Do you trust your Fitbit?
temazur
Posts: 76 Member
I've been using my Fitbit for almost two years, have had it synched to MFP.
Lately I've been more active and greatly exceeding my step goal.
Fitbit adds calories in under exercise if you synch it and I've mostly ignored those and not eaten them back very often. Lately, it's been adding up to 1000 calories a day.
This can't be right. I'm afraid to eat even half of those back because there's no way walking is adding that much more to what I should be eating.
Can anyone add any insight? Is there a setting I need to tinker with?
Lately I've been more active and greatly exceeding my step goal.
Fitbit adds calories in under exercise if you synch it and I've mostly ignored those and not eaten them back very often. Lately, it's been adding up to 1000 calories a day.
This can't be right. I'm afraid to eat even half of those back because there's no way walking is adding that much more to what I should be eating.
Can anyone add any insight? Is there a setting I need to tinker with?
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Replies
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I'm assuming since you are in this forum you are not maintaining but trying to lose still. Is MFP set to sedentary? If so, I'd recommend you eta back 1/2 the calories for a few weeks and see how that affects your loss.0
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I bought a FitBit Charge in December and really don't think it's accurate at all. The HR is never even close when I am exercising. For example, I was Kickboxing and it said I was at 92 BPM. My heart monitor said I was at 140.0
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I bought a FitBit Charge in December and really don't think it's accurate at all. The HR is never even close when I am exercising. For example, I was Kickboxing and it said I was at 92 BPM. My heart monitor said I was at 140.
The HR monitoring has always been questionable, but the persons post was referring to the over all TDEE earned from steps, which most people find fairly accurate.0 -
I've had a Fitbit (first the Force, and now the Surge) for years. I have learned much about them, and think I can give an informed answer to your question.
First, understand that the Fitbit is a tool, and it has limitations like any other tool. I found that the Force (which did not have a heart rate monitor) did a decent job of estimating my calories burned. My Surge overestimates my daily calories burned by 1000-1500. For example, on March 11 I had 19,000 steps (walking), didn't lift weights, and Fitbit estimated I burned 3974 calories. I'm a 5'7 male and I weigh 160 pounds; my BMR is about 1600 calories per day. To say I burned ~2400 calories from walking that much is ludicrous. That's supposedly 125 calories per 1000 steps. No way. Probably more like 50 calories per 1k steps, which would mean I burned about 2500 calories TOTAL that day, 1500 less than what Fitbit reported.
It's staggering how wrong it is in that regard, well outside the tolerance of +/- 10% that Fitbit says I should allow. So, I have to ignore it.
It's great for step counting, GPS tracking a hike or whatever, showing floors climbed, and other metrics. But calories burned are just plain bad, and I blame the HR monitor. Either the HR monitor doesn't accurately capture my HR, or there's a screw-up in the function that converts heart beats to calories.
I can look past this and determine my calories burned in other ways, but if I do decide I want a different Fitbit some day I'd probably get one without HR.0 -
So far, my charge HR has been accurate. I set mfp to lose 1lb/week, have my fitbit set to sedentary (to lose 1lb/week), and my TDEE -500 has been accurate so far (losing ~1lb per week). I eat all the calorie adjustment back.
Do you have negative adjustments enabled? Perhaps your fitbit and mfp are set up with different goals or activity levels? I used to get huge adjustments when mfp calorie goal was too low.0 -
No, my husband threw it in the trash 3 years ago now.0
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My fitbit is only accurate with the heart rate for non contact stuff like cycling. With anything involving impact like heavy bag work or quick hand movements it's way off. I think it's just a limitation of tracking heart rate by shining a light at your skin0
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Mine seems to be pretty accurate although it has a hard time with non step-based activity. As a result, it tends to underestimate my calories burned on days I do aerial silks or pole fitness.0
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There might be a setting mix up in there somewhere. I'm new to the fitbit realm as I just got a Blaze but even on my heavy burn days (10 mile + run with yoga in the evening) I don't seen adjustments much above the 500 mark. I've seen a few other people complain about fitbit making outrageous adjustments but I haven't heard of a specific issue causing it.0
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My charge HR has been accurate in step counts. I had trouble at first until I did the stride test. I also had doubts about the heart rate/calorie burns. Pushing up the band about an inch on my arm during walking workouts has helped alot. I also start/stop the timer whenever I am seriously walking as this gives me the steps, HR and calories for that time only. Pretty cool to see on the fitbit graph too. Honestly, I have found mine to be very accurate but it also doesn't give me crazy numbers that others have been seeing.0
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I've found mine to be very accurate. I got my fitbit ChargeHR after I started maintaining and I've continued successfully maintaining by eating back the calories its given me. The adjustments are going to depend a lot on your activity setting in MFP. I've seen adjustments as high as 2000 calories (running a half marathon and then walking around Disney for 10+ hours) since my activity level is set to sedentary.0
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itsthehumidity wrote: »I've had a Fitbit (first the Force, and now the Surge) for years. I have learned much about them, and think I can give an informed answer to your question.
