Are Fitness Trackers Actually Good for You?
Are Fitness Trackers Actually Good for You? 5 Ways They Can Do More Harm Than Good
Fitness trackers, smartwatches, and wearable devices have become one of the most popular health tools of the modern age. Millions of people strap them on every morning with the same intention: to become fitter, healthier, and more aware of how their body moves through the day.
And for many people, they deliver. A gentle vibration reminding you to stand up. A step count that motivates an evening walk. A sleep score that encourages an earlier bedtime. These nudges can make a real difference, particularly for people who are just beginning to build healthier habits.
But there is a side of fitness tracking that rarely appears in product advertisements — and it deserves serious attention.
Behind the sleek interfaces, gamified streaks, and congratulatory badges lies a system that does far more than passively record your behaviour. It actively shapes it. And for a growing number of users, that shaping process is producing anxiety, obsession, shame, and in some cases, disordered relationships with food, movement, and rest.
Here is what the research reveals — and why it matters for anyone who wears a fitness tracker or is thinking about getting one.
The Promise vs. The Reality
The fitness technology industry is built on a compelling promise: that by measuring your body, you can optimise it. Track your steps, calories, heart rate, sleep stages, and stress levels, and you will gain the insight you need to live better.
There is genuine evidence supporting some of these claims. Wearable activity trackers have been shown to increase physical activity levels in certain populations, particularly sedentary adults who benefit from the awareness and accountability that tracking provides. For people who struggle to maintain motivation, the visual feedback of a daily step count or a closing activity ring can provide the external push they need to move more.
But the picture becomes significantly more complicated when we look at what happens over time — and at the psychological mechanisms through which trackers actually influence behaviour.
5 Ways Fitness Tracking Can Become Harmful
1. The 10,000 Steps Myth
One of the most enduring features of fitness trackers is the 10,000-step daily goal. It appears on virtually every major wearable device as the standard measure of a sufficiently active day. Most users assume it is grounded in decades of scientific research.
It is not.
The 10,000-step target originated as a marketing slogan for a Japanese pedometer sold in the 1960s. The name of the device — Manpo-kei — translates loosely to "10,000 steps meter," and the number was chosen for its commercial appeal, not its scientific validity.
Contemporary research suggests that for many adults, particularly those over 60, meaningful health benefits begin at around 7,000 steps per day, with returns diminishing beyond that point. For younger, more active individuals, higher targets may be appropriate. But a single universal number cannot — and should not — apply to everyone.
The practical problem is that the 10,000-step standard creates a distorted picture of what meaningful movement looks like. A person who swims for 45 minutes, completes a strength training session, or spends an hour doing yoga may hit fewer than 5,000 steps and feel as though they have failed their fitness goals for the day — even though they have done something profoundly beneficial for their health.
Trackers measure what they can easily count. Steps are visible. Strength, mobility, flexibility, rehabilitation exercises, and recovery work are largely invisible to a step counter, but they may be exactly what a person's body needs.
2. The Calorie Counting Problem
Many fitness trackers estimate both the calories burned during activity and, when combined with nutrition apps, the calories consumed through food. This combination creates a powerful but potentially dangerous feedback loop.
Research consistently shows that wearable devices produce significant inaccuracies in calorie burn estimates — with some studies finding errors of 20 to 93 percent depending on the device and the activity. Despite this unreliability, users frequently treat these numbers as precise facts and make dietary decisions accordingly.
For people with a predisposition toward disordered eating, or those in recovery from conditions like anorexia or orthorexia, the constant quantification of food and exercise can become deeply destabilising. Studies have found associations between intensive calorie tracking and the development or worsening of disordered eating patterns, particularly in younger women and adolescents.
Even for those without pre-existing vulnerabilities, the fixation on calorie balance can shift the relationship with food from one of enjoyment and nourishment to one of calculation and compensation — a subtle but meaningful change that can erode long-term wellbeing.
3. Gamification and the Anxiety of Broken Streaks
Modern fitness trackers are heavily gamified. Streaks, badges, challenges, leaderboards, and congratulatory notifications are all designed to harness the psychology of reward and habit formation in the service of keeping users engaged.
