Set for 7 May, the $99.99 tracker has no display or GPS, weighs 12 grams, lasts seven days and includes three months of Google Health Premium.
Fitbit Air tracks heart rate, steps, blood oxygen, skin temperature and calories, while Gemini-powered Google Health Coach offers personalised fitness, sleep, recovery and nutrition guidance.
Google is positioning the device against screenless rivals such as WHOOP, while reviving Fitbit’s simpler roots with core tracking available without an ongoing subscription.
As Google's AI coach tracks your health, is it a wellness tool or an unregulated data privacy risk?
Can an AI truly manage your health, or is this a high-tech solution for problems that still need a human touch?