Fitbit has been quietly cutting the Charge 6 price every few days during Prime Day, and the third drop just landed. Amazon now has it at $85, down from its $159 standard price, the lowest this fitness tracker has ever been, with a 3-month Google Health Premium membership included in the box. This deal requires Prime membership, and the 30-day trial runs without a card.
What three months of Google Health Premium gives you
The Fitbit Charge 6 doesn’t just track your health data: it feeds it into Google Health Premium, which analyzes patterns across sleep, heart rate, activity, and recovery to generate personalized insights and recommendations that raw numbers alone don’t provide. The 3-month membership included with this deal covers the full premium feature set, including daily readiness scores that tell you how prepared your body is for exercise on any given day, advanced sleep analysis with sleep stages and restoration scores, and cardio fitness trends tracked over time with context for what the numbers mean relative to your age group.
Google Health Premium also connects Fitbit data directly to Google apps across the ecosystem. Heart rate data syncs to compatible exercise equipment via Bluetooth, so the treadmill or stationary bike you’re using at the gym pulls your live heart rate from the Charge 6 without needing a chest strap. Google Maps integration provides turn-by-turn navigation on the tracker’s display during outdoor runs and walks, and YouTube Music controls let you manage playback from your wrist without touching your phone.
The health monitoring hardware covers continuous heart rate tracking, ECG app for on-demand heart rhythm checks, skin temperature sensing, SpO2 blood oxygen monitoring, and stress management score. Both small and large bands are included in the box, which covers most wrist sizes without an additional band purchase. The Obsidian colorway is the version on offer here.
Three drops, one week, and Fitbit isn’t making noise about any of it
Fitbit has cut the Charge 6 price three times over the past few days without any announcement or fanfare, each drop arriving quietly and pushing the tracker further below where it started Prime Day. That pattern of repeated silent cuts during a major retail event typically signals a brand that’s prioritizing volume and ecosystem adoption over hardware margin, which makes each subsequent drop a better entry point than the last and also a signal that waiting for another cut may be a reasonable strategy before Prime Day closes.
At nearly half off its standard price with a 3-month Google Health Premium membership included, the Charge 6 delivers more software value at purchase than most fitness trackers at twice the price. The membership alone has a retail value that meaningfully offsets the hardware cost, and the Google ecosystem integration makes the Charge 6 more useful for Android users than any competing fitness tracker that doesn’t connect natively to Google’s health platform.