Fitness & Wearable Tech — 2026-05-18
This week's biggest fitness tech story is the imminent transformation of the Fitbit app into Google Health — complete with a Gemini-powered AI coaching layer — which enters public preview days before its official May 19 launch. Meanwhile, Strava deepens its integration with Apple's AirPods Pro 3 fitness feature, bringing workout logging to your ears, and Garmin's upcoming screenless Cirqa band continues to leak pricing details that suggest a premium price point far above rivals like the Fitbit Air.
Fitness & Wearable Tech — 2026-05-18
Wearable Hardware
Google Fitbit Air (Screenless Band)
- Brand: Google
- What's new: The screenless Fitbit Air launched at $99, positioning itself as Google's entry into the WHOOP-style screenless tracker segment. The device runs alongside the upcoming transformation of the Fitbit app into Google Health (rolling out May 19–26), tightening the software-hardware ecosystem.
- Why it matters: At $99, the Fitbit Air undercuts rivals sharply — and leaked pricing for Garmin's competing Cirqa device suggests it could cost five times as much. This price gap will define the emerging screenless-tracker market and could cement Google's foothold with casual fitness users.
Garmin Cirqa (Screenless Band — Leaked Pricing)
- Brand: Garmin
- What's new: New leaked pricing information for Garmin's rumored Cirqa screenless fitness band suggests the device could cost approximately five times the price of the Fitbit Air — placing it in a premium tier closer to WHOOP's subscription model than a mainstream consumer product.
- Why it matters: Garmin is clearly targeting dedicated athletes and biometric-data enthusiasts rather than casual users, differentiating on sensor depth and data accuracy rather than price accessibility. The positioning signals a two-tier screenless tracker market is forming.

Apple AirPods Pro 3 (Fitness Workout Feature)
- Brand: Apple
- What's new: Apple's AirPods Pro 3 shipped with a dedicated workout fitness feature, and as of this week, Strava's iPhone app officially supports it — letting users log workouts and tap into the in-ear fitness data directly within Strava.
- Why it matters: It's a rare crossover between hearable and wearable categories. By enabling workout logging via AirPods Pro 3, Apple and Strava are pushing fitness tracking beyond the wrist, potentially changing how athletes think about which device is their primary tracker.

Apps & Platforms
Google Health (formerly Fitbit App)
- Update: The Fitbit app officially becomes the Google Health app on May 19, with rollout completing by May 26. Ahead of launch, Google opened a Public Preview on both iOS and Android, allowing users to access the new four-tab layout and the Gemini-powered Google Health Coach now. The process takes under a minute and is reversible.
- Who benefits: Existing Fitbit app users who want early access to AI-powered health coaching before the full rollout; also any Android or iPhone user looking for a comprehensive, AI-assisted health tracking dashboard.

Strava (AirPods Pro 3 Integration)
- Update: Strava's iPhone app now integrates with Apple AirPods Pro 3's new workout fitness feature, enabling users to log activities and access in-ear biometric data without reaching for their phone or watch.
- Who benefits: Strava's running and cycling community who own AirPods Pro 3 and want a more seamless, multi-device workout experience; particularly relevant for users who don't wear a smartwatch but already use AirPods during exercise.
Strava (Download & Availability)
- Update: Strava remains available as a free download across Android, iOS, and Web App platforms as of this week, with its broad activity library (50+ tracked activities) continuing to expand. The app was confirmed available through Gizmodo's app directory as of May 13, 2026.
- Who benefits: New users evaluating social fitness platforms, particularly those looking for a cross-device solution that now spans Apple Watch, Garmin devices, and — as of this week — AirPods Pro 3.
Health Sensing & Research
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FDA guidance on consumer wearable blood pressure and glucose monitors: In January 2026, the FDA issued revised guidance on general wellness products, clarifying broader wellness exemptions for blood pressure and blood glucose wearables — provided values are validated and the devices are intended solely for wellness rather than medical-diagnostic purposes. This regulatory clarity is reducing uncertainty for manufacturers designing next-gen biometric trackers, though as of March 2026, no new FDA clearances for mainstream consumer wearables in heart monitoring, glucose, or sleep apnea had been issued since August 2025.
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Multi-sensor convergence in 2026 wearables: Analysis published in April 2026 describes how the latest consumer wearables now combine optical PPG, multi-lead ECG, accelerometry, skin impedance, and biochemical sensing in single form-factor devices — with many receiving FDA Class II and III clearances. Regulators are treating these devices not as replacements for clinical tests but as the "gold standard for trends," which is often more actionable for daily health management than a single point-in-time lab result.
Weekly Analysis
The defining theme of this week is ecosystem consolidation: Google is folding Fitbit entirely into its Health platform with a Gemini AI layer, Strava is weaving itself into Apple's hardware at the ear, and Garmin is staking out premium biometric territory with a screenless device priced far above mass-market alternatives. The battleground is no longer just the wrist — it's every surface that can hold a sensor, from earbuds to screenless bands to smart rings. Google's move is arguably the boldest: by rebranding the Fitbit app as Google Health and embedding a Gemini coach, it signals that AI health coaching is no longer a differentiating "extra" but a baseline feature expectation. The FDA's January 2026 guidance clarifying wellness exemptions for blood pressure and glucose wearables also unlocks a new product category race — expect the next round of device announcements to lean heavily into continuous metabolic monitoring without the regulatory overhead of a medical device.
What to Watch Next Week
- Google Health full rollout (May 19–26): The official launch of the Google Health app — replacing Fitbit for all users — completes its rollout by May 26. Watch for user reaction to the Gemini-powered Health Coach and whether the new four-tab interface lands well with Fitbit's large installed base.
- Garmin Cirqa official reveal timing: With leaked pricing already circulating, Garmin may be close to an official announcement for its Cirqa screenless band. Any formal reveal will immediately sharpen the competitive comparison against the $99 Fitbit Air and WHOOP's subscription model — clarifying whether premium screenless tracking can capture mainstream adoption.
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