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Withings Steel HR Sport - Multisport hybrid Smartwatch, connected GPS, heart rate, fitness level via VO2 max, activity and sleep tracking, notifications

  • Based on 4,482 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Tuesday, Nov 26
Order within 22 hours and 42 minutes
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Color: Black


Features

  • DAY & OVERNIGHT HEART RATE - Enjoy heart rate tracking day & night plus continuous tracking during workouts.
  • DAILY ACTIVITY TRACKING - Automatically counts steps, calories and distance.
  • AUTOMATIC SLEEP MONITORING - Wake to a Sleep Score based on light & deep sleep cycles, interruptions, depth & regularity.
  • MULTISPORT TRACKING -Delivers Fitness Level via VO2 max estimation | Tracks 30+ sports and maps your session with distance, elevation, and pace via connected GPS
  • RECORD BATTERY LIFE - Spend more time moving and less time charging with a rechargeable battery that lasts up to 25 days.
  • SMART NOTIFICATIONS - Customize call, text, event & app notifications from your smartphone right on the watch screen.
  • WATER RESISTANT TO 50M - Steel HR Sport is a life-friendly hybrid smartwatch that can accompany you to the pool or hit the showers.
  • AUTOMATIC DATA SYNC - Steel HR Sport seamlessly syncs with the free Health Mate app via Bluetooth. Works with Alexa, Apple Heath, Google Fit, Strava and 100+ top health & fitness apps.
  • SWAPPABLE WRISTBANDS - If you have multiple bands, it's easy to change them in seconds to wear Steel HR Sport your way: leather, silicone or metal

Item Package Dimensions L x W x H: ‎7.32 x 4.57 x 1.97 inches


Package Weight: ‎0.26 Kilograms


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎0.79 x 0.51 x 1.6 inches


Item Weight: ‎0.13 Pounds


Brand Name: ‎Withings


Model Name: ‎Steel HR Sport


Color: ‎Black


Material: ‎Mesh


Suggested Users: ‎Unisex-adult


Number of Items: ‎1


Manufacturer: ‎Withings Inc - SPORTS


Part Number: ‎5


Model Year: ‎2018


Style: ‎Black


Included Components: ‎Steel HR Sport Multi-Sport Hybrid Smartwatch with a dedicated silicone wristband, Magnetic charging cable, Quick start guide (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish)


