Fitbit’s new smartwatch clearly has the Apple Watch in its crosshairs. It looks very similar and offers many of the same features, but at a significantly lower price.
The basic version costs $200. By contrast, a simple GPS-enabled editionof the Apple Watch Series 3 starts at $329.
So, how do you choose between the Fitbit Versa and the Apple Watch 3?
Design and durability
The two watches share a similar design, interchangeable straps, a selection of metal finishes and a variety of watch faces to customize the look. They're both water resistant to 50 meters, so you can wear them in the shower or use them to track laps in the pool.
Those are the facts, but here's a few things we like and dislike about each watch's design:
Fitbit Versa
- It's really comfortable to wear, because it's so thin and sits flush on your wrist, and because it's so light
- There are three different buttons on the Versa and it's confusing to work out which button does what
- Changing the band is a real struggle -- it's extremely fiddly
Apple Watch
- Swapping the straps out is a breeze
- The screen has slimmer bezels than the Versa, so it has a smaller footprint on the wrist
- But the LTE version is thicker and the sensor on the bottom bulges out and can dig into your skin when the strap is pulled tight
Smartwatch features
While both mirror notifications from your phone, only the Apple Watch gives you unlimited responses. Android users can program quick replies on the Versa, but its lack of microphone means you can't dictate or scribble a response like you can with the Apple Watch.
Fitbit Versa
- It's compatible with Android and iOS
- Vibrations are quite weak, even at max vibrate, so it's easy to miss notifications
- Not all third-party app notifications came through when we were testing
- There's a limited number of apps available in the store at the time of writing
- Fitbit Pay is only available if you buy the Special Edition, which costs $30 more in the US. But elsewhere in the world, the Versa comes with NFC for mobile payments by default. The list of supported banks isn't as large as Apple Pay
Apple Watch
- You're tied into the Apple ecosystem, so you can only use it with an iPhone($1,000 at Cricket Wireless), not Android
- It has many more smartwatch features than the Versa, like being able to ring your phone or unlock a Mac.
- Transferring cards from your digital wallet to the Watch for Apple Pay is simple
- Being able to leave your iPhone behind (when using the LTE version) means you don't feel disconnected if you need to hail an Uber or Lyft, or get a call or message during a workout
- If you have multiple languages setup on your phone, voice dictation doesn't always choose the right language
Health and fitness tracking
Runners who want to leave their phone behind might think the lack of GPS in the Versa is a major deal-breaker. In our real-world use, we didn't miss the GPS as much as we thought, but you won't get as accurate a read of pace and distance when it's not paired to the phone.
The Versa can also act as a personal trainer with the Coach app that comes with a few basic workouts, or fork out $40 a year for unlimited access. It shows you the moves right on your wrist -- and being able to initiate a guided training session in your living room is a game changer if you're tight on time. Fitbit's stand reminders are also better than on the Apple Watch: By requiring 250 steps an hour to "win," it's more focused on motivating regular movement.
Visual cues on the Apple Watch only give you notifications to stand or keep moving during the day rather than guide you through workouts, although there are plenty of third-party apps that can help fill that gap. And it's really easy to become addicted to closing your rings if you're motivated by those sorts of notifications.
The Versa includes a female health-tracking feature on the watch, which you can see when you swipe up from the lock screen. Log your last period on the Fitbit app and it predicts your next fertile window, based on this data. You can't log the information directly on the watch, but you can see how long you have until your next window directly from your wrist. The Apple Watch has third-party period-tracking apps that do the same thing, but they're not baked into the interface.
Interpreting your workout
Both let you dive into a deeper breakdown of your fitness data over time. Fitbit consolidates all this into its main phone app, while the Apple Watch splits this across the Watch app, the Activity app and the Health app on the iPhone.
Having your fitness metrics across three different apps can be confusing if you're looking to track progress over time. Again, there are plenty of third-party apps available for the Watch that let you find everything in one place. Vanessa's a fan of Nike+ Run Club for runs or AllTrails for hikes, while Lexy prefers Strava to track progress against previous workouts and other users.
The Fitbit app was better at translating heart-rate readings into useful information, like telling you if you were in a fat-burning, cardio or peak zone during a workout. Apple's heart-rate data in the Activity app can be hard to interpret on its own because there's no baseline to compare it to. The closest feature is the color-coded route map that shows you how fast you were going during each part of your journey -- green is fast and red is slow. But the Apple Watch will soon be getting better activity tracking features with WatchOS 5, including better tools for runners that may give it an edge over the Fitbit.
The colored overlay shows your pace at each stage of your workout when using the Apple Watch with GPS.
Our biggest complaint about the Fitbit app? It doesn't show you elevation gain for individual activities, so for hikes uphill the only way to figure out altitude is from the summary page on the watch, although this seems to disappear after you finish a workout.
Both have third-party apps, though many big partners seem to be less invested in developing wrist-based apps, with Google Maps, Amazon, eBay and Instagram all leaving the Apple Watch platform in the last year or so.
Music
You can sync songs to each watch while they charge. The Versa has 2.5GB of storage set aside for music, which is around 300 songs, while the Apple Watch has 8GB for music on the LTE model (2GB if you have a non-LTE version).
Fitbit Versa
- Syncing music is a challenge because you need to use the desktop app. It takes a long time if you transfer lots of songs
- You can only load music you own and nothing with DRM protection
- If you pay for Deezer or Pandora, you can sync playlists and stations for when you don't have your phone (Pandora is US only)
Apple Watch
- Syncing music is easier than the Versa because you can do it from your phone. But you have to have the songs in your Apple Music library (Spotify users are out of luck at this time, same as the Versa)
- Streaming over LTE is possible through Apple Music as long as you're a paid subscriber, or you can listen to Beats1 radio if you don't subscribe
- But streaming music over LTE is a major drag on battery life
Battery life
Where the Fitbit really shines is battery life. After five days of wearing the Versa all day during workouts, but not listening to music, it still had about 10 percent battery remaining.
The Apple Watch struggles by comparison, especially if you're using battery-intensive features such as LTE and GPS. If you're just tracking a workout, mirroring notifications or responding to texts, you'll get about a full day's use before you have to charge it -- anything extra is a bonus.
Both use proprietary chargers, but they do juice up fairly quickly.
The Apple Watch has a power reserve feature that lets you conserve battery but it disables all features apart from telling the time.
Futureproofing
Note that the Fitbit Versa is brand-new: It just hit stores in April, so we don't expect we'll see another Fitbit smartwatch in 2018. If you want state of the art for Fitbit, this is it.
The Apple Watch is a different story. The current Apple Watch Series 1 and Series 3 models were released in September 2017, and Apple has been pretty diligent about refreshing the line since the first model debuted in 2015. Don't be surprised to see new Apple Watch models to hit in September of this year.
That said, those thoughts on future Fitbit and Apple products are merely educated guesses. We don't have any inside info.
And our winner is?
Vanessa: I ended up wearing the Fitbit more, solely for the longer battery life. Even when I forgot to charge it I could grab it as I was running out the door in the morning knowing it would at least have enough juice to get me through the day. But the Apple Watch is a much more versatile device -- I did miss many of its features, especially GPS and the text responses, which allowed me to break free from my phone.
Lexy: Neither are quite there as an all-round smartwatch for me, but if you're an iPhone user and want a smarter companion that can also free you from your phone once in a while, the Apple Watch is likely a better fit. I love that the Versa is so comfortable and has amazing battery life, but I'd pick the Watch because it can do so much more.