Garmin is staying neck and neck with Fitbit,announcingthe revamped Vivosmart 4 shortly after its competitor unveiled theFitbit Charge 3. The new Vivosmart packs a punch, combining new hardware and software into a thinner and sleeker device. The most notable addition to the Vivosmart line is a pulse oximeter which measures blood oxygen saturation. This sensor first appeared inthe Fenix 5X Plus, Garmin’s $849 multi-sport GPS watch.
Design and Display
On the outside, the Vivosmart 4 has a slim and fashionable design that looks great and feels great on your wrist. The soft and smooth silicone wristband is available in a variety of color combinations including a sleek black with slate bezel, a berry with gold bezel, a powder grey with rose gold bezel, and an azure blue with silver bezel. You still can’t change out the band in the Vivosmart 4, but these color combinations help.
Similar to last year’sVivosmart 3, the Vivosmart 4 has an OLED touchscreen display that saves precious battery life by turning on only when you need it. you may swipe, tap, or raise your wrist to activate the display on demand. The 48 × 128 pixels display is on the small size, but Garmin does its best to make it readable by using a black-and-white color scheme along with an auto-adjust feature that responds to ambient light.

Pulse Oximetry
Underneath the hood, Garmin made several essential upgrades in the Vivosmart 4. First and foremost is the pulse Ox sensor which measures blood-oxygen saturation. Unlike theFenix 5X Pluswhich uses pulse Ox for high-altitude acclimation, the Vivosmart 4 bundles its pulse Ox data into the sleep metrics where it can assist with sleep-related issues like sleep apnea. Notably absent is GPS which is present in Garmin’sVivoactive 3andVivosporttrackers.
Monitoring sleep disturbances is a new area of exploration for fitness manufacturers. Garmin recently rolled outadvanced sleep trackingto a handful of its devices and Fitbit just bundled the feature into its newFitbit Charge 3 tracker.
Body Battery
The new Vivosmart model also includes an updated wrist-based optical heart rate monitor that powers a new metric called body battery. Only available on the Vivosmart 4, body battery provides you with an “energy level” measurement that you can use to best time your workouts. The tracker calculates your energy level based on metrics like your resting heart rate, stress level, sleep quality, and recent workouts/activities. The higher your energy level, the more reserves you will have to crush your next workout.
Lifestyle and Smartwatch Features
Similar to its predecessors, the Vivosmart 4 keeps all our favorite fitness and lifestyle features including step counting, VO2 max, advanced sleep tracking, and stress management. The fitness tracker also can control music playback, check the current weather, and receive both incoming smartphone alerts and text messages. Garmin upped the battery life on the device to seven days and included water resistance so you’re able to swim with it.
Availability
The Garmin Vivosmart 4 sells for $129 — $30 cheaper than Fitbit’s competingCharge 3. The fitness tracker will be available soon fromGarmin’s websiteas well as other online and in-store retailers.