Fitbit Seems to Be Giving Me Too Many Calories
randilast
Posts: 99 Member
Hello, I was wondering if anyone else had experienced this and how you handled it? I got a Fitbit Flex on Friday and I've worn it everyday since. I synced it with myfitnesspal but I feel like it's crediting me with too many burned calories. For example, on Saturday I worked my second job (retail) and it was crazy busy. I was running around a lot and carrying things and I know I definitely walked over 10,000 steps in those 4 1/2 hours (had second pedometer on my show) but I don't believe I burned 1,100 calories doing that. And I was wearing my Fitbit on my non-dominant hand!
I'm keeping my calorie intake goal to the original one myfitnesspal gave me and not "eating back" the ones earned according to Fitbit. But how can I make certain it's not overestimating my activity level?
Thanks for any help!
I'm keeping my calorie intake goal to the original one myfitnesspal gave me and not "eating back" the ones earned according to Fitbit. But how can I make certain it's not overestimating my activity level?
Thanks for any help!
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Replies
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I've been using a FitBit off and on for almost two years and I actually think it's fairly accurate. If I stay within the calories it gives me I lose weight.0
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I dont think you can really tell if it is overestimating, however, if you imagine yourself at the gym for 4.5hours, it is very well true that you burnt 1100 calories.
I think the only way to tell is if you get another calorie expenditure device and compare the numbers - or you can just assume a 10% over estimation in the numbers.
When i first got my fitbit one, i was apprehensive - but it did work. I did eventually give it away, as I wanted something with higher accuracy, so I went with the bodymedia armband.0 -
It doesn't just measure the calories burned in that 4 1/2 hours…it the calories you have burned throughout the entire day. Since I have gotten my Fitbit I've felt it was accurate in how many calories I have burned throughout the day. Some days when I am more active I get to my calorie goal faster, some days it takes until later at night. The 1100 calories is your steps, plus the calories you have burned all throughout the day…at 5'1" and 165 lbs I burn about 2200 calories in a day1
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I find my flex to be very accurate. I've been wearing it since before Christmas and by sticking to it's calories I lost four lbs and then have lost the Christmas weight gain already!0
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I kind of have the same issue. I got my Fitbit Flex for Christmas. I have my MFP activity level set to "low" since I work a desk job. It seems like even on a regular work day when I'm not that active Fitbit is giving me extra calories. So confused!1
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Mexicanbigfoot wrote: »I kind of have the same issue. I got my Fitbit Flex for Christmas. I have my MFP activity level set to "low" since I work a desk job. It seems like even on a regular work day when I'm not that active Fitbit is giving me extra calories. So confused!
I work a desk job too and have MFP set to sedentary since I don't move much, I find it makes my Fitbit that much more accurate.
Also, you can change the settings on the Fitbit to give you a more conservative calorie estimate if you think it's being too high.0 -
Mexicanbigfoot wrote: »I kind of have the same issue. I got my Fitbit Flex for Christmas. I have my MFP activity level set to "low" since I work a desk job. It seems like even on a regular work day when I'm not that active Fitbit is giving me extra calories. So confused!
https://help.fitbit.com/articles/en_US/Help_article/How-does-Fitbit-know-how-many-calories-I-ve-burned0 -
Fitbit's little calorie counter includes the calories you burn to be alive in its totals and starts at midnight every day. When you wake in the morning, you'll have a few hundred calories burned already due to your resting metabolic rate.
If you didn't look at the calorie total before your shift, then compare that to the post shift total and see a difference of 1000 calories between those two data points then the odds are you didn't burn that much in 4.5 hours ... it was a total to that point in the day.
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Was your Fitbit adjustment 1100? How many miles or steps did you walk that day? For me to get an adjustment that high, I'd have to walk somewhere around 11 miles above a sedentary day, which would be maybe 25k steps. Which is a lot. But retail can do that.
