Track your sleep in the Fitbit app to better understand your sleep patterns and quality.
Learn about sleep tracking
Wrist-based Fitbit devices and Google Pixel Watch series automatically detect your sleep when you wear your device to bed. We recommend wearing your device in a snug wristband while sleeping and donât wear your device in a clip or pendant accessory.
When your body is completely at rest and you havenât moved for about an hour, your device records that youâre asleep.
If your device doesnât track heart rate, you can check your sleep pattern in the Fitbit app. Your sleep pattern includes your time spent awake, restless, and asleep. Restless sleep indicates that you moved in your sleep, like tossing and turning. If your device detects excessive movement, enough that restful sleep won't be possible, your device records time spent awake.
Fitbit devices that track heart rate (except Charge HR and Surge) also track sleep stages. For more information, go to What should I know about Fitbit sleep stages?
How can I find my sleep log data?
- Swipe up from the clock face to find Fitbit Today.
- Check the sleep tile to find your sleep information. You may have to swipe up to find it.
- Press the crown, swipe up to the Fitbit Today app tap the app to open it.
- Swipe to the Sleep card , then tap the card to find more details.
For a faster way to check your sleep data, add the Sleep tile to your watch. For more information, refer to Change settings, alarms, and notifications on Google Pixel Watch.
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Tap the Benchmark tab to check the amount of time spent in each sleep stage in comparison with other users. Tap the 30 day average to compare your most recent results with your average over the past 30 days.
- Tap Day, Week, Month, or Year to change your view.
Can I check my average sleep stats?
Check your averages for the week or longer periods of time for certain sleep stats, including:
- Hours sleptâThe number of hours you slept each night that week and your weekly average
- Sleep scoreâYour sleep scores throughout the week and your weekly average score
- Sleep scheduleâAn overview of your sleep schedule that week (when you went to bed and when you woke up)
- Sleep stagesâThe number of hours you spent in each sleep stage each night that week and your weekly average minutes asleep
- Swipe up from the clock face to find Fitbit Today.
- Check the sleep tile to find your sleep information. You may have to swipe up to find it. If you don't find the sleep tile, tap Settings at the bottom of Fitbit Today and make sure you turned on the sleep tile.
- Swipe left on the sleep tile to find your sleep history for the past week.
- Press the crown, swipe up to the Today app , and tap the app to open it.
- Swipe to the Sleep card , and tap the card to find more details.
- Swipe up to find your sleep history for the past week.
For a faster way to check your sleep data, add the Sleep tile to your watch. For more information, refer to Change settings, alarms, and notifications on Google Pixel Watch.
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Swipe down to Sleep timeline to find stats for your previous sleep session.
- To check average stats, tap Week, Month, or Year, and then tap Duration, Score, Schedule, or Deep sleep to filter your sleep data.
Note: This feature is available with a Fitbit Premium subscription.
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Tap Sleeping heart rate to find stats for your most recent sleep session.
- To check stats for other days, use the week, month, and year tabs to choose a different day, and then tap a sleep session to check your Sleeping heart rate.
- Tap and hold your finger on the chart, then slide your finger right and left to check your sleep details.
Your time asleep is calculated by subtracting your time spent awake and restless from your overall tracked sleep time. For example, if you slept 8 hours but woke up 2 times for 15 minutes each, your time asleep would be 7 hr 30 min.
To learn more about your time asleep in sleep stages, go to What should I know about Fitbit sleep stages?
Understand and take steps to help improve your sleeping habits with a monthly sleep profile, available to Fitbit Premium members using one of these devices: Charge 5, Charge 6, Inspire 2, Inspire 3, Luxe, Pixel Watch series, Sense, Sense 2, Versa 2, Versa 3, or Versa 4.
On the 1st of each month, you receive a breakdown of your sleep with 10 monthly metrics, along with a sleep animal that reflects long-term trends in your sleep behaviors.
Each month, wear your Fitbit device to sleep for at least 14 days out of the month. The more sleep you log, the more closely your sleep profile will reflect your patterns. Check your progress toward receiving next monthâs sleep profile on the Sleep tile below your sleep graph.
