Polar or Fitbit???

Hey everyone,

Okay I realllllllllly want to get something that will help me accurately track the calories I burn. I'm a crazy person about tracking how many calories I consume so I want to make sure I know exactly how much I'm getting rid of.

I've been looking at the Polar FT4 and FT7 as well as the Fitbit. Feedback? Suggestions? Pros/cons? Anything???

Help! Thanks in advance!
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Replies

  • WRXymama
    WRXymama Posts: 342 Member
    I absolutely LOVE my FitbitONE....BUT....

    I strictly use running/walking as my form of excercise. If you are wanting more acurate readings that cover a variety of excercise, I would go with a HRM. I don't plan on getting rid of my Fitbit, nor do I plan on getting a HRM, because the fitbit suites my needs just perfectly. Just some food for thought....
  • action_figure
    action_figure Posts: 511 Member
    Hey everyone,

    Okay I realllllllllly want to get something that will help me accurately track the calories I burn. I'm a crazy person about tracking how many calories I consume so I want to make sure I know exactly how much I'm getting rid of.

    I've been looking at the Polar FT4 and FT7 as well as the Fitbit. Feedback? Suggestions? Pros/cons? Anything???

    Help! Thanks in advance!

    I have an FT4 and a Jawbone UP. Personally, if I had the money, I would not use either of these, I'd replace it with the Basis band.
  • SouperDuck
    SouperDuck Posts: 57 Member
    I wear my fitbit thru the day and use a polar ft60 during hard workouts
  • escloflowneCHANGED
    escloflowneCHANGED Posts: 3,038 Member
    Polar is more accurate!
  • SimplyDenyse
    SimplyDenyse Posts: 124 Member
    I love my fitbit one but ended up buying the polar ft7 HRM because I wanted to know how much I was burning EXCATLY.. Now I use both but the HRM is the one I couldn't live without.
  • jacksonpt
    jacksonpt Posts: 10,413 Member
    They do different things and are intended to serve different purposes.

    Get the one that meets your needs best.
  • MzManiak
    MzManiak Posts: 1,361 Member
    If you only want to track during workouts, the Polar HRM would be the better choice for you. The Fitbit tracks overall calorie burn for the whole day, so if you need help figuring out your TDEE, that would be the better option.
  • ADixie4You2Know
    ADixie4You2Know Posts: 47 Member
    I have both. They are two totally different things. The polar is a heartrate monitor the fitbit is a glorified pedometer. I have the polar ft7 I use it during my cardio to get my calories burned. I have an older fitbit the ultra. I wear it all day EXCEPT while doing my cardio to get my daily steps. I love them both! They have been useful tools on my weight loss journey.
  • lexoxoc
    lexoxoc Posts: 135 Member
    I just got the Polar FT4 about a month ago. It's been reallllly helpful to me as a lot of my calories burned were being overestimated!
  • i have the pink polar ft4 and love it!
  • McSpike
    McSpike Posts: 34 Member
    Accuracy is a dicey topic at best. HRM's are great for steady-state cardio. So they work well for walking, running, biking and the like. If you do weights, they don't work as well, unless you are doing HIIT. They do seem to work well for circuit training, as the goal there is to keep your heart rate up.

    I love my fitbit, as it tracks my activity throughout the day. I find I get more exercise calories that way, as I only wear my HRM during longer workouts - a walk or bike ride, in my case.

    If you can swing it, I recommend both, as I use both constantly.
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    Fitbit tracks everything you do all day, every day.

    HRMs are mediocre-to-good (depending on how closely your VO2max matches up with what the HRM manufacturer guesses) for steady-state cardio workouts and nothing else.

    Different devices for different purposes.
  • I have the Fitbit Flex and I love it! Although, I'm not so intent on tracking exactly how many calories I'm burning.
  • icimani
    icimani Posts: 1,454 Member
    I settled on the Polar FT4 and I'm really happy with it.Polar got a lot of good reviews both here and elsewhere on the web. If I remember right, the FT7 gave you connectivity with the Polar site that I wasn't interested in so it wasn't worth the extra money for me. Previous models of the FT models didn't allow the user to change the batteries, but that's since been changed - I changed mine a few months ago with no problems. I've gone swimming with my FT4 with no problems, you just have to be careful not to push any button under water. The chest strap is very comfortable and I don't even notice it, and the "watch" piece is easy to set up and use.

    But the Polar HRM's are only for steady-state cardio and don't work well unless your HR is raised, so it won't work well for weight lifting or for use all day.

    I've been looking fat Fitbit to get a better idea of my TDEE an the bonus of the sleep monitor. I've kinda decided on either the Fitbit One or the Flex but I haven't purchased one yet. You wear them all day and they both do the same thing, but you wear the Flex on your wrist and the One is more like a pedometer that you'd wear on your waistband or on your bra.

