Are your fitbits accurate?
Noreenmarie1234
Posts: 7,492 Member
I've been using a fitbit for about a year. (Fitbit flex) And I've found it says I burn 1600-1900 calories a day. However, I eat 2200-2600 a day and have been maintaining? I am just wondering why there is such a big difference and if anyone else has had this problem. I have my weight entered correctly and I wear it all day and night.
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I have a fitbit zip and I only use it to count steps. But it's giving me far more steps than I'm actually walking. I tested it and walked 75 steps and it gave me credit for 87. I wear it in my pocket, so I'll try clipping it to my waistband instead.0
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I use jawbone up & map my run and I also don't trust my calorie burn. As an example I walk the mall for 1.39 miles and it said I burned 309 calories. I walked a pretty steep trail huffing and puffing, sweating, red faced for 1.31 miles and it was 264 calories.
I know the jawbone and fitbit doesn't account for inclines etc. I thought map my run did but I need to check more into it.0 -
I only eat back calories tracked during workout (so I eat 1200 a day plus whatever calories burned during work out) and I've been losing weight at a good rate.1
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I use a fitbit one - seems to be pretty accurate, unless I am lifting iron - then whatever I enter seems to underestimate calories, given that I typically lose a pound or two a month when the #s say CI = CO1
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My fitbit over estimates my TDEE, the only exercise i do is walking and it says my TDEE is 2600. I've reduced my stride length and height by 2.5 inches but it hasn't made a difference. If that TDEE was correct i would have been at my goal weight eons ago.0
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It is totally inaccurate. I've had a Fitbit Flex for a year and a half. I don't base any calorie decisions on its information.
It simply serves to motivate me to be more active.2 -
ibamosaserreinas wrote: »It is totally inaccurate. I've had a Fitbit Flex for a year and a half. I don't base any calorie decisions on its information.
It simply serves to motivate me to be more active.
Does yours over or under estimate?0 -
Christine_72 wrote: »ibamosaserreinas wrote: »It is totally inaccurate. I've had a Fitbit Flex for a year and a half. I don't base any calorie decisions on its information.
It simply serves to motivate me to be more active.
Does yours over or under estimate?
It over estimates exercise calories, it under estimates distance by a lot even though I have tried adjusting stride length several times.0 -
I have a Fitbit One. It's pretty spot-on, based on over two months of accurate tracking of intake, expenditure, and my weight. The numbers match almost perfectly, I lost slightly more than the Fitbit's numbers said I should have. But I have my height 3 inches less than I actually am, as I was afraid of the Fitbit overestimating, so that might be why.0
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The models without HR underestimate for me by an avg of 200 calories per day (at least the last time I used it...which was like 2 years ago...I should see if that's changed any now that I'm at a healthy weight). The HR models seem to be right.2
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I have the Garmin Vivosmart HR. I think it does a pretty good job. Once in awhile I it think off, but because it has the heart rate monitor it does take intensity into account.0
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I use a Fitbit one and have twice checked my fitbit data against my actual weight loss and calorie intake and it's been fairly close (1st time over two months and I had lost .5kg more second time 1 month and I had lost 200g more than expected)
I enter exercise on my Fitbit that is not step based such as boxing but only log 3/4 of the time I spent doing it to allow for over estimates as some burns seem too high.
If you have more than a months Fitbit reports, an accurate intake log and your weightloss in the same time frame you can compare the data and see how accurate it is.
In the report go to calories in vs calories out, add them up for each week and then divide them by 7500, this will give you the expected kg lost (or 3500 for lb)
To work out your TDEE multiply the kg lost X 7500 then add calories eaten each week then divide this by the number of weeks
Then divide by 7 this will get you your daily tdee
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I have the Fitbit Alta (the newest one). It was underestimating my distance so I increased my stride length and now it is quite accurate. I think for me the calories are quite accurate. I am losing steadily while sometimes eating a lot but staying in calorie range.
I think the best thing for me it has encouraged me to increase my daily movement - parking far away from store, not just putting kids stuff at bottom of stairs - me actually walking it up the stairs, i have a big house - sometimes I will take two trips carrying stuff in to get more steps instead of saving everything in my arms and making it in one trip, i have the remainder to move every hour - I've been surprised how many times I've gotten sucked in to the internet and an hour has gone by. It reminds me to get up and move!0 -
I love my charge HR. It seems pretty accurate on non-active days (i.e. compared with calculators). I track each workout activity with the stopwatch. I've noticed that it reports 25% less calorie burn than the elliptical - precor will say 400 calories, but my fitbit tracked activity will say 290.