Size: ‎40mm


Sport Type: ‎Training


Date First Available: September 10, 2018


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, Nov 26

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Looks Good for Business, Useful for Fitness
Color: White
After 3 Days My aim was to buy a watch with fitness/workout/sleep tracking comparable to an Apple Watch but which was stylish enough to wear to work. I wear a suit to work in a Four Diamond hotel, so not just any watch would be fitting for my daily dress code. The Withings Steel HR Sport meets these requirements wonderfully (and, compared to Apple, cheaply)! Setting up the watch and syncing it to my phone was a breeze. The Withings Health Mate app has a great aesthetic, and the process was very straight-forward. The app does have you calibrate all of the dials (the crown on the watch doesn't turn - it's just a button - so you move the dials with the app on your phone), which felt tedious, especially for the small steps-goal %. Fortunately, you can re-calibrate at anytime through the app if you get it a little bit wrong. Withings recommends wearing the watch one finger-breadth above the bone on your wrist. This is to ensure the HR monitor isn't put at any funny angles and can't take readings. I've been wearing mine comfortably lower than that (closer to my hand), and I've had no trouble getting HR readouts. The HR monitor is really slick. Throughout my day, it's taking measurements (every 10 minutes, I believe), and I can pull up the app and see what has been measured. I can also use the button to initiate an HR reading at anytime (It will immediately display the results from the most recent reading, if it quietly took one in the background, and then take a new reading if you wait just a moment on the HR screen.), and then when you go into fitness mode, it monitors continuously (as well as initiates GPS tracking, when connected to your phone). The step counter has also been great to have on my wrist. Throughout the day, I have checked both the digital screen and the little dial to see how I'm tracking. And when you reach your goal, it vibrates and displays the step count to let you know. Tracking sleep data seems accurate so far. It does a good job of continuing sleep monitoring even if you get up for a short while in the middle of the night (such as when taking care of an infant). One morning though, I woke up, set the watch on the countertop while I took a shower, and found later it recorded my whole morning routing as 30 minutes of 'deep sleep' which inflated my 'sleep score.' You can go in and edit your asleep & wake-up times, though, so a quick adjustment made the data more reliable. Alarms are also based on your sleep cycle, trying to wake you up when you're not in a deep sleep. It has worked well for me so far. Also, the watch itself is hardly noticeable when I sleep (unless I don't turn notifications off), but the band it ships with isn't all that comfortable. I think I might get something fabric, not silicone, for sleeping. At first, I thought interacting with the screen would be frustrating. I thought that perhaps I would feel constrained. In fact, it's quite the opposite. It's almost a relief not to have a deluge of digital information on my wrist. The notifications have been great. I can see if a message/email needs to be checked right now or not, and if it does, I pull out my phone to deal with it (which is what all my Apple Watch-wearing friends seem to do anyway). The single-button design works really well, too. In the app, I can customize which screens the digital display can show. I admit, I haven't done much exercising with it - just a few long walks so far. I hope to have some exercise in before my next update to this review. After 1 Week The band included is really not that comfortable, I found, which is why I'm glad this watch uses a standard 20mm watch band. I ordered a different sport band, and the result was immediate. My wrist has been much, much more comfortable since. Gear Sport Band, KADES Soft Silicone Band Breathable Strap Compatible for Samsung Galaxy Watch 42mm/ Garmin VivoActive 3/ Ticwatch 2/ Ticwatch E/Amazfit Bip Smart Watch- White/Black Sleep tracking has worked really well. Sometimes, if I set my watch down shortly after waking up, the watch will think I'm still sleeping. I've been surprised a couple times to see that the app shows I was in a 'deep sleep' when in fact I was showering or brushing my teeth. Withings made it quite easy to go into the app and adjust the 'wake up' time, so that any sleep data collected while you were awake is disregarded. For the most part, the notifications on the watch have been really useful. Even though they're just short snippets of text that scroll by, they've still been useful. I much prefer glancing at my watch instead of pulling out my phone from my pocket to see who that text/email is from. Notifications only