Free Garmin update rolls out Lifestyle Logging to all users — here’s what it does and how to get it

Garmin Lifestyle Logging
(Image credit: Future)

Garmin announced several new features alongside the launch of the Venu 4 smartwatch yesterday, with one of the most interesting being Lifestyle Logging. This allows you to track behaviours each day and, over time, get insights into how they might be affecting things like your sleep and stress.

Lifestyle logging will be available via an on-watch widget on the Garmin Venu 4 when it goes on sale on September 22 and will be added to some other Garmin watches in time, but it’s already rolling out as a free update for all users in the Garmin Connect app.

As a Garmin user myself, I think the feature is significant for three reasons. Firstly and most obviously, it could be helpful in tracking healthy and unhealthy habits to see what effect they’re having on you.

It’s also great to see Garmin add a free feature to the Connect app, rather than one that’s locked being the Garmin Connect+ subscription. Finally, this is a feature that’s similar to Whoop’s journal, and could be another indication that Garmin is lining up a screenless tracker of its own.

What is Garmin’s Lifestyle Logging?

Garmin Venu 4

(Image credit: Garmin)

Lifestyle logging is a tool that helps you track your habits to see how they affect your overall health. It’s a simple feature that lists lifestyle factors, and each day you tick off whether they did or didn’t happen that day.

Garmin has a lot of behaviours you can use to build out your list at first like early caffeine, sunlight and exercises (light, moderate or vigorous), and you can also customize your own factors if there’s something you think affects your overall wellbeing that happens regularly.

Pretty much anything that affects you can be considered a factor worth tracking, so beyond daily habits like a morning coffee or alcohol intake there are also more substantial, long-term things like having an infant at home, or illness.

You log everything that does and doesn’t happen each day and once you’ve built up the data over time you’re shown four- and 12-week graphs that show how each behaviour might be impacting things like sleep, stress and your heart variability, either positively or negatively.

It’s a feature that requires a lot of input from the user, and you can set up reminders in Garmin Connect so you remember to log behaviours each morning and evening.

Even if you know that certain behaviours are likely to affect the body, sometimes having this data laid out so starkly can be very helpful in showing you that getting some sunlight in the day leads to better sleep, for example, or that alcohol plays havoc with your heart rate variability.

How to get Lifestyle Logging on Garmin Connect

Garmin Lifestyle Logging

(Image credit: Future)

If you download the latest version of the Garmin Connect app on your phone you should get access to Lifestyle Logging. When I updated the app it appeared at the top of the home screen as a new feature, but if you need to find it in the menus, it’s under More/Health Stats.

Once you have it set up, it’s worth adding as a tile on your home page so you remember to log your behaviours, as well as using the morning and evening reminders. For now, you have to not only tick any behaviours you did that day, but also cross any you didn’t — hopefully this will become automatic for any unticked behaviors in future updates.

Is a Garmin Whoop rival coming?

a photo of the Whoop MG on the wrist

(Image credit: Future)

The Lifestyle Logging feature will be added to Garmin watches along with the Venu 4 in the future, but it’s a feature you can use entirely in the app and similar to the Whoop 5.0 band’s journal tool, so it could easily work with a screen-free tracker.

Garmin did launch the screen-free Index Sleep Monitor this year, which is an armband that just tracks sleep for now, but it has the technology and software to make a screenless tracker work 24/7.

The recent launch of the Polar Loop band shows traditional sports watch manufacturers are keen to rival Whoop in the screenfree market, so it wouldn’t be a surprise to see such a device from Garmin over the next year.

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Nick Harris-Fry
Senior Writer

Nick Harris-Fry is an experienced health and fitness journalist, writing professionally since 2012. He spent nine years working on the Coach magazine and website before moving to the fitness team at Tom’s Guide in 2024. Nick is a keen runner and also the founder of YouTube channel The Run Testers, which specialises in reviewing running shoes, watches, headphones and other gear.


Nick ran his first marathon in 2016 after six weeks of training for a magazine feature and subsequently became obsessed with the sport. He now has PBs of 2hr 27min for the marathon and 15min 30sec for 5K, and has run 13 marathons in total, as well as a 50-mile ultramarathon. Nick is also a qualified Run Leader in the UK.


Nick is an established expert in the health and fitness area and along with writing for many publications, including Live Science, Expert Reviews, Wareable, Coach and Get Sweat Go, he has been quoted on The Guardian and The Independent.

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