On the 1st of the month, check your sleep profile in the Fitbit app or on your Fitbit device (Sense 2 and Versa 4 only).
Fitbit app |
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On-device |
Install the My Sleep Animal clock face (available on Sense 2 and Versa 4) to check your sleep profile on your watch.
Once installed, you'll find your sleep animal wake in their natural habitat at 9 am and wind down for the night at 9 pm on the clock face. If you haven't yet received a sleep animal for the month, youâll find a mix of different animals until your personalized animal is ready. Learn more about sleep animals, and track your progress in the Fitbit app. |
- You must be a Fitbit Premium member.
- You must be using one of these devices: Charge 5, Charge 6, Inspire 2, Inspire 3, Luxe, Pixel Watch series, Sense, Sense 2, Versa 2, Versa 3, or Versa 4.
- You must wear your Fitbit device to sleep for at least 14 days each month, beginning on the 1st of the month. The sleep logs donât need to be consecutive.
- For a sleep log to count toward your sleep profile, you must receive sleep stages. For more information, check What should I know about Fitbit sleep stages?
- Make sure you recently synced your Fitbit device. For more information about syncing, go to How do Fitbit devices sync their data?
To delete your current sleep profile:
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile Your sleep profile.
- Tap the menu icon in the top right.
- On iPhones, tap Remove Sleep ProfileDelete. On Android phones, tap Delete Sleep ProfileOK.
To delete a past sleep profile:
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tileHow you slept last monthHistory tab.
- On iPhones, swipe left on the sleep profile you want to delete Delete. On Android phones, press and hold the sleep profile you want to delete Delete.
Premium content and features may change. Terms and conditions apply. For more information, review our Terms of Service.
Check and edit sleep details
With a Premium subscription, turn on the snore and noise detection feature to allow the microphone on your Fitbit Sense or Fitbit Versa 3 to track noise, including snoring from you or someone next to you. By analyzing noise information every few seconds, your device can track the overall noise level of your surroundings and check for snoring throughout the night. When you wake up, your nightly results are summarized in a report.
To turn on or turn off snore and noise detection:
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Tap the menu icon in the top right Settings.
- Tap the button next to Snore & noise detect. When you turn on snore and noise detection for the first time, follow the on-screen instructions.
To check your snore and noise report:
- Wear your Fitbit device to sleep. Snore and noise detection doesnât analyze previous nightsâ sleep. You receive your first report the day after you turn on the feature.
- When you wake up, open the Fitbit app on your phone. From the Today tab , tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Swipe to the bottom of the page and tap the Snoring & Noise tile to show your Snore & Noise Report. Your report shows the amount of time your device detected snoring and a chart of the noise level throughout the night.
- The amount of snoring is categorized as:
- None to mild (less than 10% of the total time you were asleep)
- Moderate (10-40% of the total time you were asleep)
- Frequent (more than 40% of the total time you were asleep)
- The noise level chart shows the volume of your sleeping environment in A-weighted decibels (dBA), which measures the relative loudness of sounds to the human ear. A dBA of 0 doesnât mean thereâs no sound, but that itâs not audible to the human ear. For example, a soft whisper is 30 dBA and a coffee grinder is 70-80 dBA. Your overall noise level is categorized as:
- Very quiet (30 dBA or lower)
- Quiet (30-50 dBA)
- Moderate (50-70 dBA)
- Loud (70-90 dBA)
- Very loud (90 dBA or higher)
- The amount of snoring is categorized as:
Note: If your device runs out of battery during the night, the noise level chart will be missing some data.
To delete snore and noise data:
- Visit the Manage your Fitbit Data page in your web browser.
- In the Snore & Noise Detect section, select the start date and end date of the data you want to delete Delete.
- This feature impacts your deviceâs battery, so we recommend charging your device to at least 40% before going to bed.
- If thereâs too much background noise, your deviceâs microphone canât pick up snoring. For best results, donât play white noise or other ambient sounds during sleep.
- Your device isnât able to identify whether snoring comes from you, someone sleeping nearby, or even a pet.
- You must wear your Fitbit device during sleep to collect snore and noise data.
- Your sleep must be at least 3 hours long in order to receive a Snore & Noise Report.