I'd say it overestimates my very active days, but I suspect it's also to do with inaccuracies in my logging. I don't weigh grilled meat, I eyeball it instead. So easy to misjudge 6 oz. Or slip up on reporting after a dinner out.0 -
It overestimates. I end up eating between 60-70 percent of my exercise calories- still plenty for dessert.0
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I feel like my Charge HR probably over estimates a bit. That said, I still love it. What I did was unsynched fitbit and MFP and only log my workouts. I still only eat back about 50-70% of those calories just in case.0
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I use a Fitbit Charge HR. I've verified that it's accurate for steps several times. I have no idea if anything else is accurate. I only wear it during the day.1
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Fitbit one was underestimating for me... but it clearly didn't track things properly either (ometimes I was getting less calories for more activity etc. Made no sense whatsoever).0
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Thanks for all the replies I find it interesting most of you have said it over estimates. For me it underestimates.0
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I have a Flex and have found it to be accurate. It helped me lose the last 15 lbs eating back exercise cal adjustments at a slight deficit, and has helped me maintain my total loss for about a year and a half now. Mine estimates my TDEE at 2200 and I usually eat close to that across the week.0
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Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »I've been using a fitbit for about a year. (Fitbit flex) And I've found it says I burn 1600-1900 calories a day. However, I eat 2200-2600 a day and have been maintaining? I am just wondering why there is such a big difference and if anyone else has had this problem. I have my weight entered correctly and I wear it all day and night.
I haven't used a Fitbit. But I was using an Apple Watch for a while. According to my Apple Watch on an active day, I would burn ~2200 calories. That's with moderate walking around and a 5 mile run. I've gotten it up to 2500 calories a few times. But on rest days, it said I'd burn only 1700 calories.
On average, my TDEE was maybe 2000-2100. While attempting to maintain, I'd end up eating well over that averaging about 2300 calories and I was losing just under a pound a week still.
So it was severely underestimating with me. I gave up on wearing it.
Fitness watches are all estimations that look at what an average person of your hieght and weight would burn. But everyone has different body composition and slightly different metabolisms so they're bound to be off for some.0 -
I find mine is spot on. I got the Blaze in May and have lost about 12 pounds, using the sync to MFP.
FYI, I've been on MFP for years and using the fitbit has kept me on track and eating enough that I don't feel like I'm starving myself. I'm really happy with it.0 -
Mine seems to over estimate my TDEE. I've been eating at around a 100-350 calorie deficit (negative adjustments enabled, estimated TDEE about 2000-2400 depending on how much I walk), and I ended up maintaining my weight between endo appointments (a 6 month period). I did lose at least one dress size though, so I could have lost a little bit that was hidden by water weight.0
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Fitbit Charge user and I find that it greatly underestimates my calorie burn during weight lifting sessions and HIIT. One example is that I manually checked my heart rate yesterday (during some cardio) and it was 137 bpm -- fitbit measured it at 68 bpm. This happens A LOT! This is, however, in alignment with reviews I've read indicating the heart rate monitors on this device can be wildly inaccurate at times. Since this is how it measures workout calories (if on "workout setting") it reasons it would underestimate the actual burn. That being said, I still use the Fitbit as one of many tools. I do not, however, base calorie consumption off of its data alone.0
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I have the fitbit hr charge. I had to alter stride length and set to dominant hand and adjust again and again until I got it the closest to being accurate. I use the HR to track my circuit training once to check the calorie burn compared to mfp estimate and it was 100 cal less than mfp so I log it that way now. The sleep feature is neat, however, it logged me as asleep during a tattoo session. Most of the features I just use as a guide and fun motivation to keep myself moving and getting outside. I work 3rd shift so this has helped me come out of my daytime hermit mode.0
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The good thing about trackers is that they may overestimate or underestimate, but it'll be consistent. You still have a base number of steps or active minutes or calories burned to use for goal-setting, and after several weeks, you can see where you land as far as device TDEE and your actual results and adjust from there.
My Charge HR initially seemed to slightly underestimate my TDEE. I lost more from November - March than it accounted for. In March, I started eating more exercise calories and started experiencing stalls, but my weight is still going down. After comparing my Fitbit to a number of online calorie calcs, I set a max of 75% exercise cals or keeping MFP set for a 1/2 lb higher rate of loss in order to eat all. In a few more weeks, I'll look at my input/output numbers again and see how my Fitbit is doing.
