Other sellers on Amazon

FITBIT SENSE BLANCO/DORADO SMARTWATCH ASISTENTES GOOGLE Y ALEXA GPS ESTRÉS FRECUENCIA SUEÑO TEMPERATURA


To see product details, add this item to your cart. You can always remove it later.

Purchase options and add-ons

Operating system Android
Memory storage capacity 6400 MB
Special feature GPS
Connectivity technology gps
Wireless communication standard Bluetooth
Battery cell composition Lithium Ion
Shape Round
Screen size 1.58 Inches
Brand Fitbit
Style Modern

About this item

  • GPS

Frequently bought together

$212.27
Get it by Saturday, Jul 13
In Stock
Sold by Just Right! and ships from Amazon Fulfillment.
Total price:
To see our price, add these items to your cart.
Details
Added to Cart
One of these items ships sooner than the other.
Choose items to buy together.

Compare with similar items

This Item
FITBIT SENSE BLANCO/DORADO SMARTWATCH ASISTENTES GOOGLE Y ALEXA GPS ESTRÉS FRECUENCIA SUEÑO TEMPERATURA
FITBIT SENSE BLANCO/DORADO SMARTWATCH ASISTENTES GOOGLE Y ALEXA GPS ESTRÉS FRECUENCIA SUEÑO TEMPERATURA
Recommendations
Fitbit Sense 2 Advanced Health and Fitness Smartwatch with Tools To Manage Stress and Sleep, Ecg App, Spo2, 24/7 Heart Rate and Gps, Shadow Grey/Graphite, One Size (S and L Bands Included)
dummy
Fitbit Versa 4 Fitness Smart Watch for Men and Women with Daily Readiness, Gps, 24/7 Heart Rate, 40+ Exercise Modes, Sleep Tracking and More, Black/graphite, One Size (S and L Bands Included)
dummy
Fitbit Versa 4 Fitness Smartwatch with Daily Readiness, Gps, 24/7 Heart Rate, 40+ Exercise Modes, Sleep Tracking and More, Pink Sand/copper Rose, One Size (S and L Bands Included)
dummy
Fitbit Versa 4 Fitness Smartwatch with Daily Readiness, Gps, 24/7 Heart Rate, 40+ Exercise Modes, Sleep Tracking and More, Waterfall Blue/platinum, One Size (S and L Bands Included)
Details
Added to Cart
Details
Added to Cart
Details
Added to Cart
Details
Added to Cart
Details
Added to Cart
Price$212.27$322.21$251.96$253.96$256.00
Delivery
Get it by Saturday, Jul 13
Get it by Wednesday, Jul 10
Get it by Wednesday, Jul 10
Get it by Wednesday, Jul 10
Get it by Wednesday, Jul 10
Customer ratings
Battery life
4.4
4.3
4.3
4.3
Value for money
4.3
4.2
4.2
4.2
Mobile App
4.0
4.0
4.0
4.0
Accuracy
3.9
3.9
3.9
3.9
Sleep tracking
3.9
3.9
3.9
3.9
Sold by
Just Right!
Simple Supplies Canada
NEmobile
NEmobile
Simple Supplies Canada
operating system
Android
Android
Android
Android
iOS, Android
display size
1.58 inches
1.58 inches
1.58 inches
1.58 inches
1.58 inches
connectivity tech
gps
Bluetooth
Bluetooth
Bluetooth
Bluetooth
supported applications
GPS, Heart Rate Monitor
Phone, GPS, Sleep Monitor, Alarm, Fitness Tracker, Heart Rate Monitor
Phone, GPS, Sleep Monitor, Alarm, Fitness Tracker, Heart Rate Monitor
Phone, GPS, Sleep Monitor, Alarm, Fitness Tracker, Heart Rate Monitor
Phone, GPS, Sleep Monitor, Alarm, Fitness Tracker, Heart Rate Monitor
input interface
microphone
touch screen, buttons
touch screen, buttons
touch screen, buttons
touch screen, buttons
wireless standard
bluetooth
bluetooth
bluetooth
bluetooth
bluetooth

Product description

Founded in 2008, Fitbit is a consumer electronics company that’s best known for its line of smartwatches and fitness trackers. The Fitbit Sense is currently the brand’s most expensive and sophisticated smartwatch. It’s also the only Fitbit to monitor stress through an electrodermal (EDA) scan, and the first model to offer electrocardiogram (ECG) heart rate monitoring. Additionally, the device keeps tabs on your workouts, stress levels, sleep, menstrual cycles, and so much more. However, you may wonder whether the Sense is worth purchasing. To test the product, the Fitbit sent me a Sense to try, and while I’ve only had it for a few months, it’s the first smartwatch that I’ve gotten into a steady habit of wearing. This article provides a comprehensive review of the Fitbit Sense, including my honest opinion on whether it’s worth purchasing.