- We only use the microphone to register noise level and snores. We donât save any audio recordings.
- This feature isn't intended to diagnose or treat any medical condition and shouldn't be relied on for any medical purposes. It is intended to provide information that can help you manage your well-being. If you have any concerns about your health, talk to a healthcare provider.
Set a sleep schedule in the Fitbit app to help you meet your sleep goal and maintain consistent sleep patterns. You can set either a bedtime or a wake-up time target, or set both targets.
If you meet your target by going to sleep or waking up within 30 minutes of the target, a star appears in the sleep schedule graph. You wonât find a star If you set both bedtime and wake-up time targets but only meet one.
How does Fitbit estimate how much sleep I need?
If you have 5 or more sleep logs, your sleep goal is estimated based on an average of these logs. Your wake-up time target is estimated based on the time you typically wake up each day, and your bedtime target defaults to the time you should go to sleep in order to meet your sleep goal.
If you have fewer than 5 sleep logs, you can provide an estimate of how much sleep you get on a typical night, and your sleep goal is set based on this estimate. You must manually set your bedtime and wake-up time targets.
To manually set or adjust your sleep goal, go to How do I set or change my sleep goal in the Fitbit app? To manually set or adjust your bedtime and wake-up time targets, refer to How do I set my bedtime or wake-up time targets?
How do I set my bedtime or wake-up time targets?
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Tap the menu icon in the top right Settings.
- Tap Time Asleep Goal, Bedtime, or Wake up Time to set or edit your targets.
Set a bedtime reminder in the Fitbit app to help you maintain a consistent sleep schedule. When it's time to wind down for bed, you receive a notification on your phone. On certain Fitbit devices, you can also find a bedtime reminder on your device.
To start, you receive bedtime reminders on Sunday through Thursday (common work or school nights). To change which days you receive a bedtime reminder:
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Sleep duration tile.
- Tap the menu icon in the top right, and then tap on Settings.
- Under bedtime reminder, tap the button next to Reminder.
- Set the time and frequency.
To check a reminder on your Fitbit device, make sure notifications from the Fitbit app are turned on. For instructions, check How do I get notifications from my phone on my Fitbit device?
For devices that record sleep patterns instead of sleep stages, you can set your device to track sleep in a normal or sensitive mode.
In normal mode, when you make significant movements like rolling over, your device records time spent awake. This setting is appropriate for most users. In sensitive mode, your device records nearly all movements as time spent restless or awake. This setting may be helpful if you wake up feeling tired even though your sleep history shows sufficient rest.
To change your sleep sensitivity setting:
If you sign in with your Google Account
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap your profile picture Fitbit settings.
- In the Preferences section, tap Sleep.
- In the Bedtime Reminder section, tap Sleep sensitivity and make your changes.
If you sign in with your Fitbit login
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, tap the Settings .
- In the Preferences section, tap Sleep.
- In the Bedtime Reminder section, tap Sleep sensitivity and make your changes.
- On the Fitbit settings page, click your device under the Devices menu.
- Click Sleep Tracking and make your changes.
Troubleshooting sleep
If your Fitbit deviceâs battery isnât critically low, check when the Fitbit device last synced. Your Fitbit will usually sync automatically when it's near your phone and you open the Fitbit app. If it doesn't (or if it syncs but your sleep session doesnât appear), follow these steps:
- From the Today tab in the Fitbit app, press and hold on the screen and pull down to refresh.
- If your Fitbit device didnât sync, force quit the Fitbit app and restart your phoneâs Bluetooth connection.
- Check if your sleep setting is set to Sensitive. If it is, change it to Normal. For instructions, refer to the section above.
- For accurate sleep tracking, wear your device higher on your wrist (about 2-3 finger widths above your wrist bone). The band should feel secure but not too tight. For additional tips, refer to How do I wear my Fitbit device?
- To adjust a sleep sessionâs start or end time, edit it in the Fitbit app. For instructions, refer to How do I add, edit, or delete Fitbit data and activities?
If you normally receive sleep stages but only go to your sleep pattern, refer to What should I know about Fitbit sleep stages?
If you received sleep stages but donât have your sleep score, refer to What's sleep score in the Fitbit app?