Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Deals

Get fit in style with Garmin’s Vivosmart 4, now only $100 on Amazon and Best Buy

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Today’s fitness bands are a far cry from the boxy and clunky accessories of yesteryear. Following Fitbit’s footsteps in stylish bands, Garmin released its most fashionable fitness tracker to date – the Vivosmart 4. Amazon and Best Buy are running the same deal on this model, dropping its price by 23% which amounts to just $100. This discount applies to a variety of band color options, including black, berry, gray, and azure blue.

Garmin is dedicated to keeping its activity trackers fresh and exciting, and the Vivosmart 4 is a solid testament to that. Apart from the aesthetics, the company also beefed it up with unique metrics and sensors that set it apart from the competition.

Buy Now

Buy Now

Just like most fitness bands, the Vivosmart 4 can monitor steps taken, calories burned, floors climbed, and heart rate. It can track a variety of exercises, including walking, swimming, cycling, and elliptical training. There are preloaded activity timers available to keep track of your exercise, and even if you fail to set it up, the Move IQ feature will automatically detect your workout and start timing. It can also remind you to move when you have been inactive and send you small encouragements when you achieved your fitness goals. The only thing missing is the GPS, but it shouldn’t be an issue if you’re not after mileage tracking.

This wearable also packs a Pulse Ox sensor which can estimate your blood oxygen levels. You can take a spot pulse ox reading any time to monitor your oxygen level during workouts or times of stress; it can even detect sleep apnea and other breathing disorders. There’s also an Advanced Sleep Monitoring that records movements and quality of sleep in each stage and an all-day Stress Tracking which calculates and displays your stress level. Our favorite, however, is the Body Battery, which measures your energy levels by using a combination of parameters. All these features help you understand your body more.

Connecting the unit to your smartphone allows you to view real-time notifications. You can even reject incoming phone calls and delete alerts directly from the tracker. But since the screen is small, reading updates can be challenging and will require you to pick up your phone for more details.

Equipped with a robust set of features you wouldn’t expect in an entry-level device, the Garmin Vivosmart 4 is definitely more than just good looks. Kickstart an active lifestyle by ordering yours today on Amazon or Best Buy at a discounted price of $100.

Feel free to browse through our curated deals page for more amazing discounts on smartwatches and activity trackers.

Erica Katherina
Former Digital Trends Contributor
I find deals and write about them to help Digital Trends’ readers save on quality tech products.
Virtual taekwondo sounds like a gimmick until it solves the biggest fear of combat sports
The noncontact VR discipline is gaining momentum in Southeast Asia by keeping the athletic grind while reducing the injury risk that scares many people away.
Electronics, Screen, Person

Virtual taekwondo sounds ridiculous in the easiest way. Put on a headset, strap sensors to your body, kick at empty air, and call it a combat sport. Somewhere, Wii Sports is quietly stretching.

Athletes are still kicking, reacting, and gasping through the work. The difference is that the hits land on avatars instead of bodies.

Read more
This VR empathy game could be the start of something much creepier
Rekindle uses face-tracking biometrics to deepen player involvement, but the same idea could eventually shape therapy tools, safety systems, and emotionally responsive interfaces.
VR Headset, Accessories, Goggles

A new VR empathy game called Rekindle turns facial expressions into part of the controls. The game asks players to perform emotions, then watches their faces to see whether those reactions match the scene.

The first-person story centers on memory, identity, and empathy for the LGBTQ+ community. Players move through a dystopian future where sexual identity has been targeted and erased, collecting memory fragments tied to the protagonist’s experience.

Read more
Carely’s new wearable watches over aging parents so you don’t have to
Because "just checking in" shouldn't be your only safety net.
Carely feature image

Checking in on aging parents usually means playing a proactive game. Are they okay? Did they sleep well? Would you even know if something was wrong before it became serious? You have to be constantly vigilant and check in with your elders. Carely wants to remove that guesswork entirely, and it does so without a screen, an app your parents need to open, or a single daily check-in call.

https://twitter.com/ritwikpavan/status/2074194987110342690

Read more