work, though, for applications which have been integrated by Withings. I wish there was some way to see notifications from other apps on my phone. For example, I use Waterlogged on my iPhone to help me ensure I'm drinking enough water throughout the day. I wish those notifications popped up on my wrist as well as my phone. There are no move reminders. If you sit all day long, your Steel HR Sport will not complain (unlike an Apple Watch or Fitbit, for example). Perhaps there's a way to use an iPhone app which can send such notifications, but I haven't found it yet. The battery life is incredible. I put this on the charger on October 10th (just to try it, not because it actually needed charging). It is now October 16th, and I'm at 58%. That includes several sessions tracking activities. Activity tracking seems to work really nicely. It even automatically detects workouts. I had a little impromptu soccer game with my two-year-old. I was running around, heart rate elevated, for about 15-20 minutes. As we walked away from the field, my phone buzzed with a notification "workout detected." It automatically categorized it as 'other' (which isn't surprising, soccer with a toddler is a pretty unique set of movements), but I could easily hop in the app to change the category and add notes so that it was recorded effectively to my log. I've been using this in conjunction with dieting to. The companion app Health Mate ties in with MyFitnessPal very well for comparing calories burned with calories consumed. One downside to mention is that I'm not sure the Steel HR Sport counts stairs climbed. On a walk I tracked, it counted elevation in the post-workout stats, but I'm not sure if that was from the watch's onboard telemetry or comparing GPS info to known topographical data from other sources. I've hit my 10,000 step goal a few times now. I love the little celebration notification that pops up. It's rewarding and well done. Finally, I really, really like the look of the watch (I have the white watch face). I've noticed at work a lot of folks wearing Apple Watches. To me, they know look large and clunky (especially with the extra armor/cases they put on to protect them). Every day, I'm quite glad to be wearing a watch that looks like a watch. After 1 Month I still love this watch. It seamlessly fits into my day-to-day as a pair of glasses or perhaps a favorite coat. I'm not often presently aware that I have it on, until I check the time or perhaps my heart rate. Notifications work better than previously thought. The companion application becomes 'aware' of a notification after it has appeared on your phone. Here's a step-by-step of how to get an app on your phone to show notifications on your watch: 1) Install app on your phone (this app will not show up in the watch's companion app yet). 2) Have the app ding your phone with any notification (now the app shows up in the watch's companion app) 3) Open up the Health Mate companion app, and enable your notifications. 4) Enjoy getting buzzed on your wrist. Additionally, it seems there is a correlation in battery life and notifications. If your watch is buzzing every couple minutes all day every day with notifications, the battery wears down more quickly. Even so, it still seems to last forever. The watch band that the Steel HR Sport ships with is decidedly terrible. I found it profoundly uncomfortable. The 3rd-party watch band I mentioned above has been incredibly comfortable, day & night. Over the past couple weeks, the sleep and alarm features have been great! I've had to edit my sleep data a couple of times. Three times, I've woken up, set my watch down to take a shower, and found the app thought I was still sleeping. A quick edit fixes that and gives me good data. Once, I supposed I tossed and turned so much that it didn't think I fell asleep until much later. Again, a quick edit with my actual bedtime corrected the data. The only hiccup I've seen so far is regarding steps. For whatever reason, in the day following the last software update, I was given 397 complimentary steps per hour from 6p - midnight. I had already put in 18,000 steps that day, but you can imagine my shock when I woke up to find Health Mate reporting 27,000. I've yet to speak with Withings to see if I can correct the data. It hasn't happened again since that one instance. I still haven't much used the sport features. Also, there's at least one micro-scratch on the watch thus far. It's only noticeable upon close inspection. I did buy Amazon's suggested 2-year warranty, just in case. Just today, my wife asked me, "What don't you really like about your watch?" And I surprised myself a little when I replied, "Nothing. Now that I've replaced the band, there is nothing that I don't like." After 3 Months (coming January 9, 2019) After 1 Year (coming October 9, 2019) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 13, 2018 by Demo318 Demo318