Product information

Technical Details

Additional Information

Feedback

FITBIT SENSE BLANCO/DORADO SMARTWATCH ASISTENTES GOOGLE Y ALEXA GPS ESTRÉS FRECUENCIA SUEÑO TEMPERATURA


Found a lower price? Let us know. Although we can't match every price reported, we'll use your feedback to ensure that our prices remain competitive.

Where did you see a lower price?

Price Availability
Date of the price (MM/DD/YYYY) *:
/
/
/
/
Please sign in to provide feedback.

Looking for specific info?

Important information

Visible screen diagonal

2" / 5 cm

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
12,131 global ratings

Top review from Canada

Reviewed in Canada on January 7, 2023
Verified Purchase
I bought a fitbit sense and loved it. I bought it when it was brand new. First watch - the strap didn't clasp properly and would randomly fall off and screen cracked. Fitbit did replace it with a refurbished product....this product randomly won't go past the logo screen. It wasn't turned off, was functioning fine minutes before. Google tells me this is a common problem happening to fitbit se se since the summer of 2022 - but fitbit won't fix or replace watches with this common issue because it's outside of the warranty.

So if you want a watch that will last approximately 2 years, develop issues that fitbit is aware of but won't admit or address....this watch is for you. If you want a fitness smart watch that lasts until you're ready to upgrade to new technology and holds its value so you can gift/resell it...pick another brand. So very disappointing. Go ahead and Google fitbit sense stuck on logo.....it's very common, wish I knew but sadly I trusted the brand
2 people found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

LaBalbuena86
5.0 out of 5 stars Una mejora importante en los monitores tradicionales
Reviewed in Mexico on June 9, 2021
Verified Purchase
Soy clienta asidua de Fitbit desde hace casi 7 años, me encanta su plataforma pues es muy amigable. Dentro de los monitores también representa uno de los más baratos y con el diseño más lindo. Cambié al fitbit Sense, pues mi monitor anterior, el Versa, dejó de funcionar. Ese es el único tema con el que me he enfrentado con la marca Fitbit; sus devices no me duran más de 2 años, y encuentro que no son tan impermeables como se presume, pues cada que dejan de funcionarme es porque nadé con ellos varios días (en mar, albercas, cenotes). Me parece que el Sense podría ser distinto al no tener botones como tal, sino un tipo de sensor que funciona como lo hacían éstos y así no hay manera de que se cuele agua en el monitor.

Me parece también que el soporte técnico es muy bueno, pues como lo conté en las líneas anteriores, mis devices dejaban de funcionar y fitbit se encargaba de apoyarme e incluso enviarme nuevos monitores. Esto es lo que más me ha convencido de la marca; están comprometidos con el usuario.

Dentro de los assets adicionales que Fitbit tiene; hay rutinas de ejercicio que puedes ver desde el monitor o la app del celular; tiene foros de discusión; cuenta con una versión premium para tener acceso a contenidos para cuidar tu salud, más entrenamientos, etc (yo no la he usado)

En cuanto a sus funciones; El Sense trae nuevos assets: medición de temperatura en sueño, medición del estrés, a partir de tocar con la palma entera el monitor durante un minuto. Sesiones de meditación o respiración. Rutinas de ejercicio, métricas promedio de todos tus signos vitales; consejos para mejorarlos. erc,

La batería me está durando un poco más que el sense, siendo que no estoy registrando todos mis entrenamientos, por lo que mi uso es muy pasivo. El monitor carga más rápido en su charger.

En el caso del sense, me está sucediendo que no es muy exacto con las métricas de temperatura, e incluso sueño. Mis entrenamientos no se trackean automáticamente, tengo que activar la función de manera manual, cuando antes no tenía que hacerlo en el Versa, el monitor lo identificaba solo. Si lo comparo con monitores como Garmin, me parece que fitbit es mucho más amigable y es para personas como yo, que no somos atletas pero cuidamos mucho nuestro cuerpo y estamos al pendiente de nuestras funciones vitales. En el caso de Samsung, estos son excelentes monitores, pero tienen un precio mayor y te atan a tener un celular de su marca, de Apple ni hablo, porque es una grosería lo que cuestan y no son tan exactos.

Espero les haya ayudado mi reseña.
33 people found this helpful
Report
Kannan Kumar Gunasekaran
5.0 out of 5 stars It is very good 😀😀
Reviewed in Sweden on November 30, 2023
Verified Purchase
Customer image
Kannan Kumar Gunasekaran
5.0 out of 5 stars It is very good 😀😀
Reviewed in Sweden on November 30, 2023
Images in this review
Customer image
Customer image
Sarasyn
5.0 out of 5 stars Not a smart watch, definitely a tracker, but exactly what I needed.
Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2021
Verified Purchase
Let me first say that I am not a smart watch person. I had the Samsung Watch before and absolutely hated it. I was very resistant to switch from my faithful Charge 3 to a new device that seemed similar to a smart watch, especially one that clearly had features that hadn't been fully sorted out yet. At the same time, some of these features, like the 24/7 heartrate monitoring and improved data for sleep monitoring were definitely a draw.

