitor to the Polar heart rate monitors?
Reseñas
3.9
Todo de compras verificadas
K**R
I ordered the Fitbit Charge HR only after I gave up on Jawbone fulfilling my preorder for the Up3 and once I realized the Fitbit
Full disclosure, I ordered the Fitbit Charge HR only after I gave up on Jawbone fulfilling my preorder for the Up3 and once I realized the Fitbit Surge was like having a VCR strapped to your wrist. Further complicating my decision was the reviews that were all over the place on Amazon. Either people loved it or they thought it was the biggest piece of crap ever. I am writing this review to try and offer a realistic perspective for those looking to buy the Fitbit Charge HR.First, disregard the reviews from all the "personal trainers" and "hardcore" gym goers out there. It's amazing how everyone becomes a trainer or gym rat when reviewing a piece of workout equipment. Wrist based heart rate monitoring is still in its infancy and if, and I stress if, you are so hardcore that a possible 5-10 beat variation is so critical then you need to stay with chest based HR monitoring for awhile. The Charge HR isn't for that. Not to mention, I haven't seen that it is off like others have said. I was skeptical and I have a Garmin Running GPS watch with a chest HR strap and I see the two being pretty consistent.Second, I cannot stress enough the quality of the Fitbit app and web based dashboard. They are motivational and intuitive and they give you goals to shoot for. I have yet to see any sync issues or any of the other nonsense I have seen in other reviews.Finally, $150 is a lot of money but it less than other comparable products out there. To me this is the perfect entry level device. If you like the concept and are disciplined, then you can upgrade to another device. if you are trying to get a snapshot of what you are doing on a daily basis and how you can make some life and fitness improvements, this device is a perfect way in. If you are a "personal trainer" or just "crushing it" beyond what the Charge can handle, you should probably do another set of burpees, stick with chest strap HR monitors and save your "insightful" reviews for Flex magazine.Bottom line; the Charge HR is well worth the money. No product is perfect but this one does perform as promised. Amazon has the best customer relations of any company out there so if you don't like it you can send it back anyway. I hope this review helps. I know when I was looking, these reviews can be ridiculous, contradict and misleading. Give it a shot! You won't be sorry!
C**)
The Fitbit Charge HR is My Favorite Activity Tracker, My Daily Companion
Being the shopper I am, I actually ended up buying all three of Fitbit's upper activity trackers: The Surge, The Charge HR and The Charge. They all have their very similar features, though each brings a niche to the market depending on your fitness needs. Ultimately it was this one, the Charge HR that I ended up keeping as my daily wear tracker. I will still use the Surge for certain types of exercising (biking and walking, especially when I want to use the GPS features). The Charge HR ticks off most boxes for me, though, and it is the one I would most recommend.If you happened to have read my review on the Charge, some of this will sound familiar. There are only two fundamental differences between the Charge and the Charge HR. One, of course, is the heart rate tracking feature. The other, is the wristband that is used. I have passed the Charge on to my adult son, who is young, healthy and fit and could honestly care less what his heart rate runs. I've warned him to keep an eye on the clasp.The good:~ It's lightweight and feels safe on my wrist. I have never had it fall off or come close to losing it.~ It tracks steps, miles, stairs, calories burned, sleep and heart rate. The last, using a relatively new technology counting beats through your wrist. I periodically check the heart rate reading against my own and it has always been within a few beats. Obviously it's not meant to be a medical device and I would not expect medical accuracy.~ It has a very easy interface with multiple devices. I've used it with a Droid, an Apple iPad and a laptop with the wireless dongle.~ The dashboard is user friendly and easy to access on any of your linked devices. It helps you set goals and cheers you in via push notifications as you near your daily goals. It also sends you periodic emails when you hit a milestone, such as walking 500 miles (which I recently hit). It also averages your resting heart rate for the day and keeps track of how and when that changes. You can go back through ALL of your data at any time. which I find interesting and helpful.~ It is quite motivational to track your activity, as the more you do it, the more you want to. It's a great way encourage additional movement into your day. Not that I have this issue, but you can apparently set it to alarm if you haven't moved in a certain amount of time, too. I can see this being helpful if you work a more sedentary job. For me, if I am not moving, I am probably sleeping.