The Amazfit Active 3 Premium is unbelievably good value. This fitness tracker is just $169/£169, which is a whopping $230 cheaper than the Apple Watch 11. Is this ridiculous(ly good) price enough to make the Active 3 Premium one of the best fitness trackers around?

Totally. I was a little apprehensive when I first started testing Amazfit gear — budget wearables get a bad rap in the fitness world — but the Active 3 Premium holds up just as well as the other Amazfit gear: the Whoop-dupe Helio Strap, Fitbit disruptor Band 7, and Apple Watch SE competitor Bip 6.

With a plethora of premium fitness features, including blood oxygen readouts, skin temperature monitoring, a lactate threshold test, vertical oscillation, and so, so many more, the Active 3 Premium is in a league of its own. This price is crazy. Want to find out more? (Why wouldn’t you?) Keep reading this Amazfit Active 3 Premium review.

Amazfit Active 3 Premium (4GB) at Amazon for $169.99$169 / £169Who is it for? Amazfit told me mostly women due to the small size, but I think it’s for everyone — beginners and intermediates alikeWhat do we like? Everything: sleep tracking, fitness functions, and in-app analysisWhat are its weaknesses? I’d like a few more (or cuter) strap or color options

$169 / £169

Colors

Black, white, blue

Size

1.32-inch screen

Weight

54.6g

Battery life

Up to 12 days

Charging time

Under 2 hours

Connectivity

Bluetooth

Durability

5 ATM

$169 from Amazon U.S. and £169 from Amazon U.K, or £169 from Amazfit direct. This is an incredibly reasonable price for a fitness tracker of this caliber — the Apple Watch Series 11 is a mind-boggling $399, the almost four-year-old Garmin Forerunner 55 is $199, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 starts from $349, and even the Apple Watch SE 3 is $249.

As with every other Amazfit watch I’ve tested — this is number four now — the Active 3 Premium is almost unbelievably good value. For well under $200, you get a bright touchscreen that looks way more pricey than it is, offline maps, in-depth fitness tracking including 200+ activity types, adept sleep tracking, and a huge variety of features in the companion app.

I’m really not sure why you’d spend $350-$400 on an Apple or Samsung watch when the Active 3 Premium is right there. I know I wouldn’t.

Amazfit Active Max.

Weirdly, though, the colorways don’t really reflect the target demographic. The watch is available in black, navy, and white. As a woman who also likes to keep active, I want a fitness tracker that can be worn for work or play. Unfortunately, I don’t think the Active 3 Premium — in its current state — necessarily has the aesthetic oomph you might expect from Apple Watches or Garmins.

the amazfit active 3 premium photographed against the blue tom's guide background

(Image credit: Tom’s Guide)

Amazfit could easily rectify this by launching new colorways — think rose pink, champagne, lilac, pistachio, baby blue, yellow — so I hope this comes in the future. I received a navy model to test (as you can see from the photos), so when I found out that the Active 3 Premium is actually aimed at women, I was surprised. This definitely looks like a “manly” watch. Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t inherently a bad thing: women can wear masculine clothes and vice versa, but if this watch is intended to separate itself from the rest of the fitness tracker landscape, it needs a few more colors.

Garmin’s Lily 2 has mastered this combination of functionality and style, so I’d like to see more Lily 2-adjacent styles in the Active 3 Premium’s future.

Style — or lack thereof — aside, the Active 3 Premium certainly looks premium. The scratch-resistant glass screen is bright and visible even in sunny weather. The buttons on either side of the face are tactile and responsive.

Although the women-focused style needs a little finesse, Amazfit has still mastered the premium-appearance-but-no-premium-price-tag vibe.

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