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Fitbit Alta HR Fitness Tracker with Heart Rate, 7 Day Battery Life, Compatible with Smartphones, Tablets, Computers

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$169.99

$ 72 .99 $72.99

In Stock

1.:Small


2.Color:Black


Product details

Material
Elastomer, Stainless Steel, Aluminum

About this item

  • Get the power of continuous heart rate in Fitbit's slimmest design yet-all day, during workouts and beyond
  • With heart rate, you can better measure calorie burn, and use zones (fat burn, cardio, and peak) to find the right workout intensity for your goals
  • See how working out more can improve your health by comparing your resting heart rate trends to your activity
  • With sleep stages powered by purpose heart rate, automatically track your time spent in light, deep and REM sleep and take steps toward a better night's rest
  • Automatically track your steps, distance, calories burned and active minutes with up to 7 days of battery life (varies with use and other factors)



Paula Coughlan
Reviewed in the United Arab Emirates on June 8, 2024
The screen goes all blurry in the sun and cannot be read. The plastic band that holds the overlap band down broke off. The watch also falls off my wrist easily as one of the bands doesn’t fasten securely.
Riham Ramadan
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on July 5, 2021
Screen not working
Gracie's Mum
Reviewed in Australia on August 4, 2019
I purchased the Alta HR for the small face size. I’m really pleased with the look & feel. I wanted the Fitbit to motivate me to MOVE & it has certainly done so, I walk more often & further than before. I’m aware of my breathing & reaching cardio levels. My water consumption has increased, the silent alarm vibration is fabulous & I’ve turned my phone alarms off, plus the alarm vibrations reminding you to move. There are so many different aspects to this Fitbit in conjunction with the App, truly amazing, what I have mentioned is but a few & as my fitness increases I will no doubt use those as well.
Thomas D. Satterlee
Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2019
I have had an ALTA HR for 2 years and love it! I like the smaller size on my wrist and it has all the most important features for me: HR tracking, active minutes, steps, sleep, goals for exercise, water intake, weight record and period tracking. I don’t worry about the calories record or miles walked, but they’re available. I also like that the bands are interchangeable so I can wear a dressier one sometimes. My only complaint is that the clasps weakened where you interchange the bands and after two years, I lost the Fitbit. I had noticed that the clasps were weakening and I should have been more careful. I was painting and clipped it to my belt loop instead of wearing it on my arm. It fell off (the band stayed on my belt loop) and I didn’t notice. After searching around my yard I gave up and ordered the exact one I had before because I do love it. I will be more careful to use the clasps less.Kathy
Katherine
Reviewed in Australia on November 2, 2019
I upgraded from the Fitbit One to the Alta HR because I wanted to monitor heart rate and be able to have a more advanced sleep monitor. The Alta HR does both. Although it took a bit to get the sleep monitor to work - had to reset it by double-pressing the button on the power charger.The Alta HR doesn't have a stair climb monitor, but that's OK because it wasn't terribly accurate anyway. I've discovered the fat-burner & cardio tracker on the heart monitor is a good trade off.
FancyHobo557
Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2019
I enjoy my Alta but I do have a couple dislikes.The battery does not last a week. I have to charge every 3-4 days. While this doesn’t bother me, I was expecting it to last longer.The light is ridiculously bright at night and for whatever reason that is the only time it comes on when I move my wrist. It doesn’t want to work during the day when I need it to but come 2 am and I’m rolling over it’s like a flashlight. I also have to tap it ridiculously hard when I do want to check something.The sleep tracking works great for the most part and I love seeing my patterns and shifts throughout my monthly cycle. Occasionally it doesn’t work and there’s no better explanation than ‘oops sleep tracking was unavailable’.I am a female so I have monthly menstrual cycles. I can keep track of my symptoms and I enjoy that. There are two issues I have with this function. One: the symptoms are lacking. There are a wide variety of symptoms missing. Two: when you log something on the calendar block it always has the same black dot on the calendar and then the symptoms below. For a quick glance it would be really nice if the icons were seen on the calendar and not just a black dot. That way you can look back and immediately identify what you have as a common symptom three days before instead of having to check every single month three days before. When you look at the calendar it wouldn’t be a slew of black dots either. You’d be able to immediately tell instead of having to push on every single day to get specifics.I really like the slim band. I do not like guaky watches. I would recommend this Fitbit as I really do enjoy mine.One of my favorite things about this Fitbit is the silent alarm. It wakes me up and also has the options to do silent reminders. I absolutely love that.The Fitbit app that accompanies the Fitbit is easy to understand, navigate, and utilize. I have no complaints other than the monthly cycle tracking. As far as accuracy, my periods are extremely regular so the app is right every month when I am going to start. For someone with irregular periods I’m not sure how accurate it would be.I love my Fitbit and I would buy it again. I would recommend it as it is a very good tool. If you do not want a ‘smart’ watch this is perfect. I think the smart watches are a bit much myself which is why I went with this product. I have had mine for four months now and I absolutely recommend it because sometimes I even use it as a flashlight at 2 am.:)