~ It charges quickly and only needs charging every 5-7 days. The Surge, on the other hand, needs to be charged frequently, even when I am not using it often.~ You can get notifications from your smart phone straight to your wrist... this is good and bad. The phone needs to be a pretty close proximity to the band for this to work at all (and even then it is hit or miss for me). If your phone is near enough to send the text or call notification to your watch via Bluetooth, it's really easier to just look at your phone.The not so good:~ The Bluetooth connections can be spotty at times. This means not all your notifications will come through AND it doesn't always sync "all day" even when set that way. There are times I have to force a sync and wait for it to upload, as it's been hours since it did so itself.~ That little, itty bitty dongle! I had more issues with interfacing with my laptop than any other device. The dongle had to be periodically re-synced with each device and it seemed to sometimes get confused with more than one device on the account. Also, it's smaller than a nickel and can be easily lost in houses like mine. I no longer sync to my laptop at all and frankly don't know where one of the dongles are right now, either.~ There were some "growing pains" with the software. The first month I had the device, there were several times where the online site would go down completely and I was not able to access the dashboard. I also had an issue one time where the device just would not sync and I had to reset it. For now, it seems that these bugs have been mostly worked out, at least for the Charge HR. The Surge still gives me an occasional bump. Both devices have recently updated software (it will prompt you to do so when you sync if one is available) and so far, so good.~ The "stairs" counter uses an altimeter when counting stairs. This can be a good and bad thing. Of course, if you are hiking in the mountains (which I have done), you want all the credit for that hike on the way up. Unfortunately, I've also had it read "stairs" when I am riding in the car and go up in elevation AND I've walked up and down stairs in my own 3 story (w. the basement) house and NOT received full credit for all the stairs. If you live in areas with lots of elevational changes, I can see this becoming a major issue.~ Not all steps get counted but sometimes the steps are counted you didn't do. I've awoken in the morning with over 200 steps overnight, and I am fairly certain (being strapped to a CPAP) that I am not sleepwalking. I try not to stress it, I hope they balance each other out in the long run.~ It is not waterproof, so no water sports. There are mixed responses to how "water resistant" it actually is, but I have not been brave enough to see how far it can go before it is waterlogged. I always removed it for bathing, swimming and dish washing. I really hope they consider this in the next generations, because it is the ONE reason why I considered another line. I do swim fairly frequently and would have loved to be able to track that accurately, too.~ It has no idea what to do with biking. If you frequently bicycle as a form of exercise, you will be very aware of this shortcoming for this tracker. Sure, you can just do a general "workout" track, but a lot will be lost in translation and you are best to enter the exercise manually... or opt for the Fitbit Surge, which is able to track biking with relative ease.~ That little screen gets beat up over time. I am not sure what the easy answer is to that, but the way the band is designed, that tiny screen can take a beating. After about 3 months time, there are quite a few scratches to the screen, which I really don't like. If you wear something as often as I wear this tracker, it is bound to take some bumps and bruises. I just wish there was a better way to protect the screen.~ I really wish there were more color choices and that they were more readily available. I have the black, as the Plum was not out yet, though I would have preferred the Plum or maybe another cool color.
Preguntas comunes
Trustpilot
Trustscore 4.5 | Más de 7,300 reseñas
1. Suresh K.
Me impresionó mucho la calidad y la entrega rápida. Volveré a comprar aquí.
Hace 4 días
Aisha M.
El producto coincide exactamente con la descripción. Muy satisfecho con mi compra.
Move it up: Since blood increases further up your arm, wear your tracker higher on your wrist to improve the heart rate signal during workouts. Start by moving the device up to three finger widths above your wrist bone, then experiment with slightly lower placement. Keep it secure: The less your tracker moves during exercise, the more chance you have of maintaining a heart rate signal throughout the activity. Do not wear the band too tightly, as this can restrict blood flow and goes against our wear and care guidelines. Hold steady for ten seconds: High intensity exercises or activities that cause you to keep your wrist bent (like push-ups) or move your arms vigorously (like dance) may interfere with heart rate signals. If you stop seeing a signal during these types of activities, hold your wrist steady for ten seconds during breaks to get your reading.
