Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. Smart Home
  5. Legacy Archives

Hands-on: Withings Blood Pressure Monitor helps keep a watchful eye on your health

Add as a preferred source on Google

Your vital signs can tell you a lot about your everyday health. If you’re in a risk category when it comes to blood pressure, it’s important to monitor it as often as possible. Unfortunately, other than those cringe-inducing public machines at the grocery store, it can be difficult to measure your blood pressure other than whenever you pay a visit to your doctor. Luckily for those who are health-conscious and own an iPhone, Withings has come up with a solution. The Withings Blood Pressure Monitor ($129) uses a small device that connects to your iPhone to take accurate measurements of your blood pressure levels and turn your daily results into graphs and helpful visuals. This storage of data makes the Withings monitor a great tool for tracking your measurements over time and sharing them with your doctor if you are at risk for of have concerns like hypertension or heart disease.

To use the device, you simply wrap the monitor around your bicep and plug the cord into your iOS device. The app will automatically launch, and a green “Start” button on the screen is all you have to press to get started. The cuff will then inflate and deflate, just like at the doctor’s office, at measure your systolic and diastolic pressure while your current heart rate appears on the screen. When the measurement is finished, you can press the “Done” button to view your history of measurements. Color markers of green, yellow, and red indicate whether your numbers are optimal, slightly high, or at risk. When you click on a color, the ratings expand to provide more detail on what each category means for your health.

Recommended Videos

Sharing your information with others is just as simple. The device can email a list of your results to your doctor, or automatically transmit the information to online databases like Microsoft Health Vault and Google Health. If you are one of those people who share inappropriate life details on the internet, you can also easily share your daily blood pressure results on Facebook and Twitter. But honestly, please don’t. We don’t need to know.

The system translate your daily results into easy-to-read graphs that help you keep track of their measurements over long periods of time. Say you go to your doctor and he warns you that you have dangerously high blood pressure and gives you some tools and advice to get the number to a more optimal level. Using this system, you could track your numbers on a daily basis and look back at your graphs after three months to see if your average level has improved at all. The ability to see trends here is an important reason why this system is worth the money and effort.

If you’re a young, healthy person, your interest in spending $129 on a blood pressure monitor is probably negligible, but if you are someone who has hypertension, heart disease, is at risk for either, or has some other health concern that has to do with BP levels, this system could be an important health tool. We found it very easy to use and would recommend it for anyone who needs to keep tabs on their daily or weekly numbers.

Kelly Montgomery
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kelly Montgomery is a magazine journalism graduate from the University of Oregon's School of Journalism and Communications…
The OLED iPad mini might miss the one upgrade fans wanted most
Home screen layout of the 2024 iPad mini.

If you've been holding off on buying an iPad mini because you were hoping Apple's first OLED model would finally get a smoother display, you may want to temper your expectations.

A prettier screen, but not necessarily a faster one

Read more
Huawei’s MatePad Air finally comes out of China and it makes the iPad Air feel inadequate
Huawei just showed what “Air” should include
Huawei MatePad Air being used with a stylus

Apple’s iPad Air remains one of the easiest tablets to recommend, largely thanks to its powerful M4 processor and excellent app ecosystem. Huawei’s latest MatePad Air has now left China, and its hardware makes Apple’s mid-range tablet look surprisingly under-equipped in some areas.

The 2026 Huawei MatePad Air will go on sale in select global markets on August 1. Prices start at 849 euros for an 8GB and 256GB model with the Smart Magnetic Keyboard included. A PaperMatte version with either the keyboard or M-Pencil Pro costs 899 euros, while the 12GB model reaches 999 euros. This arrives just days after Huawei unveiled the MatePad Pro.

Read more
Apple could launch two new Apple Pencils next spring alongside the iPad Pro
Bloomberg reports that two refreshed styluses are planned for next spring's iPad Pro launch
Apple Pencil featured

Apple's next iPad Pro refresh might not be the only hardware getting an upgrade. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is preparing two new Apple Pencil models for launch next spring. The lineup is said to include a refreshed Apple Pencil Pro alongside an updated version of the more affordable USB-C Apple Pencil, with both expected to debut alongside the next-generation iPad Pro.

A refresh for both ends of the lineup

Read more