I walked 5,000 steps with the Apple Watch 11 vs Fitbit Air — and there's a clear winner

Close-up of the Apple Watch Series 11 next to the Fitbit Air; both are on colorful straps
(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

Apple Watch Series 11 or Fitbit Air, which popular wearable is the more competent/reliable fitness tracker? I decided to find out by performing one of my renowned head-to-head walk tests.

For this showdown, I wore the Apple Watch 11 on my left wrist and the Fitbit Air on my right wrist for a 5,000-step walk around beautiful Seattle, Washington. How do I know it was 5,000 steps? I counted every darn one, with some assistance from my trusty tally counter (one click= 100 steps).

Now, if I were a betting man (I'm not), my money would be on the Series 11 to come out victorious. Not only is it one of the best smartwatches in 2026, but it's also four times the cost of the Fitbit Air: $399 vs $99.

Then again, the Fitbit Air may be affordable, but it's also one of the best fitness trackers in 2026. Not only that, when I pitted in a separate walk test versus the Apple Watch SE 3, the Air surprisingly came out victorious. Will this be a repeat win? Read on!

Fitbit Air
Fitbit Air: $99 at Amazon

The Fitbit Air is a diminutive, comfortable fitness tracker with no screen or buttons. Just $99, it boasts nearly a week of battery and lots of health, sleep, and workout insights.

Apple Watch Series 11
Apple Watch Series 11: was $399 now $329 at Amazon

The Apple Watch Series 11 is one of the most high-tech smartwatches money can buy, with plenty of apps and features to keep you connected, healthy, safe, and fit. It also boasts a big, bright touchscreen and up to 24 hours of battery per charge.

Fitbit Air vs Whoop: Don’t Pick Wrong! - YouTube Fitbit Air vs Whoop: Don’t Pick Wrong! - YouTube
Watch On

Apple Watch 11 vs Fitbit Air: tech compared

Close-up of the Apple Watch Series 11 next to the Fitbit Air; both are on colorful straps

(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

When it comes to wrist-based trackers, the Fitbit Air and Apple Watch 11 couldn't be more different. The former has no screens, buttons, or notifications, and lasts up to a week.

The Series 11, meanwhile, is a super-connected device, boasting a large, bright touchscreen, multiple physical buttons, and compatibility with a dizzying array of apps. That said, the Series 11 comes up short on battery life; 24 hours per charge is the norm.

Another major difference: the Fitbit Air has no onboard GPS for location tracking or altimeter for elevation data, so you need to carry a smartphone along when logging an outdoor workout. The Apple Watch 11, on the other wrist, has both GPS and an altimeter.

With that out of the way, let's move on to the results!

Apple Watch 11 vs Fitbit Air: Walk test results

Swipe to scroll horizontally
5,000-step walk comparison: Apple Watch 11 vs Fitbit Air
Header Cell - Column 0

Apple Watch 11

Fitbit Air

Control

Steps

5,053 steps

5,108 steps

steps (manual count)

Distance

2.63 miles

2.72 miles

2.39 miles (Strava)

Climb

372 feet

205 feet

328 feet (Strava)

Average pace

18 mins 51 secs

18 mins 03 secs

17 mins 22 secs (Strava)

Average heart rate

119 bpm

119 bpm

n/a

Max heart rate

153 bpm

153 bpm

n/a

Calories burned

312 calories

373 calories

n/a

Battery usage

6%

1%

n/a

Before we begin, it's worth noting that Strava appears to have had a "hiccup" while recording this walk test. How do I know? The app logged just 4,506 steps, which is a major red flag. Normally, Strava's step-count data is within 10-20 steps of my actual count. TLDR: Take Strava's distance, climb, and pace data with a grain of salt.

Anyhow, both the Apple Watch 11 and Fitbit Air performed admirably when it came to keeping an accurate tally of my steps — anything within ~150 steps of the control is considered excellent in my book — but the Apple Watch was just a little closer!

Distance data between the Apple Watch and Fitbit Air is similar enough for my liking. The Fitbit noted slightly more ground covered but also a faster pace, which checks out.

The Fitbit Air's elevation metric is concerningly inaccurate (this walk was particularly hill-heavy), which doesn't make a whole lot of sense, given the device can piggyback off of the iPhone 16 Plus's climb data. This also isn't the first time I experienced less-than-precise elevation tracking insights from the Fitbit Air; it was also way lower than expected versus the Apple Watch SE 3.

Fortunately, the Fitbit Air finishes strong: Heart rate data is a perfect match with the Apple Watch Series 11, a result I love to see. Meanwhile, the Air logged slightly more calories burned, but used way less battery during my ~42-minute stroll.

Apple Watch 11 vs Fitbit Air: Winner

Close-up of the Apple Watch Series 11 next to the Fitbit Air; both are on colorful straps

(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

Ultimately, the Apple Watch Series 11 wins this showdown of fitness tracking accuracy against the Fitbit Air, with a more precise total step count and climb data.

Which fitness trackers or smartwatches should I pit head-to-head next? Let me know in the comments below. Also, which do you prefer, the Apple Watch 11 or the Fitbit Air? Share your opinion in the poll below.


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Dan Bracaglia
Senior Writer, Fitness & Wearables

Dan Bracaglia is the Tom’s Guide editorial lead for all things smartwatches, fitness trackers and outdoor gear. With 15 years of experience as a consumer technology journalist testing everything from Oura Rings to instant cameras, Dan is deeply passionate about helping readers save money and make informed purchasing decisions. In the past year alone, Dan has assessed major product releases from the likes of Apple, Garmin, Google, Samsung, Polar and many others. 

An avid outdoor adventurer, Dan is based in the U.S. Pacific Northwest where he takes advantage of the beautiful surroundings every chance he gets. A lover of kayaking, hiking, swimming, biking, snowboarding and exploring, he also makes every effort to combine his day job with his passions. When not assessing the sleep tracking and heart rate accuracy of the latest tach gadgets, you can find him photographing Seattle’s vibrant underground music community.

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