Screenless Fitbit 2026: Wait or Buy WHOOP/Garmin CIRQA?
WHOOP just filed for its IPO. Buried in the S-1 paperwork: the company’s average revenue per user has gone up 18% since 2024. That money comes from one place—your credit card, every single month.
At $240/year for WHOOP 5.0 (or $360/year for WHOOP MG), the subscription cost has become harder to justify, especially when the recovery tracking market has finally caught up. If you’ve been wearing a WHOOP band and watching those charges pile up, 2026 is the first year where subscription-free alternatives can genuinely replace it.
I’ve spent the last six months testing every no-subscription recovery tracker I could find. Four of them are worth your attention: Polar Loop, Amazfit Helio Strap, Luna Band, and Livity (an app that turns your Apple Watch into a WHOOP clone for free). Here’s what actually works, and where each one falls short.
| Feature | Polar Loop | Amazfit Helio Strap | Luna Band | Livity (Apple Watch) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $199 one-time | $129 one-time | $149 one-time | Free (requires Apple Watch) |
| Subscription | None | None | None | None |
| HRV Tracking | Yes (continuous) | Yes (overnight + spot) | Yes (continuous) | Yes (uses Apple Watch sensors) |
| Recovery Score | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Sleep Tracking | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Strain/Load | Training Load | Exertion Score | Strain metric | Strain + Recovery |
| Battery Life | 5-6 days | 10-12 days | 7 days (claimed) | Tied to Apple Watch |
| Form Factor | Wrist band | Chest/arm strap | Wrist band | Software only |
| Data Export | Yes (API) | CSV only | Yes (API) | Apple Health |
Polar released the Loop in September 2025, and it’s had enough time on wrists to prove what it can do. I’ve worn it through a full training cycle: base building, a strength block, and a half marathon prep.
The recovery algorithm is solid. Polar calls it “Recovery Pro,” and it pulls from overnight HRV, resting heart rate, sleep quality, and recent training load. After six months, I trust its daily readiness score about as much as I trusted WHOOP’s. It flagged every overreaching week accurately and told me to rest before I felt like I needed to.
The big advantage Polar has: decades of heart rate data and training science. This isn’t a startup guessing at algorithms. Polar has been building HR-based training tools since the 1980s, and the Loop benefits from that institutional knowledge. The Training Load view breaks your recent work into cardio, muscle, and perceived load. That’s more granular than WHOOP’s single strain number.
Where it falls short: The app feels clinical. Polar Flow works, but it’s not pretty. You won’t get the social features or the polished dashboard WHOOP users are used to. And the band itself is thicker than a WHOOP 5.0. If you sleep with it on (you should, for recovery data), it takes a few nights to stop noticing it.
Best for: Endurance athletes who want deep training load analytics without a subscription. If you’re a runner, cyclist, or triathlete, the Polar ecosystem (watches, sensors, bike computers) all feeds into the same platform. That integration alone might seal the deal.
The Helio Strap doesn’t get much press, which is a shame. At $129, it’s the cheapest dedicated recovery tracker on this list, and it does things the others can’t.
The standout feature: it doubles as a broadcast-mode heart rate monitor. Strap it to your chest or upper arm, pair it with your Peloton or Garmin, and it sends real-time HR data over Bluetooth and ANT+. Then at night, wear it on your wrist for sleep and HRV tracking. One device, two jobs.
Recovery tracking is simpler here. You get an overnight HRV reading, a recovery score from 1-100, and sleep staging. No continuous daytime HRV like Polar or WHOOP. For most people, that’s enough. Overnight HRV is the most reliable window anyway, and fewer measurements mean fewer chances for motion artifacts to corrupt your data.
Battery life is absurd. I charged it every 11 days with daily workout broadcasting and nightly sleep tracking. That alone makes it easier to live with than WHOOP’s every-5-days charging ritual.
Where it falls short: The Zepp app is middling. Recovery trends over time work fine, but the daily insights feel generic. And there’s no strain tracking during the day. You get recovery data and workout HR, but nothing connecting the two automatically. You’ll need to log workouts manually or pair with another app if you want a complete picture.
Best for: People who already own a GPS watch and want dedicated recovery tracking on the cheap. The broadcast HR mode means it replaces your chest strap too.
Luna is the one I’m most cautiously optimistic about. It ships in April 2026 at $149 with no subscription—ever, according to the company. They’ve been explicit about the business model: hardware margin only, no recurring revenue.
I got an early review unit in February. Build quality is good. It’s thinner than the Polar Loop, comparable to WHOOP 5.0 in size. The silicone band is comfortable for sleeping. Continuous HRV, skin temperature, SpO2, and respiratory rate. The full sensor suite you’d expect.