First, understand that the Fitbit is a tool, and it has limitations like any other tool. I found that the Force (which did not have a heart rate monitor) did a decent job of estimating my calories burned. My Surge overestimates my daily calories burned by 1000-1500. For example, on March 11 I had 19,000 steps (walking), didn't lift weights, and Fitbit estimated I burned 3974 calories. I'm a 5'7 male and I weigh 160 pounds; my BMR is about 1600 calories per day. To say I burned ~2400 calories from walking that much is ludicrous. That's supposedly 125 calories per 1000 steps. No way. Probably more like 50 calories per 1k steps, which would mean I burned about 2500 calories TOTAL that day, 1500 less than what Fitbit reported.
It's staggering how wrong it is in that regard, well outside the tolerance of +/- 10% that Fitbit says I should allow. So, I have to ignore it.
It's great for step counting, GPS tracking a hike or whatever, showing floors climbed, and other metrics. But calories burned are just plain bad, and I blame the HR monitor. Either the HR monitor doesn't accurately capture my HR, or there's a screw-up in the function that converts heart beats to calories.
I can look past this and determine my calories burned in other ways, but if I do decide I want a different Fitbit some day I'd probably get one without HR.
I just love the challenges. Just like the situation above yesterday I mostly walked. For 21k steps I got a fitburn burn of about 3100. I also wear a Garmin and I got a total burn of about 2300 for the same activities and approximate steps. It works great for some people. I guess the key is are you losing weight or maintaining? Then trust it. If you are not, then dont.0 -
I've only walked 356 steps today , according to mine wrist band i've burned 868 calories. There's no way that's possible. However once I connect it to my app it tells me my active calories are 7 which sounds more reasonable.....i have a different brand tho.0
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Mine has nver been accurate. It says my hr is always around 70ish, but I have tachycardia and my normal resting hr is 130 lol0
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I have the Blaze and I think it's accurate-ish most days. (Except the HRM, I don't trust that at all). But that being said, I have it and love it for its functions, usefulness, and motivation, not because I think the numbers it gives me are totally accurate and can be taken as such. They are just for the sake of information, taken with a grain of salt.0
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I've only walked 356 steps today , according to mine wrist band i've burned 868 calories. There's no way that's possible. However once I connect it to my app it tells me my active calories are 7 which sounds more reasonable.....i have a different brand tho.
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I find my charge HR fairly accurate. I have successfully lost weight eating back most of my exercise calories. If im not hungry I won't eat all my calories back, but if im having a day when I am hungry I will eat them all. I veiw it mostly as a weight loss tool, it gives me a rough idea how many calories I burn. I don't think any of these gadgets are ever 100% accurate. Also make sure you have your fit bit set up correctly. I had to change the sensitivity level on mine.0
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I don't really trust the calorie burn it gives me, particularly if I'm doing a lot of intentional exercise. I have looked at MET calculations for various types of exercises (especially walking), and it seems like my Fitbit overestimates my exercise intensity fairly often.0
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How is your weight in comparison to what it should be, based on the additional deficit? Are you losing on schedule, faster or slower? That is the best way to tell assuming you have 2-3 months of data to work with. In general, if you have MFP set to sedentary and you're actually fairly active, you should expect a significant adjustment.
Personally when I'm very accurate on my diary/food logging and eat what my Fitbit shows I burn, I maintain. If I eat less, I lose. (I'm in maintenance.) For what its worth, I have the One. I know nothing about the newer models with HR function.I've been using my Fitbit for almost two years, have had it synched to MFP.
