Style and substance for less
The Huawei Watch Fit 4 is a triumph in the budget smartwatch category. It offers a premium design, a stunning AMOLED display, and surprisingly powerful sports tracking features like offline maps that are rare at this price. While it still lags on smart features like payments and app support, and the companion app can feel cluttered, these are minor trade-offs. For anyone outside the US seeking a stylish, fitness tracker in a smartwatch body without a premium price tag, the Watch Fit 4 is arguably the one to beat.
Premium-feeling design and bright display
Excellent battery life
Impressive sports tracking
Very limited smart features
Huawei Health app can be cluttered
No official availability in the US
It’s been a relentless year for Huawei’s wearables team. Amid the launch of the flagship, health-focused Huawei Watch 5, the refresh of its most affordable line—the Watch Fit—arrived with less fanfare back in May.
We’re a little late to the party on this one—especially after also having our wrists occupied with the brand’s Watch GT 6 Pro, announced earlier this month. However, in many ways, this is the review that matters most.
While the top-tier models grab the headlines, the Watch Fit series has consistently been Huawei’s most compelling offering, delivering an incredible amount of features for the money and filling the basic fitness tracker void once dominated by Fitbit.
The Watch Fit 4 (and its Pro twin) continues that legacy. It aims to build on the success of its excellent predecessor by enhancing its fitness and health capabilities, all while maintaining an accessible price.
So, has Huawei once again delivered the best budget smartwatch of 2025? We’ve been putting it to the test to find out.
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Price and competitionÂ
Technically, the Huawei Watch Fit 4 is priced in the mid-range. However, while not as inexpensive as some models from Amazfit, CMF by Nothing, and Xiaomi, it remains a very affordable option.
The first thing to address is that there is no official US availability or pricing, a long-standing consequence of the sanctions placed on Huawei. It is, however, available in the UK and other regions, where it launched at £149.99. This makes it slightly more expensive than the Watch Fit 3 (£139.99), but it remains very affordable.
It’s also considerably cheaper than the Watch Fit 4 Pro (£249), where the extra cost gets you features like Huawei’s latest sensor system, richer mapping support, and tougher screen protection.
Outside of Huawei’s own collection, the Fit 4 competes with rivals such as the Amazfit Active 2 (£149.90), the Xiaomi Watch S4 (£129.99), and the slightly older Garmin Venu Sq 2 (£149.99). These are all smartwatches that impressed us in testing, so the Fit 4 faces some stiff competition to be the top pick in this crowded space.
Design and displayÂ
(Image credit: Wareable)
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The design evolution from the Fit 2 to the Fit 3 was significant, moving from a fitness tracker-smartwatch hybrid form factor to a more committed smartwatch design. The Fit 4 refines this further.
It remains a dainty and light 43mm-sized smartwatch that’s waterproof up to 50 metres, making it suitable for swimming. The angular case of its predecessor has been softened, giving it a more premium feel that’s less toy-like.
Measuring 9.5mm thick, it’s now thinner than the Fit 3 (9.9mm), yet it weighs roughly the same. Huawei has kept the twisting crown and flatter pusher button, but they now feel more seamlessly integrated into the aluminium alloy case.
(Image credit: Wareable)
The range of strap options has been reduced, however; only fluoroelastomer and woven bands are available at launch. The straps are easy to remove, with additional official options costing between £30-40.
Huawei has retained the excellent, highly responsive 1.82-inch, 480 x 408 resolution AMOLED touchscreen. The key upgrade is brightness, which has been boosted from 1,500 to a peak of 2,000 nits. While the previous screen was never difficult to view, the extra brightness is a welcome improvement, especially for new features like offline mapping.
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The screen doesn’t get the same sapphire crystal glass protection as the Watch Fit 4 Pro, but the Gorilla Glass on offer should be sufficient for most users who aren’t planning major outdoor expeditions. In testing, we’ve experienced no issues with it.
Battery life
(Image credit: Wareable)
The battery life on the Watch Fit 4 remains unchanged from the Fit 3, offering a maximum of 10 days, up to 7 days with typical usage, and 4 days in heavy usage mode (which primarily means keeping the always-on display enabled).
We’ve been using the watch with a mixture of the raise-to-wake gesture and the always-on display mode. Engaging the always-on mode will, of course, drain the battery faster. Other factors, such as high screen brightness, continuous health tracking, and music streaming, will also reduce device longevity.
We never felt shortchanged by the battery performance, even if it falls a little short of Huawei’s larger, more expensive smartwatches. Four days of heavy use are perfectly acceptable, and, by disabling the always-on mode, we could comfortably get through a full week. On some days, the battery drop was less than 10%, while on heavier usage days, it was slightly more. It’s no better than the last Watch Fit—but, crucially, it’s not worse despite the improvements elsewhere.
