The Fitbit app is becoming Google Health – something that could reshape the future of consumer longevity tech.
Breaking news: Google is no longer thinking like a wearable company. Something unusual happened this week in consumer health tech as Google made a move that could ripple across the entire wearable industry and perhaps reshape how everyday people engage with longevity itself.
Starting 19 May, the Fitbit app officially becomes Google Health, replacing the familiar fitness-tracking experience with a broader AI-powered health platform designed around sleep, fitness, wellness and preventive care [1]. On the surface, it sounds like another Big Tech rebrand, but underneath, Google may be changing the economics of wearables altogether.
For years, companies like WHOOP and ŌURA sold consumers on a simple promise: pay a subscription, wear the device and gain deeper insight into your body. Recovery scores, sleep analytics and readiness metrics became status symbols for the health-conscious.
Google’s new strategy feels different. Instead of positioning the wearable as the product, it is positioning health data itself as the platform. That could matter more than any new sensor.
The redesigned Google Health app reorganizes the experience into four simplified tabs: Today, Fitness, Sleep and Health. It sounds minor, but the simplification is intentional. Google is trying to make health tracking feel less like reading medical charts and more like checking the weather. Most people do not want to “biohack” their lives. They simply want to feel better, sleep better and understand why they are exhausted by 3 PM.
The company says the redesign is meant to help users “live longer, healthier lives” through “effortless tracking and adaptive coaching.” In practice, this means Google is taking the sprawling world of wellness metrics and translating it into something more conversational and accessible.
And then comes the bigger aspect: AI coaching. Subscribers to Google Health Premium, the evolution of Fitbit Premium, will gain access to Google Health Coach, powered by Gemini, Google’s multimodal generative AI assistant and chatbot. The promise is proactive, personalized guidance that adapts to users over time. It’s like a health assistant in your pocket.
For the average user, that changes the relationship entirely. Instead of opening an app to stare at numbers you barely understand, the software begins interpreting patterns for you: why your sleep dropped, why recovery feels harder this week or how stress may be affecting your body.
Why wearable companies may be nervous
The announcement exploded across LinkedIn after longevity entrepreneur Leonard Rinser posted a blunt reaction. He argued that Google’s strategy is obvious: “Don’t sell the wristband. Own the health data layer.” That line landed because it exposes the pressure now facing subscription-based wearable companies [2].
WHOOP’s business model depends heavily on recurring memberships. ŌURA combines premium hardware with annual subscriptions. Google, meanwhile, appears willing to make core tracking widely accessible while monetizing the broader ecosystem instead.
It is the same strategy Big Tech has used repeatedly. Make the entry point cheap (or free) then dominate the platform underneath.
The concern for smaller wearable players is not simply competition, but commoditization. When sleep tracking, readiness insights and AI wellness coaching become standard features inside massive operating systems, standalone wearables risk becoming interchangeable hardware. A wristband becomes less valuable if the real power lives inside the software layer connecting everything together.
That does not necessarily mean ŌURA or WHOOP disappear. In fact, the companies already appear to be evolving beyond pure fitness tracking. ŌURA has expanded deeper into women’s health and clinical partnerships, while WHOOP has pushed into bloodwork and broader health optimization.
The wearable companies saw this coming. Also, this is really a story about longevity going mainstream. For years, longevity technology sat at the edges of culture – expensive clinics, elite athletes, Silicon Valley optimization culture. However, the language of longevity has slowly entered ordinary life. Sleep scores, metabolic health and recovery are no longer niche concepts discussed only by biohackers; they are becoming consumer habits.
Google understands this shift. It is redefining longevity through everyday software that nudges millions of people toward better sleep, lower stress and healthier routines before disease appears.
At the same time, the more personalized health platforms become, the more intimate the data exchange becomes, too. Consumers are increasingly handing over biological patterns, emotional states and behavioral rhythms to technology companies in exchange for guidance.
The next chapter of longevity will be about who interprets our health data and who profits from it. Google’s redesign may look like a simple app update. In reality, it could mark the moment longevity became a mainstream technology race.
[1] https://support.google.com/fitbit/answer/17068213?hl=en#zippy=
[2] https://www.linkedin.com/posts/leonardrinser_breaking-google-just-changed-the-rules-of-activity-7458402881608740864-aGy1