Health & Fitness
13 products rated across 3 categories · Last updated: 5 Jun 2026
Health and fitness covers fitness trackers and smartwatches (Apple Watch, Garmin, Samsung Galaxy Watch, Fitbit), smart scales (Withings, Renpho, Garmin Index), and massage guns (Theragun, Hyperice, Renpho, Bob and Brad). Phone ecosystem compatibility is the ecosystem decision; sensor quality is the hardware decision.
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Health & Fitness jargon, explained
The acronyms and features you will run into shopping for health & fitness, in plain English. See the full glossary.
- Australian Consumer Law (ACL)
- The national law that gives you automatic consumer guarantees on top of any manufacturer warranty. If a product fails sooner than a reasonable person would expect for the price, you have a right to a repair, replacement or refund from the retailer, even after the warranty has expired. It cannot be signed away. More →
- Beats Per Minute (bpm)
- Your heart rate, measured in beats per minute (bpm). Wrist trackers are accurate enough for steady-state cardio and resting trends, but they lag behind a chest strap during quick interval work, so serious training data is better off the chest. More →
- Blood Oxygen (SpO2)
- The percentage of oxygen your blood is carrying, measured on the wrist by shining light through your skin. Useful for spotting trends in sleep and recovery, but wrist sensors are not medical-grade, so read the number as a guide rather than a diagnosis. More →
- Body Mass Index (BMI)
- A number worked out from your weight and height that sorts people into broad ranges from underweight to obese. It is a quick population-level screen, not a verdict on any one person, because it cannot tell muscle from fat. A lean, muscular person can read as overweight on BMI alone, so treat it as one rough signal, not the full picture. More →
- End of Financial Year (EOFY)
- Australia's financial year ends on 30 June, and the weeks leading up to it bring some of the year's biggest retail sales as stores clear stock. If you can wait, EOFY and the Black Friday period in November are the two windows where the real discounts land. More →
- Recommended Retail Price (RRP)
- The price a manufacturer suggests a product should sell for. Treat it as the number a discount is measured against, not what you should pay. Plenty of products carry an RRP almost nobody has ever paid, so always check the street price before you get excited about a markdown. More →