Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Fitbit’s sleep-schedule features want to give you a more ‘consistent sleep’

fitbit sleep goals blaze
Fitbit
Fitbit is making its sleep tracking more useful with a few new features to improve your sleep. The company is launching Sleep Schedule, which allows people to “better understand your sleep patterns” to get consistent sleep.

With your Fitbit, you’ll now be able to set a sleep goal — the app offers personalized recommendations, or you can set your own number of hours of sleep each night. The fitness band will also offer wake-up and bedtime targets, which sounds like alarms, but the company says the Fitbit app will provide reminders to get you the “right amount of sleep” of between 7 to 9 hours.

Recommended Videos

These bedtime targets and wake-up reminders can come through push notifications on your smartphone, or you can set a silent wake alarm on your fitness band. There’s a handy Sleep Schedule History Chart in the app that lets you check whether or not you’re hitting your sleep goals, and if you need to make adjustments in order to do so.

More sleep tools are on the way, as Fitbit says the Sleep Schedule is just the “first in a series.” But instead of just releasing a few basic sleep-tracking features, the company also released sleep data from more than 10 million people, and it’s full of interesting tidbits like how “baby boomers who were more active slept 9 minutes more per week; overweight users got 70 minutes less sleep per week than average; Gen Xers who were more active slept 21 minutes more per week; and women slept 25 minutes longer than men each night, on average.”

Fitbit’s data says that people who sleep 7 to 9 hours on average compared to people who sleep 3 to 4 hours on average have a lower Body Mass Index, a more consistent bedtime, and have an earlier bedtime. Based on the 10 million people’s recorded data, millennials sleep an average of 7 hours and 17 minutes, and their average bedtime is 11:52 p.m. College kids’ average bedtime is 12:22 a.m., and they sleep a little longer for 7 hours and 26 minutes — though they have the longest period of restlessness or average time awake prior to falling asleep (28 minutes).

Fitbit says the new feature was made with the assistance of a panel of sleep experts, and the new sleep functions are available to all Fitbit devices.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
What is a pulse oximeter, and why should you care?
Withings ScanWatch feature image

Today's wearables are already stuffed to the gills with all kinds of health sensors, from electrocardiograms to sleep trackers. The most recent addition is the pulse oximeter, and it's starting to show up in the latest, most high-end smartwatches and fitness trackers. But what is it, and should your next device have one?

Pulse oximeters measure blood oxygen level -- how much oxygen is present in your blood and how well it is transported to the extremities (blood pressure monitors are different). Medical pulse oximeters are simple, non-invasive gauges that often clip on to an extremity, like a finger, toe, or earlobe, to take measurements based on a combination of LED red and infrared light. These measure the varying rates of light absorption to determine the level of oxygen in the blood.

Read more
Want a ThinkPad with AMD inside? Ryzen 4000 chips give you more options
lenovo thinkpad e t x l amd ryzen 4000 pro e15 2020

Thanks to their minimalist aesthetics and powerful performance, Lenovo's ThinkPad laptops have long been viewed by many as the gold standard for business, and now these notebooks are about to get even more powerful.

The ThinkPad E, T, X, and L series will soon come in variants featuring AMD's new Ryzen 4000 mobile processors, solidifying these notebooks' role as a productivity workhorse.
ThinkPad E14 and E15

Read more
Fitbit wants to find out if wearables can detect coronavirus
Fitbit-Versa-2

Fitbit is collaborating in new studies that aim to find out if wearable devices can detect the coronavirus, officially called COVID-19 -- and it needs your help. 

Fitbit's participation is part of a combined effort between research already underway with The Scripps Research Institute's DETECT Study and Stanford Medicine's COVID-19 wearables study to see if wearables can help with early detection when it comes to infectious diseases. 

Read more