Lately I've been more active and greatly exceeding my step goal.
Fitbit adds calories in under exercise if you synch it and I've mostly ignored those and not eaten them back very often. Lately, it's been adding up to 1000 calories a day.
This can't be right. I'm afraid to eat even half of those back because there's no way walking is adding that much more to what I should be eating.
Can anyone add any insight? Is there a setting I need to tinker with?
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I have the One (had a Flex before that) and have found it to be accurate. I was skeptical at first because the numbers seemed high, but I don't gain weight when I eat as much as it tells me to eat.0
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I have a couple dif trackers (won one) and one is a fitbit...I never use it...I was shovelling snow for 45mins...gave me 6 active mins..psh.
Now my other one I did test and when it said I should have lost 1/2lb a week I did....consistently.0 -
I think it's different for every person and there's some trial and error involved in seeing how well it works for you. I've found the burn it gives me to be really accurate. The math has been adding up almost exactly when I eat back 75-100% of my fitbit calories. It adds about a 1000 for me each day.
I'm currently 245 pounds and 6'4''. I'm a 32 YO male and I walk about five miles a day (12,00-15,000 steps)0 -
The calories shown on my Charge HR seems pretty accurate for me. I've verified the step count several times and it's spot on. I've never synced mine with MFP since I don't log food here so not sure what it would show there.
It does seem to get comically confused re: the number of stairs when I hike up a mountain.
The number of active minutes rarely shows anything on mine. I don't really care about that so I've never called tech support about it.0 -
I threw my fitbit chargehr in the trash it was so inaccurate in mt step counts, it was off by 5000 steps a day from my previous pedometer Polar loop. It said I climbed 57 flights of stairs when I only walked 2 miles on a windy day save your money.0
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I don't sync up my fitbit with MFP because the calorie burn it comes up with is never accurate (at least for me).0
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I've only walked 356 steps today , according to mine wrist band i've burned 868 calories. There's no way that's possible. However once I connect it to my app it tells me my active calories are 7 which sounds more reasonable.....i have a different brand tho.
@veliia - That calorie burn includes your BMR. So it's BMR (from midnight to time you looked at it) + steps = 868 cal0 -
I've had my Charge HR since last summer and it has been pretty accurate. It's linked to MFP and I eat at least half my exercise calories back and I've been losing consistently. I love it.0
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There might be a setting mix up in there somewhere. I'm new to the fitbit realm as I just got a Blaze but even on my heavy burn days (10 mile + run with yoga in the evening) I don't seen adjustments much above the 500 mark. I've seen a few other people complain about fitbit making outrageous adjustments but I haven't heard of a specific issue causing it.
What's your activity level set to on MFP?
Large adjustments typically mean someone has their activity level set to low.
Mine is set to lightly active and my adjustments start getting close to 1000 when I'm in the 18k - 22k step range.0 -
I've only walked 356 steps today , according to mine wrist band i've burned 868 calories. There's no way that's possible. However once I connect it to my app it tells me my active calories are 7 which sounds more reasonable.....i have a different brand tho.
As another poster said, it is giving you the total calories burned for the day. You burn calories being alive, and that is what it is telling you.
I have had a fit bit for 3 years. First a One, then the Force, now the Charge HR. I love having a fit bit. It is the best motivator to get me moving more. I struggled at first to get 10,000 steps, thought it was impossible. Now I get over 20,000 daily. I rarely pay attention to calories burned, seldom eat back calories, find it counter productive for me. I like the HR feature. When I got the Charge HR, my resting heart rate was about 68, now it is between 47-49. I am an old lady (64). Was morbidly obese 4 years ago. Borderline high blood pressure. Out of breath walking up a flight of stairs. Now, normal weight, normal blood pressure, and moving over 20,000 steps/day, all through diet and exercise. I will have a fit bit the rest of my life, it gets me moving, and that is all good for me. The accuracy or inaccuracy is moot point, it makes me move more. Maybe not for everyone, but a perfect tool for me.
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I just started to use my blaze, but my previous Fitbit trackers (flex and surge) were extremely accurate, as long as I logged my non step exercises separately. The NEAT calories tended to be spot on, in that I consistently gained or lost within 10% or so of what was predicted based on my calorie balance.0
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