I've used Fitbits for years and the calorie estimates work for me but common sense tells me they typically underestimate your base burn and over-credit exercise, probably by design to be more motivational. I don't really burn an extra 100+ calories each mile I walk based on other estimators, and I also don't really only burn 1300ish calories on a sedentary day. And I don't work in retail so the over-crediting isn't really an issue.0 -
Thank you to everyone who has responded! dakotababy, thanks for the tip for assuming a 10% overestimation. It makes sense to do that. mexicanbigfoot, I work a desk job during the week as well and I've been keeping an eye on Fitbit to see how it compares. I believe with some fine tuning (courtesy of the link provided by dunnodunno) it's more accurate now.0
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WalkingAlong wrote: »Was your Fitbit adjustment 1100? How many miles or steps did you walk that day? For me to get an adjustment that high, I'd have to walk somewhere around 11 miles above a sedentary day, which would be maybe 25k steps. Which is a lot. But retail can do that.
I've used Fitbits for years and the calorie estimates work for me but common sense tells me they typically underestimate your base burn and over-credit exercise, probably by design to be more motivational. I don't really burn an extra 100+ calories each mile I walk based on other estimators, and I also don't really only burn 1300ish calories on a sedentary day. And I don't work in retail so the over-crediting isn't really an issue.
I'm currently challenging myself to do 20 minutes of Zumba at home on my lunch break and it's fun to see how active I am during those minutes. I do log the exercise on MFP and according to tutorials that's supposed to prevent double counting of steps.
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disconnect the fitbit from MFP. It will save you a lot of headache.0
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WalkingAlong wrote: »Was your Fitbit adjustment 1100? How many miles or steps did you walk that day? For me to get an adjustment that high, I'd have to walk somewhere around 11 miles above a sedentary day, which would be maybe 25k steps. Which is a lot. But retail can do that.
I've used Fitbits for years and the calorie estimates work for me but common sense tells me they typically underestimate your base burn and over-credit exercise, probably by design to be more motivational. I don't really burn an extra 100+ calories each mile I walk based on other estimators, and I also don't really only burn 1300ish calories on a sedentary day. And I don't work in retail so the over-crediting isn't really an issue.
I'm currently challenging myself to do 20 minutes of Zumba at home on my lunch break and it's fun to see how active I am during those minutes. I do log the exercise on MFP and according to tutorials that's supposed to prevent double counting of steps.
Your heart rate doesn't have to be elevated to burn calories. Look at the METs values for walking-
https://sites.google.com/site/compendiumofphysicalactivities/Activity-Categories/walking
Walking, household, less than 2mph has a METs value of 2.0, which means in tests people burned twice their BMR doing it. So if you normally burn say 80 calories an hour just to be alive, you burn 160 calories walking slowly. Walking at work, moderate pace, is more like 4 times BMR. No sweat, no elevated heart rate, but hundreds of extra calories burned.
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What are you doing with it that is work? Where is the conflict? I'm genuinely curious. I've had mine linked for 6 months now and I've never had to do any work associated with their linkage. I've also never seen any conflict.
OP- Your numbers do seem unusually high given what you've shared, retail or otherwise. I've had days where I've walked all day long and exercised and I don't think I've ever seen an adjustment that large. I hope it was an anomaly. How did it work out yesterday?
I have also heard that there can be issues for people wearing wrist-based trackers if you use your hands a lot. My friend has to take hers off to wash her hands because it goes nuts, and there have been plenty of reports of people talking about it not working well if pushing a baby stroller when walking because your hands are so steady. Still, its odd if the adjustment is so high for the 10,000 step range.0 -
brightsideofpink wrote: »I have also heard that there can be issues for people wearing wrist-based trackers if you use your hands a lot. My friend has to take hers off to wash her hands because it goes nuts, and there have been plenty of reports of people talking about it not working well if pushing a baby stroller when walking because your hands are so steady. Still, its odd if the adjustment is so high for the 10,000 step range.
And I do use my hands a lot. I work at a store where I carry a lot of items and move things around. My desk job requires me to mess with paperwork all day and my arms can sometimes feel like they're flying all over the place.