  • Best heart rate / sleep tracker I could find!
Color: White
This is an excellent watch for what I was looking for and I'm really glad I found it. The one remaining concern I have for it is longevity, because for $200 I expect this to last at least 3 years. But to sing some praises first: - Great battery life, quick recharge 8hrs in exercise mode (continuous HR monitoring) takes about 40% of the battery for me. Otherwise the battery seems like it will last a month if I didn't use that mode. - Looks good I literally had someone comment on how they would rather wear this than an Apple watch because it looks like a normal, nice watch. I agree, although the Apple watch has a lot more features and I'd use one if I liked their phones at all. - Solid HR tracking This was the reason I bought and kept this watch, the HR tracking is solid. The sensor could be better like the multiple larger lights in the galaxy watch, sure. But the galaxy watch and almost every HR monitoring wrist band on the market right now sucks. Either because they all skimp on the HR monitor or because the design doesn't make effective use of the sensor (including algorithms to get accurate HR from the sensor) because they don't think anyone wants to have accurate, continuous monitoring. But I do. I use this watch in workout mode to record my HR during exercise, where tracking can be hard for light based sensors. Other watches, including galaxy watch, suck at this. Sometimes sweat buildup messes up the reading on this one too, sure, but it happens way less often and swiping my finger under the reader fixes it right away. The watch itself is designed intelligently to push the sensor down onto your skin without pushing the entire watch body into it and causing chafing, unlike most other devices in this class. A simple yet effective as hell solution! Good job to the designers. - Water resistance I have had several devices like this and this one really makes me feel good with its simplistic physical design there is only one place where sealing could be a problem and it looks thoroughly sealed (button). I have worn it in the shower, swimming, and sweat like crazy during workouts on it, zero signs of any issues. - Data is accessible The HR data is transferable to other apps easily too, unlike the garbage data hoarding most of these companies do (Samsung health, more like Samsung hell). This was another huge plus for me. I use Withings app only because it does have a few nice addons to it I enjoy, but I feel a lot better knowing that if I didn't like how the company was behaving with my data they allow me to use the watch with other apps. - Sleep tracking is good Honestly the tracker is really good, I wish it had stronger compatibility with Sleep for android because it does a great job of detecting when I fall asleep, when I wake up briefly, etc. But it isn't compatible yet, so I use a Mi Band additionally for sleep tracking. I do like to compare their data, and this one is usually more accurate. The data IS accessible, it can be exported and then imported to Sleep, so that's nice, but obviously not how I wanted to do it. For cons, I'll have to think hard: - Stock band is a bit suffocating I haven't had a chance to try other bands but I know with other watches I haven't had any instances of them trapping sweat under the band in a way that causes irritation the way this one has. It's not hard to fix, just keep it clean. I might buy other bands to try out in the future. - Face is a little small for me I would prefer something the size of the galaxy watch, but that's very much just a style preference. - Gimmick VO2 feature? I got this version thinking I'd like to use the VO2 feature but it ONLY works if you run outside where it can get GPS and elevation data during your run. I run on a treadmill, so I'm out of luck until I go hiking. That was disappointing to find out. - Price Of course I wish I paid less for it. I could have got the non sport version to save money since I'm not using that feature. But overall I'm using this like a fitbit for twice the price. I don't care about the notifications, it's not really a competitor for smart watches... It's a health tool and I have to admit it nailed that enough that I'm willing to pay for it. But I think if their competitors pulled their heads out of their asses for a day they could be quickly bringing the price down to something I'd be much happier with (like half..). That's all I've got. Owned the watch about a month, so take that into account. Will be watching for battery life degradation, or other malfunctioning. 8-month Update: Time flies! I've been using this watch for a while now. The company continues to support data migration which I LOVE, big props to them for putting in the support work to make it easy to use MY data with whatever I want to! This is probably the one thing that will keep me coming back to this watch. Oh, and my original review has some outdated information - the watch IS supported now in Sleep for Android, and a lot of other apps that didn't support it at the time. Very cool having that compatibility across so many apps, I love to support this kind of product. They did a few firmware updates, not too many, and from what I can tell this improved the battery life in certain conditions (like in exercise modes). I do not like a recent update that added a "feature" to let you pause a workout, because I was used to just ending and restarting workouts whenever I needed and now I have to click through an extra screen to do that... but I see how others would want this. Overall I am really happy that they don't push out updates too often, but they are also clearly still constantly working on improvements! Great job. One complaint I almost had was the button - it started sticking and losing the tactile feel to it, which made navigating menus harder. I was really annoyed at this because it signals to me that gunk (probably from all my sweating) is getting IN the button and that could even cause it to stop functioning eventually. However, I solved this... in the shower (which I take the watch with me in) when I was washing up, I got the lathered soap as much into the button as I could then pressed it a lot to try to work it in, then rinsed it and pressed the button a bunch more to wash out the soap. Worked. Button is working again like it used to. For now. Hopefully doing that doesn't do any damage long term to the watch though. Oh, another complaint that other people have had. The watch face scratches easily. Mine has some nicks. =( Nothing that I can see without looking hard though, nothing functionally invasive. I've had plenty of surprised compliments from people who thought I was into the recent "vintage/classic watch" wearing fad, only to find out mine is actually fully functional! =) I also have recently purchased the Fenix 5 Sapphire watch from Garmin and can offer a comparison to this. An important note for comparison, on a black friday sale the Fenix dropped to $300. That's the deep sale price for it. While of course, this watch has (since I purchased it for $200.. =( ) has dropped to around $120-$150 in sale prices. So literally comparing a watch that costs nearly twice as much. But still. The Fenix glass does not scratch almost at all, where this watch absolutely does. The Fenix is also a better HR tracker, sad to say. During heavy exercise I notice sometimes they both can run into issues losing tracking for a bit (usually cleared up by swiping sweat away from the sensor, or moving the watch around), it happens a lot less with the Fenix. The Fenix has great battery life too and does not drain nearly as fast during exercise tracking as this watch does. But Fenix also does not last as long in standby. Data sharing I have yet to really test on the Garmin either, and I'm worried because I know for sure they aren't as easy as Withings is for exporting data. So I still use both (yep, two watches...). Overall, still think this is a great value HR tracking watch, especially at the new sale prices. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2019 by B. Normal

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