    I found my Polar FT4 online for about $65 and you can find deals on them sometimes. The Fitbits run about $100 and I haven't seen any difference in pricing between retailers or online.

    Gadgets can be really motivating - Have fun!
  • scrapjen
    scrapjen Posts: 387 Member
    I LOVE my Fitbit ... it has so many interesting graphs, you can actually SEE your day, the spikes as your activity level is up. It's very motivating to me, and the total burn each day is basically the TDEE everyone talks about here. The Fitbit picks up ALL your daily activity, and sometimes that will really open your eyes as to how active you are (or are not) when you are not exercising.

    I did buy a Polar FT4 and it does provide some good feedback too. But you have to put it on before each workout (I do SEVERAL workouts during the day, so this actually is a big deal for me) ... and it's just a little uncomfortable for me. I'm always very aware that I am wearing it. The Fitbit is just a part of me, I wear it all the time (even to sleep, as it tracks that too).
  • I use the Polar FT for swimming and as far as I know, the calorie burn is accurate. I also use it to stay in my target heart range while exercising.
    I use the Fitbit One daily to track steps and sleep. I like the Fitbit for determining exercise calories because it deducts your base calorie burn from the "extra" calories before determining how many calories to add to your diet for the day.
    They're both great, I use them for different reasons.
  • LindseySprake
    LindseySprake Posts: 333 Member
    I have a Polar & LOVE it!

    Not used a fitbit but a girl at my gym does and sounds like its geared more towards runners??

    X
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    I have a Polar & LOVE it!

    Not used a fitbit but a girl at my gym does and sounds like its geared more towards runners??

    X

    Quite the opposite. HRMs are best suited for steady state cardio like running. The Fitbit tracks all the little stuff you do throughout the day.
  • butreally12
    butreally12 Posts: 67 Member
    I know this is kind of off topic, but for those of you who have responded saying you use the polar ft4 or ft7... has anybody found it to OVERrestimate calories burned? I made a post about this earlier but did not receive any definite answers. I have my height, weight, gender, and age set correctly and it seems to work for other activities, but for jogging it records a crazy burn! (Today, for instance, I jogged 6 miles and it said I burned 849 calories.) Anyone?? :)
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    I know this is kind of off topic, but for those of you who have responded saying you use the polar ft4 or ft7... has anybody found it to OVERrestimate calories burned? I made a post about this earlier but did not receive any definite answers. I have my height, weight, gender, and age set correctly and it seems to work for other activities, but for jogging it records a crazy burn! (Today, for instance, I jogged 6 miles and it said I burned 849 calories.) Anyone?? :)

    Happens to a lot of people. HRMs guess at your VO2max, a measure of how efficiently your body can deliver oxygen to body tissues. As you get more fit, your VO2max goes up. If the HRM thinks your VO2max is higher than it is, it's going to assume that you're delivering much more oxygen to your tissues, and therefore burning many more calories, than you actually are.
  • momswanson
    momswanson Posts: 76 Member
    Wow, that does sound high, what was your pace, were you running up hill? These all could affect your burn. I burn about 100 calories a mile when I run, on average. I have an FT 7.
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    BTW, a woman of your size will burn about 80-100 calories per mile, max, while jogging. 849 calories for a 6 mile jog is well outside that range.
  • ChangingAmanda
    ChangingAmanda Posts: 486 Member
    I have both and they serve different purposes. I use the FitBit to track my daily steps and find myself walking extra if I'm near my goal. It is not good for tracking my workouts which are HIIT circuit usually incorporating core and weight work. I do wear it during workouts because we will often run during our session and want to count the steps. For workouts I use a Polar FT4 HRM and found the MFP calculations were nearly double what my HRM calculated. Also, I do not sync my FitBit to MFP because I didn't like it automatically adjusting my calories and knew there was a bit of doubling between FitBit and my HRM since I wear the FitBit during workouts.
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    I have both and they serve different purposes. I use the FitBit to track my daily steps and find myself walking extra if I'm near my goal. It is not good for tracking my workouts which are HIIT circuit usually incorporating core and weight work. I do wear it during workouts because we will often run during our session and want to count the steps. For workouts I use a Polar FT4 HRM and found the MFP calculations were nearly double what my HRM calculated. Also, I do not sync my FitBit to MFP because I didn't like it automatically adjusting my calories and knew there was a bit of doubling between FitBit and my HRM since I wear the FitBit during workouts.