The recovery algorithm shows promise but needs more data. Luna uses what they call an “open recovery model” where the algorithm weights are published, and you can see exactly how your score is calculated. That transparency is refreshing after years of WHOOP’s black-box approach. But the scores have been inconsistent for me in the first month. Days where I felt wrecked got middling scores; one morning after poor sleep it gave me a green light. The team says the algorithm improves as it learns your baseline, and they’re pushing monthly updates.
Where it falls short: It’s brand new. The app has bugs. Syncing drops occasionally, and the sleep staging missed a few wake-ups that WHOOP caught. The company is small (40 people), and long-term support is a legitimate question. Will they still be pushing firmware updates in 2028?
Also: no social features, no coaching integration, and the data export currently only works through their API. CSV export is on the roadmap for Q3 2026.
Best for: Early adopters who want WHOOP-level sensors without WHOOP-level costs, and who are comfortable with a product that’s still maturing. If the algorithm improves as promised, this could be the best value on the list by year-end.
If you already own an Apple Watch Series 8 or newer, Livity might be all you need. It’s a free app with no subscription, no premium tier, no catch I’ve found yet. It uses your watch’s existing sensors to generate recovery scores, strain tracking, and sleep analysis.
The concept is simple: your Apple Watch already records HRV, heart rate, sleep stages, and activity data. Livity just does something useful with it. Apple’s own Health app buries this data in charts that aren’t actionable. Livity turns it into a morning readiness score and a daily strain number that updates through the day. Basically what WHOOP does, using hardware you already paid for.
I ran Livity alongside my WHOOP for four weeks. Recovery scores correlated about 80% of the time. The biggest divergences came on days with afternoon naps (Livity didn’t always catch them) and after alcohol (WHOOP was more aggressive about marking those mornings as impaired). But for day-to-day “should I go hard or go easy” decisions, Livity gave me the same answer as WHOOP most mornings.
The strain tracking surprised me. It uses Apple Watch workout data plus all-day heart rate to calculate an exertion score. It’s not as responsive as WHOOP’s real-time strain (there’s a slight delay in processing), but by end of day, the numbers tell the same story.
Where it falls short: You’re limited by Apple Watch hardware. Battery life means you need to find a charging window if you want both sleep tracking and all-day strain. Most people charge while showering, which works. The HRV readings from a wrist-based optical sensor aren’t as clean as a dedicated band with better skin contact. And Livity can’t track you during swimming (Apple Watch’s HR sensor is unreliable underwater, regardless of the app).
The app is also young. The developer is a two-person team, and feature requests pile up faster than they ship. But what’s there today works.
Best for: Anyone with an Apple Watch who wants to try recovery tracking before spending money on dedicated hardware. Zero risk, zero cost. Start here.
Let’s be honest about what WHOOP still does better:
But here’s what the alternatives do better:
Let’s put real numbers on this. WHOOP’s IPO filing and rising costs tell us subscriptions are only going up from here.
| Option | Year 1 Cost | Year 2 Cost | Year 3 Cost | 3-Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHOOP 5.0 | $240 | $240 | $240 | $720 |
| WHOOP MG | $360 | $360 | $360 | $1,080 |
| Polar Loop | $199 | $0 | $0 | $199 |
| Amazfit Helio | $129 | $0 | $0 | $129 |
| Luna Band | $149 | $0 | $0 | $149 |
| Livity (with existing Apple Watch) | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Over three years, you save $521-$1,080 depending on which alternative you pick and which WHOOP tier you’re leaving. That’s real money.
Switch if:
Don’t switch if:
If you have an Apple Watch: Start with Livity today. It’s free, it works, and you’ll know within two weeks whether recovery tracking changes how you train. If it does and you want more, upgrade to dedicated hardware.
If you’re buying new hardware: Polar Loop for endurance athletes, Luna Band if you want the closest WHOOP-like experience (and can tolerate early-product rough edges), Amazfit Helio Strap if you also need a broadcast HR monitor.
If you want to wait: The Garmin CIRQA is expected later this year with no subscription. If Garmin nails the recovery algorithm, and given their track record with training metrics, it could be the one that finally makes WHOOP’s subscription model obsolete.
The recovery tracking market is splitting in two: subscription devices that monetize your data monthly, and one-time-purchase devices that make money on hardware. After six months of testing, I’m convinced the hardware-only side has caught up enough for most athletes. WHOOP pioneered this category. But paying $240/year for a wristband, especially when wearable regulation is tightening, it feels less like a premium and more like a tax.
Your recovery data shouldn’t come with a monthly bill.
Tested Polar Loop for 6 months, Amazfit Helio Strap for 4 months, Luna Band early unit for 6 weeks, and Livity for Apple Watch for 2 months alongside WHOOP 5.0. Pricing accurate as of March 2026.