While proprietary chargers are never ideal, the magnetic charger for the Fit 4 is well-built and attaches securely. A full charge from zero takes the 75 minutes, which matches the claim made by Huawei.
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Sports, fitness, and wellbeing tracking
(Image credit: Wareable)
The number of health and fitness-focused features on the Fit 4 significantly outweighs its general smartwatch capabilities. Starting with sports modes, there are plenty to choose from, including profiles for running, swimming, hiking, and skiing.
The upgrade to dual-frequency GPS is a significant advantage for those seeking more precise outdoor tracking. But, as we always say: it;s the implementation of this tech that matters, as simply having dual-frequency isn’t an automatic slam-dunk for better accuracy.
Still, in our testing, the Fit 4 more than held its own against considerably more expensive dual-frequency watches from Garmin and Apple in terms of accuracy.
(Image credit: Wareable)
Another significant addition for outdoor enthusiasts is the availability of offline maps. This is separate from phone-tethered Petal Maps support and allows you to sync map regions directly from the Health app to the watch for navigation.
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The map screen is integrated as an additional data screen within supported sports profiles, and you can easily enable back-to-start navigation or import and follow GPX routes.
(Image credit: Wareable)
Health and well-being
There are also new features for monitoring general health and well-being. Unlike more expensive Huawei watches, you don’t get advanced health features like ECG or blood pressure monitoring, nor the additional metrics unlocked by the brand’s latest TruSense sensor system.
However, you do get a heart rate sensor that tracks continuously and does so with impressive reliability, especially with the most detailed tracking enabled. The sensor also performed well during workouts, and we had no issues pairing an external Garmin heart rate monitor via Bluetooth for higher-intensity sessions.
(Image credit: Wareable)
In addition to SpO2 tracking, you gain access to Huawei’s Health Insights, which analyze changes in sleep data, resting heart rate, and emotional state to provide a comprehensive overview of your overall well-being.
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We found the emotional well-being tracking to be an intriguing addition. This feature leverages activity data and heart rate variability (HRV), which directly relates to stress tracking found on most other smartwatches.
The presentation of this data, both on and off the watch, is impressive and offers a practical way to identify what Huawei labels as ‘calmer’ or ‘unpleasant’ periods, complete with links to guided breathing exercises. It’s still not as useful as the stress-related insights from the likes of Oura, who we consider to be at the forefront in this area, but there’s still something to take from this.
(Image credit: Wareable)
Sleep monitoring
Sleep tracking is another strength, although the data presentation in the Health app can feel somewhat disorganized.
We tested it against reliable trackers from Oura, Garmin, and Ultrahuman. We found that core metrics, such as sleep duration, were similar on most nights, although Huawei’s sleep scores were sometimes slightly more generous. And, as is often the case when it comes to digging into recommendations in the Huawei Health app, this information could be presented more cleanly.
Training features and training insights
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The suite of training features and insights demonstrates Huawei’s commitment to bolstering the Watch Fit 4’s fitness credentials—and you do get a lot here, considering.
On the watch itself, you’ll find sports watch metrics like training load, a training index, and recovery time suggestions. For runners, it will also score your running ability. Within the sports modes, the Fit 4 usefully offers animated warm-up and cooldown stretches, along with the ability to import running training plans from the Huawei Health app.
In the companion app, however, things can start to feel overwhelming.
The exercise tab offers challenges and travel-centric training runs, but some of these require a Huawei Health+ subscription to access. The sheer volume of features and their presentation can make it challenging to engage with them in a deep and meaningful way.
Huawei would benefit from cleaning up the clutter to make these powerful tools more accessible.
Smartwatch featuresÂ
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Is the Watch Fit 4 the best, most complete smartwatch on the market? Absolutely not. But does it do a convincing impression of one? For the most part, yes.
Compatibility across Android and iOS is generally acceptable, with the most significant omissions for iPhone users being the lack of support for Petal Maps and the inability to use the built-in music player for offline storage. For core tasks like reading phone notifications, checking the weather, answering calls over Bluetooth, or using music playback controls, the Fit 4 performs perfectly well.
(Image credit: Wareable)
Huawei also offers some very nice watch faces, including animated ones, with more available to download from a dedicated store. But, disappointingly, you’ll need to pay for most of these extra faces (or sign up for a Huawei Health+ subscription to get them tacked on).
So, what exactly stops the Watch Fit 4 from being a better smartwatch?
The user interface feels fluid, and the Huawei Health app offers a wealth of features; however, it occasionally appears disorganized in certain areas. The lack of payment support and the limited AppGallery are the main disappointments.
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However, when compared to other smartwatches at this price, it’s not necessarily doing a better or worse job on those core smartwatch features.