Fitbit built its reputation on step counting and daily health habits. Garmin built its reputation on GPS navigation and athletic performance. Both have expanded, but their DNA is different — and for athletes who want structured training, that difference matters enormously.
Fitbit
Fitbit (now part of Google) shines at making health data accessible to everyone. Daily Readiness Score, Active Zone Minutes, and stress management tools help casual exercisers build healthy habits. The Pixel Watch integration brings Fitbit to the Google ecosystem, and sleep tracking remains one of the most user-friendly in the market.
Read our full Fitbit alternative review →Garmin
Garmin is engineered for athletes. Training Status, Training Load, VO2 Max estimation, Race Predictor, and Garmin Coach put structured coaching on your wrist. From the affordable Forerunner 165 to the flagship Fenix 8, Garmin covers every sport and distance with purpose-built metrics and multi-week battery life.
Read our full Garmin alternative review →Feature Comparison
| Aspect | Fitbit | Garmin | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI Coaching & Plan Generation | No structured training plans; Daily Readiness suggests workout intensity | Garmin Coach provides adaptive plans for 5K, 10K, half marathon | Garmin clearly leads with actual training plan generation |
| Data Depth & Ecosystem | Steps, heart rate zones, sleep stages, stress; Google Fit integration | VO2 Max, Training Status, stamina, pace pro; Connect IQ apps and widgets | Garmin offers far deeper training-specific metrics |
| Multi-Sport Support | Basic sport modes: run, bike, swim; no triathlon or multisport | Triathlon mode, 50+ sport profiles, multisport transitions | Garmin is in a different league for multi-sport athletes |
| Recovery & Readiness Tracking | Daily Readiness Score based on HRV, sleep, and activity | Training Readiness, Body Battery, HRV Status, recovery time | Both offer readiness scores; Garmin ties readiness to training load |
| Injury Prevention | Active Zone Minutes cap; no overtraining alerts | Training Load Focus, unproductive alerts, load/recovery balance | Garmin actively warns about overtraining patterns |
| Wearable Integration | Pixel Watch, Fitbit trackers; limited third-party sensor support | Power meters, speed/cadence sensors, radar, satellite communicators | Garmin supports far more external training sensors |
| Community & Social | Fitbit challenges, friend leaderboards, community groups | Garmin Connect challenges, badges, segments, clubs | Both have solid community; Garmin is more athlete-focused |
| Price & Value | $149-$349; Fitbit Premium $9.99/month for advanced insights | $249-$999; Garmin Connect is free with all features included | Garmin is more expensive upfront but no subscription needed |
A Better Alternative for Training
Fitbit excels at health habits and Garmin excels at training metrics, but neither truly adapts your training plan to your daily readiness. AiTrainingPlan connects to both ecosystems and uses their data — Daily Readiness from Fitbit, Training Status from Garmin — to generate intelligent training plans that evolve with your body, not just your schedule.
- Ingests data from Fitbit (via Google Fit) and Garmin Connect simultaneously
- Generates structured training plans that neither platform provides in full
- Adapts workout intensity based on readiness data from either device
- Supports multi-sport and multi-race planning across running, cycling, triathlon, and HYROX
- AI coaching draws from multiple models and latest sports science research
Our Verdict
Fitbit is the right choice for health-focused users who want step tracking, sleep insights, and gentle fitness nudges within the Google ecosystem. Garmin is the clear winner for structured training with its coaching tools, GPS accuracy, and deep performance metrics. If you are training for a specific event or want your workouts to adapt to your recovery, pair your device with AiTrainingPlan for AI coaching that uses your data to its fullest potential.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Fitbit good enough for marathon training?
Fitbit can track runs with GPS and heart rate, but it lacks structured training plans, Training Load analysis, and advanced running metrics. For marathon training, Garmin or a dedicated training app like AiTrainingPlan is a better fit.
Can I switch from Fitbit to Garmin without losing my data?
Historical Fitbit data does not transfer directly to Garmin Connect. However, AiTrainingPlan can work with data from both platforms, so switching devices does not mean starting from scratch.
Which is better for beginners: Fitbit or Garmin?
Fitbit is more beginner-friendly with its simple interface and health-focused approach. Garmin Forerunner 165 is an accessible entry point for beginners who want to start structured training from day one.
Also Compare
Komoot and Strava overlap in route planning but serve fundamentally different purposes. Komoot is a route planning and n...
Read full comparison →Rouvy and Zwift are the two leading indoor cycling platforms, but they take fundamentally different approaches. Rouvy us...
Read full comparison →COROS has emerged as Garmin's most credible challenger in the endurance sports market. With competitive pricing, excepti...
Read full comparison →Ready for AI-Powered Coaching?
Free during alpha. Integrates with all your devices.
Apply for Alpha Access
Join the first athletes testing AiTrainingPlan.