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Health wearables have exploded in popularity, promising better sleep, fitness, and recovery tracking. But with so many options—Apple Watch, Whoop, Withings, Oura, and Ultrahuman Rings—which one is actually worth your money?
More importantly, do these devices improve your health, or are they just expensive digital trophies?
In this breakdown, we’ll compare features, accuracy, HRV (Heart Rate Variability) and “strain” tracking, battery life, hidden costs, and privacy concerns—so you can make the best choice for your lifestyle.
We have come a long way since the pedometer - which I used to buy and give to my post op surgery patients to encourage them to walk.
What Do These Devices Track?Most modern wearables track heart rate, sleep, HRV, activity levels, and even blood oxygen and temperature. More than just steps - which they all track, but each device has its strengths:
A 2020 Nature Digital Medicine study found that wrist-based devices overestimate activity but underestimate calories burned, while rings tend to be more reliable for sleep and HRV.
HRV is the variation in time between heartbeats—a measure of how well your autonomic nervous system is functioning.
However, HRV is highly variable based on factors like hydration, sleep, and time of day.
How Wearables Measure HRV:
💡 Bottom Line: HRV is useful for tracking trends over time, but daily fluctuations can be misleading.
Dr. Terry Simpson's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Strain is Whoop’s proprietary score that estimates how hard your body works based on HRV, heart rate, and activity levels.
🚨 The Problem?
💡 Bottom Line: While strain tracking can help athletes fine-tune training, it’s not always meaningful for the average user.
Not all wearables are created equal.
More for our paid subscribers below - comparing battery life, hidden costs, and the overall winner.
Battery Life & Charging: The Hidden Cost of ConvenienceDevice Battery Life. Charging Time
Apple Watch 18-24 hours 1-2 hours
Whoop 4-5 days 1.5 hours
Oura Ring 4-7 days 20-80 minutes
Withings 3-4 WEEKS ~2 hours
Ultrahuman 4-6 days 1-2 hours
🔋 Withings wins by a landslide with up to a month of battery life. This allows users to wear it at night for continuous heart rate tracking, something that’s difficult to do with an Apple Watch.
Device Upfront Cost Subscription Hidden Costs
Apple Watch. $250-$800. None for basic use $10-$20/month cellular charges
Whoop Free device $30/month ($360/year) bands/sleeves
Oura Ring. $299-$549. $6/month ($72/year) Without subscription, limited data
Withings $250-$500 No subscription. None
Ultrahuman $349-$499 $8/month ($96/year)
💰 Whoop is the most expensive long-term due to its subscription model.
💰 Apple Watch requires a monthly fee if you want cellular features.
💰 Withings is the most cost-effective—one-time purchase, no subscriptions, no hidden fees.
🥇 Best for Most People: Withings – FDA-cleared, blood oxygen tracking, continuous heart rate monitoring at night, long battery life, no subscription, strong privacy protections.
🥇 Best for Fitness & Heart Health: Apple Watch (beware of cellular fees).
🥇 Best for Recovery Optimization: Whoop (if you can afford it).
🥇 Best for Sleep & Metabolic Tracking: Oura, Withings, or Ultrahuman Ring.
Wearables are great tools, but they don’t replace healthy habits.
I told Verizon that I don’t need the now $21 a month for cellular for the Apple Watch. The Withings Watch looks much nicer and easily stays on my wrist day and night.
I had Whoop for over a year and a half. It has great insight, and those who have a favorite watch (Timex, Rolex, Omega, and so forth) but want tracking might like this device. You can wear a Whoop on your sleeve and still have your fancy watch on your wrist. I am a watch fan - but day in and day out, Withings is now my go-to. But even when I am going out and put on my watch that Dad gave me, I don’t need a lot of things tracked. I can be free of the digital age.
I am not a ring fan. As a surgeon, they don’t work for me. Every surgeon loses rings to scrub laundry. Which is why many surgeons simply don’t wear rings at all.
Withings also has an entire health system with blood pressure, a scale (where I keep track of my weight), and a sleeping pad that can diagnose and track sleep apnea (FDA-cleared).