I'm still happy with it, and it still motivates me to move more. The HR seems fine on mine. Using machines or just taking my own pulse, both relaxing and working out, it's always within a few beats. The step counter is tons better than the old hip pedometer I had. Much lower though I am sure it gives me a few extra steps here and there.0 -
Mine seems to be accurate. I have the alta. I have it synced to mfp and absolutely eat the calories it gives me. I am still losing a pound weekly and never feel hungry.0
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Mine isn't...not with calories or heartbeat. When I exercise, it's off by 20 beats per minute0
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A very interesting question and a large number of issues are at play too!
TL;dr: accuracy will vary and a number of factors come into play... but will be relatively close for most. Eat your Fitbit calories and evaluate how badly off they appear to be. As long as you're generally heading in the right direction don't agonise too much over how fast you are achieving that: too much could be in play.
A standard way to estimate caloric consumption is to apply an activity multiplier to BMR calories.
Fitbit (just like MFP) uses the Mifflin StJeor equation to estimate your BMR calories.
MFP then uses BMR x 1.25 as an estimate for the calories of a sedentary individual, 1.4x, 1.6x, and 1.8x for lightly active, active, and very active individuals plus deliberate exercise added on top.
Fitbit assigns you just BMR x 1 calories while you're inactive. This is an expected underestimation. Most sitting/standing/keyboarding/watching TV activities come in at BMR x 1.2 or 1.3, or more.
But, Fitbit then detects your activity and assigns you more calories while you're active. You either tell it, or it guesses, at the type of activity you are doing.
I suspect that when you tell it that you did a non step related activity, it just uses the standard compendium of physical activity tables, just like MFP and many other apps do, to estimate your burn.
But when the Fitbit has hrm and accelerometer data of its own it for the time period in question, it probably goes with that!
I believe it averages your burn over a 5 minute period and then issues calories for the 5 minutes based on that average. This average appears to me to be a slight over-estimated for most people.
But most people are only active for part of the day. And when you combine the active and inactive parts of the day... lo and behold Fitbit seems to come in quite close, while encouraging people to move a bit more
But, even assuming the Fitbit was estimating perfectly for you, would you be able to tell?
First of all your calories in would have to be counted perfectly! How do you know, were you to spot a 5% error, whether it originated from Fitbit, or from your calorie counting when you mis-judged the calories for a restaurant meal, or forgot to log the couple of beers you enjoyed at a BBQ?
Then you would have to detect your weight accurately. Because of water weight (sodium, TOM, exercise related water retention) your scale weight can change 10x faster than your underlying weight level. Are you evaluating the accuracy of your Fitbit's performance based on transient water weight? Are you using a trending weight app? is the trending weight app actually accurate?
And then you would have to know your actual body composition changes.
Because yes, we can probably assume that 3500Cal = 1lb of fat change whether up or down as fat gets stored and used up very efficiently. However, 1lb of lean mass may only yield 800Cal when burned; yet, it could take 4x to 6x more Calories in order to create 1lb of muscle mass.
In practical terms what could body composition issues mean for our results?
Well, let's take a normal weight individual who just lost 4lbs on their scale this month and is ready to compare their logged calories in to their Fitbit calories out.
4lbs... this means a 14000 Cal deficit (heck my own spreadsheet below uses this assumption because you cannot actually account for body composition most of the time!)
But if 1lb of this is a water weight error, the 14,000 was only 10,500 Cal.
And if they lost at a fat to lean mass ratio of 2:1, 1.5:1, or 1:1 (all absolutely possible outcomes when restricting calories within the normal weight range), the respective caloric deficit might have been 8600, 9680, or 10400 calories.
And that doesn't even tackle the common situation where there might be a 1.75:1 fat to lean mass loss; but, even though some lean mass is lost, you also have to account for the creation of 0.25lbs of new muscle on say the arms from doing 100 push-ups a day when in the past you did zero! because that 0.25lbs by itself may have required 4000 Cal to create!
So in the end... well, you don't really know if your 4lbs was 14,000 cal or 8600 cal
Which is where my original piece of advice came in... as long as you're heading in the right direction that's good enough... and in fact I would argue that slower is better.
And in spite of all these uncertainties, yes, I did use to use something similar to the below spreadsheet to "evaluate" my Fitbit's accuracy. Since it has been stable at an under 6% over-estimate for more than a year... I've sort of stopped looking into it and take it as a given :-)
And yes, it does count extra steps when I keyboard and it does under-count steps when I walk really fast and it is also slow to react to heart rate changes... and it still keeps coming in with a substantially less than 10% error (in fact less than 6% error in my case).
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1VDmqNpLPu7sbQSochUJNXdp2F7AN15AGgkvS3zLw1GU/edit#gid=0
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