I haven't had this device for months yet, and may update this in the future if I notice different things, but I will say if you go into this with the idea that you're buying a health tracker, you'll get about what you expect. This is not a fancy smart watch and if you want all the music features, additional apps, and things of that nature, this device is not for you. It doesn't function like a smart watch near at all. The music player is limited to Deezer, which I haven't tried. It allows you to navigate Pandora and Spotify on your phone through the device, which is literally the only feature I wanted a smart watch for when I was teaching dance, so for me it's perfect. Almost everything else focuses on your health.

Other reviews have commented on the press point to activate the watch being problematic, but I have had no issues. It doesn't always come on when I turn my wrist to face, which was the same issue with all my previous Fitbit devices. However, the press point to turn it on is basically the same idea as my Charge 3, so maybe that's why I have no issues there.

Not all the newly available metrics have obvious uses. The additional sleep data is very much up for interpretation, but if you keep a log with how you feel when you wake in the morning, any correlation becomes obvious. While I don't know how to interpret this data myself, it is something I've mentioned to my doctor and we will be reviewing on my next visit to help give us a bigger picture of what contributes to my poor quality sleep and other sleep challenges. This is one of the reasons I opted to upgrade when my Charge 3 was still working great and perfectly serviceable.

In additional metrics, we should talk about that EDA scan that's mentioned in all the reviews, but no one seems to understand. I'm actively trying to train myself to make use of that feature. A nifty little thing I've noticed, EDA responses don't appear when I'm under high stress, but they do appear when I've experimented with using the quick scan feature as a non-visual timer for deep breathing in the middle of a anxiety attack. While I don't know if this is reliable, it is giving my medical team more information to try and figure out what's going on, so this may have useful implication in the future.

Another note on the EDA quick scan, as I haven't done any of the guided sessions, it gives you information on your heartrate variability in comparison to your baseline, which I assume is taken from your sleep baseline. Below baseline indicates high stress where above indicates a relaxed state. For me, this has become a useful tool to make sure I'm getting enough exercise, which directly impacts my depression. I know some people out there say "just make sure you get XYZ amount of exercise every day." For me this is giving me useful data on how much and how often is enough to get that number up. Will a run or yoga in the morning be effective for the day? Does an evening routine impact the next morning? It's quantifiable data that I can use as a cue in building my own routine.

I also want to mention the other feature that sold me on this device, the 24/7 heartrate monitoring. Before the pandemic (and became increasingly difficult throughout the pandemic) I had taken up running. One of the things my training app asked was my heartrate during my run. Only problem was I could not accurately get that data as my Charge 3 needed me to remain stationary for an accurate heartrate read. While my heartrate on a run may not have been a necessary detail to include, not having that heartrate often meant exercises were missed and other activities that possibly should have flagged a response didn't. My active minutes have dramatically increased as a result of having more accurate heartrate monitoring. I am also getting a much more accurate look at my activity levels and my calorie intake versus calories burned. This constant data is a lot more useful for anyone who is monitoring their health during exercise, trying to get an accurate calories in/calories out record, and anyone trying to get an accurate picture of what their activity level is throughout the day beyond simply steps to include things previous trackers may have missed. It even picked up on 4 minutes of cardio levels while I was doing an excited sword demonstration for my kids while homeschooling. Is that 4 minutes useful time? Probably not, but it's good to put in my list of activities Fitbit wouldn't have noticed before, but logs now, which also includes dance and other movement exercises that weren't enough to trigger my Charge 3 to identify them as exercise. It was disappointing that 2 hours of dance 3 days a week would often only show up as maybe 30 minutes each day, and sometimes not at all. Those same practices (with an admittedly shorter 30 minute cap due to lack or stamina, thanks pandemic...) are being picked up in their entirety, even if my heartrate elevation is small, but enough to push it into registering in one of the "zones". This has helped a good deal in getting an overall portrait of my health and activity levels, which I'll be bringing to my doctor on my next visit.

The only thing I have found is I haven't been able to get 6 days of battery life out of it, generally landing at 4-5 days. For me this isn't an issue as I don't wear my device to shower and have had a habit since my original Charge HR (way back in the day) of popping it on the charger whenever I shower. This may also be why I don't have any effect from the device or band as my wrist gets regular breaks.