For many people, these features work as intended. The satisfaction of closing an activity ring or maintaining a 30-day streak provides genuine motivation.
But gamification has a shadow side. When the streak becomes the goal rather than the health outcome it was designed to support, users can find themselves exercising through illness, injury, or exhaustion simply to avoid breaking a record. The anxiety of a missed day can become disproportionate to any real health consequence. Some users report feeling genuine distress — not just mild disappointment — when a target is not met.
This is a recognised psychological pattern. When external rewards replace intrinsic motivation, the underlying desire to move for genuine enjoyment or wellbeing can erode. The activity that once felt like self-care begins to feel like a obligation — one enforced by a device on the wrist.
4. The Comparison Trap
Many fitness trackers include social features that allow users to share their activity data with friends, family, or online communities. These features are framed as sources of support, accountability, and healthy competition.
In practice, they can become something else entirely.
Constant exposure to other people's step counts, workout summaries, and fitness achievements creates fertile ground for unfavourable comparison — particularly for users who are newer to exercise, managing health conditions, or going through periods of reduced capacity. The visibility of others' performance can make ordinary activity feel inadequate, and rest days feel like failures.
For people already prone to social comparison or low self-esteem, the public display of fitness data can be actively harmful rather than motivating.
5. Medicalising Normal Human Variation
The human body is not a machine that operates at a fixed, optimisable output. Sleep quality, heart rate, energy levels, and activity capacity vary naturally from day to day based on stress, hormonal cycles, illness, seasons, age, and countless other factors.
Fitness trackers present this natural variation as data to be acted upon. A lower-than-usual heart rate variability score becomes a signal to rest. A disrupted sleep stage pattern becomes a problem to be solved. A drop in activity compared to last week becomes evidence of decline.
For some users, this level of bodily surveillance generates chronic low-level anxiety about normal fluctuations that would otherwise pass unnoticed. Rather than developing a more attuned relationship with their body, they become dependent on external validation from a device — and anxious when that data does not align with their goals.
There is also growing concern about the appropriate boundaries between consumer wellness technology and medical monitoring. Fitness trackers are not medical devices, and their data should not be interpreted as such. Yet many users treat tracker readings with a level of authority that the underlying technology does not justify.
A Healthier Approach to Fitness Tracking
None of this means fitness trackers are inherently harmful, or that people who find them useful should stop using them. For many people, they remain a valuable and genuinely positive tool.
The key is intentionality. Using a tracker as a loose source of information and occasional motivation is very different from using it as the primary arbiter of whether a day's movement was worthwhile. Some practical approaches that can help:
Treat targets as guidelines, not rules. The 10,000-step goal is a suggestion, not a medical prescription. Adjust targets based on your own circumstances, health status, and what your body actually needs.
Recognise that not all movement is counted. Strength training, yoga, stretching, rehabilitation work, and active rest all contribute meaningfully to health, even when they do not register impressively on a step counter or calorie tracker.
Take regular breaks from tracking. Scheduled days or weeks without data collection can help reset the relationship with movement and restore intrinsic motivation.
Pay attention to emotional responses. If a tracker consistently makes you feel anxious, inadequate, or compelled to exercise despite pain or illness, that is important information about whether the device is helping or harming your wellbeing.
Seek professional support if needed. If tracking has contributed to disordered eating, compulsive exercise, or significant anxiety, speaking with a healthcare professional or therapist is an important step.
Final Thoughts
Fitness technology has genuine potential to support healthier lifestyles. But technology designed to optimise behaviour is most beneficial when used with clear-eyed awareness of its limitations and its psychological effects.
Movement is not a number. Health is not a streak. And a life well-lived cannot be fully captured by the data on a wristband.
The most sustainable relationship with exercise is one built on how your body feels, what it needs, and what genuinely brings you joy — with or without a device to measure it.
Disclaimer: This article is intended for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical, psychological, or clinical advice. The views expressed are based on published research and expert commentary. If you are experiencing anxiety, disordered eating, or compulsive exercise behaviours related to fitness tracking or otherwise, please consult a qualified healthcare professional or mental health practitioner. Always seek personalised guidance from a medical professional before making significant changes to your exercise or nutrition routine.
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