","image":["https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71fVo9h1ckL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71fVo9h1ckL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51QjTEUpCOL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/21ZoKL9jeVL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/31yt4VqlALL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/21yfOlE5XML.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/31IltMXOIuL.jpg"],"offers":{"@type":"Offer","priceCurrency":"PEN","price":"1198.34","itemCondition":"https://schema.org/NewCondition","availability":"https://schema.org/InStock","shippingDetails":{"deliveryTime":{"@type":"ShippingDeliveryTime","minValue":4,"maxValue":4,"unitCode":"d"}}},"category":" fitnesstechnology","review":[{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"K***R"},"datePublished":"January 17, 2015","name":"I ordered the Fitbit Charge HR only after I gave up on Jawbone fulfilling my preorder for the Up3 and once I realized the Fitbit","reviewBody":"Full disclosure, I ordered the Fitbit Charge HR only after I gave up on Jawbone fulfilling my preorder for the Up3 and once I realized the Fitbit Surge was like having a VCR strapped to your wrist. Further complicating my decision was the reviews that were all over the place on Amazon. Either people loved it or they thought it was the biggest piece of crap ever. I am writing this review to try and offer a realistic perspective for those looking to buy the Fitbit Charge HR.First, disregard the reviews from all the \"personal trainers\" and \"hardcore\" gym goers out there. It's amazing how everyone becomes a trainer or gym rat when reviewing a piece of workout equipment. Wrist based heart rate monitoring is still in its infancy and if, and I stress if, you are so hardcore that a possible 5-10 beat variation is so critical then you need to stay with chest based HR monitoring for awhile. The Charge HR isn't for that. Not to mention, I haven't seen that it is off like others have said. I was skeptical and I have a Garmin Running GPS watch with a chest HR strap and I see the two being pretty consistent.Second, I cannot stress enough the quality of the Fitbit app and web based dashboard. They are motivational and intuitive and they give you goals to shoot for. I have yet to see any sync issues or any of the other nonsense I have seen in other reviews.Finally, $150 is a lot of money but it less than other comparable products out there. To me this is the perfect entry level device. If you like the concept and are disciplined, then you can upgrade to another device. if you are trying to get a snapshot of what you are doing on a daily basis and how you can make some life and fitness improvements, this device is a perfect way in. If you are a \"personal trainer\" or just \"crushing it\" beyond what the Charge can handle, you should probably do another set of burpees, stick with chest strap HR monitors and save your \"insightful\" reviews for Flex magazine.Bottom line; the Charge HR is well worth the money. No product is perfect but this one does perform as promised. Amazon has the best customer relations of any company out there so if you don't like it you can send it back anyway. I hope this review helps. I know when I was looking, these reviews can be ridiculous, contradict and misleading. Give it a shot! You won't be sorry!"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"C***)"},"datePublished":"July 27, 2015","name":"The Fitbit Charge HR is My Favorite Activity Tracker, My Daily Companion","reviewBody":"Being the shopper I am, I actually ended up buying all three of Fitbit's upper activity trackers: The Surge, The Charge HR and The Charge. They all have their very similar features, though each brings a niche to the market depending on your fitness needs. Ultimately it was this one, the Charge HR that I ended up keeping as my daily wear tracker. I will still use the Surge for certain types of exercising (biking and walking, especially when I want to use the GPS features). The Charge HR ticks off most boxes for me, though, and it is the one I would most recommend.If you happened to have read my review on the Charge, some of this will sound familiar. There are only two fundamental differences between the Charge and the Charge HR. One, of course, is the heart rate tracking feature. The other, is the wristband that is used. I have passed the Charge on to my adult son, who is young, healthy and fit and could honestly care less what his heart rate runs. I've warned him to keep an eye on the clasp.The good:~ It's lightweight and feels safe on my wrist. I have never had it fall off or come close to losing it.~ It tracks steps, miles, stairs, calories burned, sleep and heart rate. The last, using a relatively new technology counting beats through your wrist. I periodically check the heart rate reading against my own and it has always been within a few beats. Obviously it's not meant to be a medical device and I would not expect medical accuracy.~ It has a very easy interface with multiple devices. I've used it with a Droid, an Apple iPad and a laptop with the wireless dongle.~ The dashboard is user friendly and easy to access on any of your linked devices. It helps you set goals and cheers you in via push notifications as you near your daily goals. It also sends you periodic emails when you hit a milestone, such as walking 500 miles (which I recently hit). It also averages your resting heart rate for the day and keeps track of how and when that changes. You can go back through ALL of your data at any time. which I find interesting and helpful.~ It is quite motivational to track your activity, as the more you do it, the more you want to. It's a great way encourage additional movement into your day. Not that I have this issue, but you can apparently set it to alarm if you haven't moved in a certain amount of time, too. I can see this being helpful if you work a more sedentary job. For me, if I am not moving, I am probably sleeping.~ It charges quickly and only needs charging every 5-7 days. The Surge, on the other hand, needs to be charged frequently, even when I am not using it often.~ You can get notifications from your smart phone straight to your wrist... this is good and bad. The phone needs to be a pretty close proximity to the band for this to work at all (and even then it is hit or miss for me). If your phone is near enough to send the text or call notification to your watch via Bluetooth, it's really easier to just look at your phone.The not so good:~ The Bluetooth connections can be spotty at times. This means not all your notifications will come through AND it doesn't always sync \"all day\" even when set that way. There are times I have to force a sync and wait for it to upload, as it's been hours since it did so itself.