If you're primarily looking for a smart watch and just want something with some extra features, this will not be the device for you. While the extra health tracking is a great draw, it loses a lot of the functionality my old smart watch had, the notifications for things like texts don't always come through (which is fine for me because I don't want that) and the pay feature isn't fantastic. Again, that doesn't matter to me because it's a feature I don't intend to really use anyway, but had to test it out. The apps are limited, and options for music and taking calls aren't wonderful.

On the other hand, if you're looking for a device to give you detailed health information, to accurately log fitness activities, and increased metrics for sleep, this may just be the device for you. It's the best fitness tracker I've seen so far, and this is giving my medical team some new information to work with, which may or may not be useful in the long run, but looks promising. That EDA quick scan had potential for people who suffer clinical anxiety or even PTSD as it can be used to cue deep breathing, and the resulting data may result in creating a better profile of what's going on during an attack, or at the very least can result in creating a cue to take specific actions in a way that simply feeling in the moment cannot. Not all of this data will be useful for everyone, but it could be useful for someone who needs this kind of data to help understand their sleep patterns, anxiety levels, how activity, even in small amounts of a few minutes here and there, impacts their mental health, or even just someone who wants an accurate profile of their physical fitness throughout their exercises.

I was 100% resistant to the idea of yet another smart watch, but in the end I'm happy I made the switch. The added information I've gained has given me a lot more understanding of what's going on with me. I now have clues as to why nights I get plenty of quality sleep (according to previously going on just my sleep score) I wake up feeling tired, and I'm seeing a correlation with sleep temp particularly and low quality sleep. That 24/7 heartrate has been huge. I can now actually monitor my activity level instead of trying to track exercise my Charge missed (because I never turn on exercises prior to start as I never remember or can't figure out which fits best), and result in trying to figure out a routine that way. Everything is logged now, making it simple and accurate. The EDA scan is becoming a tool to manage my anxiety, and while the metrics may or may not be useful, it does cue activities which are useful, so even if it's no more than placebo effect, the end result is valuable.

What you will get out of this device will be very personal and it depends on how you use it, and what you expect to get from it. The Fitbit Sense can be a useful tool for you and your medical team, or even you and your trainer, depending on your goals. This device is definitely not for everyone, and the price point does not make it worth it for every user, but if you're looking for a tool to track your health, this one seems to be the best on the market to date.
319 people found this helpful
Report
Abhishek Sharma
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome product
Reviewed in India on January 12, 2022
Verified Purchase
Awesome looks
Classy curves
Switching on and off is a problem. May be I am not doing it right.
Tracks well.
Solves the purpose of a fitness tracker.
One person found this helpful
Report
R.Foell
5.0 out of 5 stars Vielseitige Gesundheits-Smartwatch
Reviewed in Germany on June 29, 2021
Verified Purchase
Die Sense gibt Auskunft über Schritte, verbrauchte Kalorien, Schlaf, Hauttemperatur, sowie die Herzfrequenz, Ruhepuls, Sauerstoffsättigung etc.

Mich hat das Schlaftracking beeindruckt, denn es gehört zum genauesten, das Nutzer haben können. Da gibt es natürlich noch den Oura Ring,  aber dann würde ich persönlich das Display vermissen. Dieses ist einfach super, auch in der prallen Sonne kann man alles gut ablesen. Schick ist sie auch,  selbst an sehr schmalen Handgelenken.

Das andere große Plus ist die große Motivation zu mehr Bewegung und Cardio. Sozusagen der Personaltrainer am Handgelenk. Super ist auch, dass ich sie mit zum Schwimmen nehmen kann und auch beim Duschen nehme ich sie nicht ab. Tipp: Aufpassen, dass die Fitbit nicht direkt mit Conditioner, Body Lotion und Co. in Kontakt kommt.

Mit der App kann ich ebenfalls mein Essen dokumentieren und meine verbrauchten Kalorien einsehen.  Wenn ich Gewicht verlieren möchte,  kann ich also genau sehen, ob ich mir das Stück Kuchen noch gönnen kann oder nicht... Kalorien zählen muss man ja auch nicht immer,  aber wenn man es einmal konsequent macht,  bekommt man ein besseres Gefühl dafür.

Bin gespannt auf die vielen neuen Funktionen und ob ich das Premium Abo nach Ablauf der Testphase behalten möchte.

Nachtrag: Die Sense trage ich mittlerweile über 12 Monate. Das Premium Abo brauche ich nicht. Bin auch so sehr zufrieden. Einziger Bug: Die Treppenstufen werden falsch gezählt. Immer! Auch nach Neustart und gutem Abtrocknen nach dem Schwimmen. In dieser Preiskategorie schade. Habe gelesen, dass viele Nutzer dieses Problem haben. Mal sehen, wie es mit der Sense 2 dann wird.
7 people found this helpful
Report