And I did receive another adjustment that's as high as the previous one. Yesterday I had an adjustment of 1,200. My steps were over 15,000 again since I went downtown with a friend for a basketball game and there was a lot of walking involved. Otherwise the adjustments are within the 300 to 500 range. I work my second job again tonight so we'll see what happens.0 -
I've been deleting the fitbit adjustment. Makes me work that much harder.0
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Depending on how many steps you did, it very well could be accurate... When I had a more active job, it would add an extra 600 calories to my day. Before I had fitbit, I wondered why I was constantly starving at work and had trouble sticking to my calorie goal. When I saw how active I was at work, I saw it made sense...0
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15000 steps and a 1300 adjustment sounds like a mistake to me. If I used a Flex and did a lot of hand-work, I'd do some tests for sure. Getting 200 steps for brushing your teeth sounds fine. Getting 1000 calories for typing- no.0
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I've done 17,000 steps with a fitbit MFP adjustment of 800 cals today - am 5'6" and 163. I wear my One clipped to my waist and think it's quite accurate - well I hope so anyway!0
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I've just set mine up and its saying I've burned 829 calories :S I've done literally nothing other than set it up and I don't know how to get it to reset!0
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Fletchie251092 wrote: »I've just set mine up and its saying I've burned 829 calories :S I've done literally nothing other than set it up and I don't know how to get it to reset!
the 829 is how many calories its estimating you've burnt so far for the day for you just living and this is normal, and how the fitbit functions. it doesn't necessarily mean that its crediting you with any additional burnt calories but tracking how much you have burnt. mfp in your setup estimates how much you'll burn and if the fitbit total burnt for the day exceeds what mfp thinks you should have burnt then it will give you extra calories for the day. no need to reset your fitbit0 -
I too disconnected my Fitbit.
I was getting frustrated that I would have a small amount of calories, like +150 before bed at 10pm. And when I woke I noticed that the day ended on a deficit of like -200 calories. It just seemed like I never knew where I was calorie-wise because it would give me too many and then take them away. Frustrating!
That is why I disconnected it and now just use it as an expensive pedometer.
David0 -
This is an old thread but I stumbled across this and wanted to put in my 2 cents. When I first started using my fitbit flex I thought the calorie adjustments were pretty accurate. Since then I've gotten pretty fit and now my resting heart beat is about 55 bpm. It seems like the calorie adjustment is now too high. It must be based on some sort of average heart rate. As I've gotten fitter and my metabolism is more efficient the adjustment has gone from spot on to a bit too high.0
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bcoonfield wrote: »This is an old thread but I stumbled across this and wanted to put in my 2 cents. When I first started using my fitbit flex I thought the calorie adjustments were pretty accurate. Since then I've gotten pretty fit and now my resting heart beat is about 55 bpm. It seems like the calorie adjustment is now too high. It must be based on some sort of average heart rate. As I've gotten fitter and my metabolism is more efficient the adjustment has gone from spot on to a bit too high.
Just curious what you are basing your calorie burn being lower because your resting HR is lower?0 -
I walked over 10000 steps today and my fitness pal only gave me an extra 140 calories. 1000 calories for walking 15000 steps seems crazy excessive to me.0
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so far today I've done 15,200 steps, which has earned me 650 extra calories. I'm set at sedentary.0
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starwhisperer6 wrote: »I walked over 10000 steps today and my fitness pal only gave me an extra 140 calories. 1000 calories for walking 15000 steps seems crazy excessive to me.
That all depends on what a persons activity level is set at among other things.0 -
I changed my setting from light to sedentary today, so I will see what it tries to give me now0
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So... I have done about 5,600 steps today. It has added 232 calories to my set 1,200 I get for the day. So does that mean if I eat 1,432 calories I could still be on a track for losing? I feel any calories I get for my fitbit, should not be eaten. I'm afraid to eat back those calories as I am losing verrryyyyyy slowly. Thoughts? I am fearful of eating back my exercise calories.0
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