~ That little, itty bitty dongle! I had more issues with interfacing with my laptop than any other device. The dongle had to be periodically re-synced with each device and it seemed to sometimes get confused with more than one device on the account. Also, it's smaller than a nickel and can be easily lost in houses like mine. I no longer sync to my laptop at all and frankly don't know where one of the dongles are right now, either.~ There were some \"growing pains\" with the software. The first month I had the device, there were several times where the online site would go down completely and I was not able to access the dashboard. I also had an issue one time where the device just would not sync and I had to reset it. For now, it seems that these bugs have been mostly worked out, at least for the Charge HR. The Surge still gives me an occasional bump. Both devices have recently updated software (it will prompt you to do so when you sync if one is available) and so far, so good.~ The \"stairs\" counter uses an altimeter when counting stairs. This can be a good and bad thing. Of course, if you are hiking in the mountains (which I have done), you want all the credit for that hike on the way up. Unfortunately, I've also had it read \"stairs\" when I am riding in the car and go up in elevation AND I've walked up and down stairs in my own 3 story (w. the basement) house and NOT received full credit for all the stairs. If you live in areas with lots of elevational changes, I can see this becoming a major issue.~ Not all steps get counted but sometimes the steps are counted you didn't do. I've awoken in the morning with over 200 steps overnight, and I am fairly certain (being strapped to a CPAP) that I am not sleepwalking. I try not to stress it, I hope they balance each other out in the long run.~ It is not waterproof, so no water sports. There are mixed responses to how \"water resistant\" it actually is, but I have not been brave enough to see how far it can go before it is waterlogged. I always removed it for bathing, swimming and dish washing. I really hope they consider this in the next generations, because it is the ONE reason why I considered another line. I do swim fairly frequently and would have loved to be able to track that accurately, too.~ It has no idea what to do with biking. If you frequently bicycle as a form of exercise, you will be very aware of this shortcoming for this tracker. Sure, you can just do a general \"workout\" track, but a lot will be lost in translation and you are best to enter the exercise manually... or opt for the Fitbit Surge, which is able to track biking with relative ease.~ That little screen gets beat up over time. I am not sure what the easy answer is to that, but the way the band is designed, that tiny screen can take a beating. After about 3 months time, there are quite a few scratches to the screen, which I really don't like. If you wear something as often as I wear this tracker, it is bound to take some bumps and bruises. I just wish there was a better way to protect the screen.~ I really wish there were more color choices and that they were more readily available. I have the black, as the Plum was not out yet, though I would have preferred the Plum or maybe another cool color."}],"aggregateRating":{"@type":"AggregateRating","ratingValue":5,"bestRating":5,"ratingCount":2}},{"@type":"FAQPage","mainEntity":[{"@type":"Question","name":"what's difference between new orange color and old black one?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"I had a orange one and after like a day of wearing it the edges got back. So I just emailed Fitbit and they sent a black one. If anyone would ask me what color to get I would say black or a dark color"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Has anyone compared it to a chest strap heart rate monitor to check for accuracy? That is primarily what I want this for.","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Like many others, I had hoped to replace a Polar chest strap and wrist heart monitor (which I used for several years) with a single wristband heart monitor device. Having monitored my heart rate (often daily) and (almost always) during exercise with my Polar, during many different activities and on many different exercise machines that display heart rate, I agree with those who have found that the Fitbit heart rate monitor is accurately only up to about 120 bpm. It cannot accurately measure higher rates during intervals, especially quick changes in heart rate. I know that during an interval when I go all out (whatever the exercise) my heart rate goes up to 150-160. But my Fitbit Charge HR has never shown bpm higher than 130. And often during intense exercise (even just on an elliptical machine or a stationary bike or a stairmaster), it just shows dashes and is not measuring my heart rate at all. Extremely disappointing, and I will go back to using a chest strap when I want accurate heart rate info."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"I'm a female with a wrist measuring 6.5 inches. The small goes up to 6.7. Large starts at 6.3. Any suggestions on which would be better?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"If your wrist is 6.5 inches or larger you will definitely want to get the large. If your wrist is smaller than 6.5 you will definitely want the small. Accidentally grabbed a large but thought it would be no big deal since I was at 6.4 but no, definitely needed a small."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Has anyone compared the accuracy of the heart rate monitor to the Polar heart rate monitors?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Even Polar heart rate monitors use an algorithm to **estimate** calorie expenditure. And because the measurement is dependent on BOTH heart rate and oxygen uptake, it will be most accurate when measuring intensities between ~40% of your VO2 max and your lactate threshold. If you don't input an accurate VO2 max into your Polar, then your \"calories burned\" could be off by a significant amount. Same for all the new activity trackers. When I was an Exercise Physiology student, our lab offered VO2 max and other tests to the community."}}]}]}