Kismet
Reviewed in Australia on August 15, 2018
Alta HR lives up to its hype. Sleep and resting heart rate monitors have proved very useful as i have tachycardia (average 96+ BPM). Since donning the Fitbit I’ve increased my daily step count and watched my RHR drop and sleep improve. Reminders to get up and move are helpful. Battery only needs charging every five days or so. Easy to use as is the App. Worth the money.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on August 12, 2017
The Alta HR looks almost exactly like last year’s Alta, which means it’s more of a bracelet than an activity tracker. It’s modular, so the bands on either side of the plastic module in the middle can be easily swapped out. It has the same display as the Alta. It’s not touch sensitive, but requires a tap on either the face or side of the module if you want to cycle through your data. This can get annoying.There is one noteworthy design change: the strap. Last year’s Fitbit Alta had a snap-in clasp (one I didn’t like very much), but this year’s has a more traditional railroad-style strap.Some people have asked me whether the Fitbit Alta HR is now a replacement for the Charge 2. My answer is: not really. They’re the same price and both have heart rate sensors. But you can stop and start exercises with the Charge 2, and you can’t do that at all with Fitbit Alta HR. The Fitbit Alta HR will automatically recognize if you go for a run, but it’s not something you can control, and it doesn’t display a timer during your activities.So what can this Fitbit do? It does what a Fitbit does. It tracks your steps, your distance traveled (without GPS), your calories burned, and your sleep. It shows you notifications and incoming calls from your smartphone. What’s new about the Alta HR is that it has optical heart rate sensors built into the underside, so it records your heart rate throughout the day, and Fitbit will now show you more advanced sleep data in its app. This latter feature isn’t limited to just the Alta HR; it will work with any newer Fitbit that has heart rate sensors. I look at the Fitbit Alta HR’s heart rate data as something that is nice to have, data that I wouldn’t trust entirely but could still help to inform other activity decisions.The same goes for distance tracking: since the Alta HR doesn’t have GPS, or even connected GPS through the phone, my expectations were low. After a five-plus-mile hike last Friday, the Fitbit app told me I had taken more than 19,000 steps total that day and had been active for 158 minutes, but I also noticed within the app that the activity was automatically recorded as just 4.97 miles.This is also the same with sleep tracking: unless you venture into a lab and have sleep sensors taped to your body and have that sort of data to compare it to, it’s hard to gauge the accuracy and efficiency of consumer trackers like Fitbit. But Fitbit is at least trying to give you more insights into what’s going on when you’re sleeping. More importantly, it’s trying to tell you what that means for your overall health.Sleep sessions are now broken down into light sleep, deep sleep, REM stages, and time awake, with a breakdown of your overall sleep quality. There are sleep insights now, too; the app will say "You were 31% in REM sleep last night" or "Light sleep doesn’t mean weak sleep! Your body actually performs a number of important functions during this sleep stage." It’s all a little reminiscent of the insights that — dare I say it — Jawbone used to offer with its UP activity-tracking system. It’s good to see Fitbit catch up. All of this may seem like I’m feeling fairly non-committal toward the new Fitbit, when in truth I like what Fitbit has done holistically with this product. It’s still the same bracelet-like Fitbit from last year, but with one hardware addition and one new software feature that improve the overall experience. Its battery life lasted me nearly a week, from a Wednesday night to the following Wednesday, on a single charge. This is more impressive when you consider the added heart rate sensors. Over a week, I became a little addicted to Fitbit again, wanting to get my steps up, trying to pay attention to the move reminders, actually checking the app every now and then to see how I slept or what my resting heart rate was that morning. I did miss real exercise-tracking features while I was wearing it, and am still a lot more inclined to buy a wearable that has GPS and other advanced sport tracking.But the new Fitbit Alta HR told me just a tiny bit more about my activity than what I knew before, and was just so easy to wear. And if we aren’t getting mind-blowing technology advances in wearables right now, then that’s probably the next best thing.
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