    FYI, HRMs do not estimate accurately for HIIT, and they are extremely bad for circuit training and resistance training/lifting.
  • ChangingAmanda
    ChangingAmanda Posts: 486 Member
    I have both and they serve different purposes. I use the FitBit to track my daily steps and find myself walking extra if I'm near my goal. It is not good for tracking my workouts which are HIIT circuit usually incorporating core and weight work. I do wear it during workouts because we will often run during our session and want to count the steps. For workouts I use a Polar FT4 HRM and found the MFP calculations were nearly double what my HRM calculated. Also, I do not sync my FitBit to MFP because I didn't like it automatically adjusting my calories and knew there was a bit of doubling between FitBit and my HRM since I wear the FitBit during workouts.

    FYI, HRMs do not estimate accurately for HIIT, and they are extremely bad for circuit training and resistance training/lifting.

    Our sessions are usually 12-15 stations with a mix of cardio, weight resistance (body weight or plates/bars/bells), and core. We work for 40 seconds going as fast as possible or doing as many reps with as high a weight as possible depending on the exercise. We then have a 20 second rest session to catch our breath and move to the next station. Once I warm up, my heart rate is in the same range as it would be if I were doing steady state cardio like rowing or treadmill. Why would my HRM not be as accurate in this situation?
  • jonnythan
    jonnythan Posts: 10,161 Member
    I have both and they serve different purposes. I use the FitBit to track my daily steps and find myself walking extra if I'm near my goal. It is not good for tracking my workouts which are HIIT circuit usually incorporating core and weight work. I do wear it during workouts because we will often run during our session and want to count the steps. For workouts I use a Polar FT4 HRM and found the MFP calculations were nearly double what my HRM calculated. Also, I do not sync my FitBit to MFP because I didn't like it automatically adjusting my calories and knew there was a bit of doubling between FitBit and my HRM since I wear the FitBit during workouts.

    FYI, HRMs do not estimate accurately for HIIT, and they are extremely bad for circuit training and resistance training/lifting.

    Our sessions are usually 12-15 stations with a mix of cardio, weight resistance (body weight or plates/bars/bells), and core. We work for 40 seconds going as fast as possible or doing as many reps with as high a weight as possible depending on the exercise. We then have a 20 second rest session to catch our breath and move to the next station. Once I warm up, my heart rate is in the same range as it would be if I were doing steady state cardio like rowing or treadmill. Why would my HRM not be as accurate in this situation?

    A variety of reasons. First of all, weight training increases your heart rate significantly, but does not burn many calories. Certainly not as many as the heart rate would suggest. This is why HRMs are terrible for any weight training.

    On top of that, the heart rate induced by HIIT doesn't correspond well to calorie burn either.

    The main reason for this is that tissue demands for oxygen can skyrocket for short periods of time during HIIT and weight training, but since it takes so long for blood to actually get from your lungs to those tissues heart rate is somewhat artificially inflated. The reason HRMs work well for steady-state cardio is that tissue demands are constant for longer periods of time, so heart rate can settle into a blood volume that works for the current demand over a while.

    HRMs are intended for steady state cardio. It's only in steady state cardio that your heart rate can be reliably converted to a calorie burn, assuming you know what your VO2max is and the HRM is aware of it. They're not good at HIIT and weight training.
  • butreally12
    butreally12 Posts: 67 Member
    Wow, that does sound high, what was your pace, were you running up hill? These all could affect your burn. I burn about 100 calories a mile when I run, on average. I have an FT 7.

    My pace was around 9:15-9:30, and there were several hills I ran up... but also several I ran up! Yeah, I think 100 calories is what most people estimate, which is why I'm thinking something is not right!
  • butreally12
    butreally12 Posts: 67 Member
    BTW, a woman of your size will burn about 80-100 calories per hour, max, while jogging. 849 calories for a 6 mile jog is well outside that range.

    That's definitely more what I was thinking it should be. Is there a way to fix this on my HRM, or is it basically useless? I do like seeing my average heart rate, but I mainly got it to get a more accurate picture of how many calories I burn in each workout. Thanks!!
  • jacksonpt
    jacksonpt Posts: 10,413 Member
    BTW, a woman of your size will burn about 80-100 calories per hour, max, while jogging. 849 calories for a 6 mile jog is well outside that range.

    That's definitely more what I was thinking it should be. Is there a way to fix this on my HRM, or is it basically useless? I do like seeing my average heart rate, but I mainly got it to get a more accurate picture of how many calories I burn in each workout. Thanks!!

    Try increasing the max HR setting. In theory, the HRM will think you aren't working as hard and will then calculate a lower calorie burn. But I don't know anything about the polars, or the formulas they use, so that's just an educated guess.
  • I run/jog everyday, but my main workout is the Les Mills Combat program. Polar FT4 or FT7 work well for that? It seems like a lot of the feedback I'm getting suggests its mainly used for running/walking/swimming or straight cardio- but would it track accurately for all the different movements in the combat workout or other Beachbody fitness program?