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Health wearables have exploded in popularity, promising better sleep, fitness, and recovery tracking. But with so many options—Apple Watch, Whoop, Withings, Oura, and Ultrahuman Rings—which one is actually worth your money?
More importantly, do these devices improve your health, or are they just expensive digital trophies?
In this breakdown, we’ll compare features, accuracy, HRV (Heart Rate Variability) and “strain” tracking, battery life, hidden costs, and privacy concerns—so you can make the best choice for your lifestyle.
We have come a long way since the pedometer - which I used to buy and give to my post op surgery patients to encourage them to walk.
What Do These Devices Track?Most modern wearables track heart rate, sleep, HRV, activity levels, and even blood oxygen and temperature. More than just steps - which they all track, but each device has its strengths:
A 2020 Nature Digital Medicine study found that wrist-based devices overestimate activity but underestimate calories burned, while rings tend to be more reliable for sleep and HRV.
HRV is the variation in time between heartbeats—a measure of how well your autonomic nervous system is functioning.
However, HRV is highly variable based on factors like hydration, sleep, and time of day.
How Wearables Measure HRV:
💡 Bottom Line: HRV is useful for tracking trends over time, but daily fluctuations can be misleading.
Dr. Terry Simpson's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Strain is Whoop’s proprietary score that estimates how hard your body works based on HRV, heart rate, and activity levels.
🚨 The Problem?
💡 Bottom Line: While strain tracking can help athletes fine-tune training, it’s not always meaningful for the average user.
Not all wearables are created equal.
More for our paid subscribers below - comparing battery life, hidden costs, and the overall winner.
Battery Life & Charging: The Hidden Cost of ConvenienceDevice Battery Life. Charging Time
Apple Watch 18-24 hours 1-2 hours
Whoop 4-5 days 1.5 hours
Oura Ring 4-7 days 20-80 minutes
Withings 3-4 WEEKS ~2 hours
Ultrahuman 4-6 days 1-2 hours
🔋 Withings wins by a landslide with up to a month of battery life. This allows users to wear it at night for continuous heart rate tracking, something that’s difficult to do with an Apple Watch.
Device Upfront Cost Subscription Hidden Costs
Apple Watch. $250-$800. None for basic use $10-$20/month cellular charges
Whoop Free device $30/month ($360/year) bands/sleeves
Oura Ring. $299-$549. $6/month ($72/year) Without subscription, limited data
Withings $250-$500 No subscription. None
Ultrahuman $349-$499 $8/month ($96/year)
💰 Whoop is the most expensive long-term due to its subscription model.
💰 Apple Watch requires a monthly fee if you want cellular features.
💰 Withings is the most cost-effective—one-time purchase, no subscriptions, no hidden fees.
🥇 Best for Most People: Withings – FDA-cleared, blood oxygen tracking, continuous heart rate monitoring at night, long battery life, no subscription, strong privacy protections.
🥇 Best for Fitness & Heart Health: Apple Watch (beware of cellular fees).
🥇 Best for Recovery Optimization: Whoop (if you can afford it).
🥇 Best for Sleep & Metabolic Tracking: Oura, Withings, or Ultrahuman Ring.
Wearables are great tools, but they don’t replace healthy habits.
I told Verizon that I don’t need the now $21 a month for cellular for the Apple Watch. The Withings Watch looks much nicer and easily stays on my wrist day and night.
I had Whoop for over a year and a half. It has great insight, and those who have a favorite watch (Timex, Rolex, Omega, and so forth) but want tracking might like this device. You can wear a Whoop on your sleeve and still have your fancy watch on your wrist. I am a watch fan - but day in and day out, Withings is now my go-to. But even when I am going out and put on my watch that Dad gave me, I don’t need a lot of things tracked. I can be free of the digital age.
I am not a ring fan. As a surgeon, they don’t work for me. Every surgeon loses rings to scrub laundry. Which is why many surgeons simply don’t wear rings at all.
Withings also has an entire health system with blood pressure, a scale (where I keep track of my weight), and a sleeping pad that can diagnose and track sleep apnea (FDA-cleared).
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