The Best Fitness Apps for Android, iOS and Apple Watch in 2025

2 de abril de 2026

Finding the right apps for recording workouts is less about chasing the most features and more about matching the app to how you train. If you want to log sets fast, an app that remembers your last numbers matters more than a giant exercise library. If you want the app to build the workout for you, a smarter planner is worth the trade-off. And if you care about exporting data later, that needs to be part of the decision from day one.

This list compares the strongest options for lifters, mixed athletes, and people who just want a clean place to store training history. It also includes the practical stuff most reviews skip, like onboarding friction, data export, and whether a free plan is actually usable.

App

Best for

Platforms

Starting price

Standout feature

Hevy

Most lifters who want a clean, modern tracker

iOS, Android, Apple Watch, Web

Free, Pro from $2.99/month

Custom exercises, rest timers, PR graphs, and Health export (hevyapp.com)

Strong

iPhone users who want a classic gym log

iOS, Apple Watch

Free, Pro from $4.99/month or $29.99/year

Supersets, CSV export, Apple Health, RPE, and advanced charts (strong.app)

JEFIT

People who want templates, guidance, and a big exercise library

iOS, Android, Watch, Web

Free Basic, Elite from $12.99/month

1,400+ exercises, custom routines, and exportable workout history (jefit.com)

Fitbod

Users who want the app to generate workouts for them

iOS, Android, Web onboarding

3 free workouts, then $15.99/month or $95.99/year

Personalized workouts, video demos, and progress tracking (fitbod.me)

Boostcamp

Lifters who want programs plus logging

iOS, Android

Free, Pro from $4.99/month billed annually or $14.99/month

Free science-based programs and a fast workout tracker (boostcamp.app)

Caliber

People who want a lean tracker with coaching-style feedback

iOS

Free, Pro from $2.99/month or $24.99/year

PR detection, Apple Health sync, and smart rest timing (usecaliber.app)

FitNotes

Android users who want a no-frills log

Android

Free, no ads

Routines, CSV export, backups, supersets, and a body tracker (fitnotesapp.com)

Gymwolf

People who track gym, cardio, and bodyweight work

Web, iOS, Android

Free core features, Pro from $5/month

Online tracking, customizable graphs, and Excel export (gymwolf.com)

How to record a workout in under 30 seconds


A person logging a workout on a smartphone in a gym

The fastest logging workflow starts before the first set. Save your routine, keep your exercise order consistent, and make it possible to open today's workout in one tap. Hevy, JEFIT, Boostcamp, and FitNotes all support routines or saved workout structures, and FitNotes also supports supersets, exercise notes, and quick set entry. For a more detailed breakdown of the basics, the core lifting principles and tracking fundamentals guide is a useful companion. (help.hevyapp.com)

A simple 30-second session looks like this:

  • Open today's workout.

  • Log the first set as soon as you rack the weight.

  • Repeat or duplicate the next sets instead of rebuilding them.

  • Add one short note if something feels different.

  • Save the workout and check the PR or volume change before you leave.

If you want more ideas for building a repeatable logging habit, the Fitness & Workout Tips hub is helpful. (setgraph.app)

The best apps for recording workouts


A smartphone showing a workout log beside dumbbells

1. Hevy

Hevy is one of the easiest apps for recording workouts if you want a clean interface that gets out of the way. The official site says it is free on iOS and Android, available on Apple Watch and web, and used by more than 12 million athletes. The App Store listing highlights hundreds of exercises, custom exercises, automatic rest timers, supersets, PR graphs, 1RM calculations, and Apple Health export. (hevyapp.com)

Best for: lifters who want fast logging with social features and polished progress tracking.

Trade-off: the most advanced extras sit behind Pro, so the free version is best if you mainly want straightforward logging. (apps.apple.com)

2. Strong

Strong is a classic gym log for people who want something proven and direct. The official site lists supersets, custom exercises, CSV export, Apple Health, RPE, advanced charts, body part measurements, workout scheduling, and custom timers. The App Store shows monthly, yearly, and lifetime Strong PRO options, which makes it easy to decide whether the app fits your long-term setup. (strong.app)

Best for: strength-focused lifters who care about a simple logbook feel and strong export tools.

Trade-off: it is more of a tracker than a planner, so people who want the app to program every session may prefer Fitbod or Boostcamp. (strong.app)

3. JEFIT

JEFIT is the most all-in-one option in this group if you want planning, logging, and a large exercise database in one place. The official site says you can build custom workouts with preferred exercises, rest time, supersets, equipment, or frequency, log from mobile or watch, and review or export your workout journey in one timeline. The pricing page lists a free Basic tier with over 1,400 exercises and an Elite plan at $12.99 per month or $69.99 per year. (jefit.com)

Best for: beginners and intermediate lifters who want templates, exercise guidance, and a deeper library.

Trade-off: the extra structure is helpful, but it is not as stripped down as a pure logging app.

If you want to compare a tracker-first app with a broader fitness system, the Setgraph app reviews page is a good comparison point.

4. Fitbod

Fitbod is built for people who want the app to do more of the planning. The official FAQ says it personalizes workouts based on goals, fitness level, recovery status, performance history, and equipment access. It also says every exercise includes a professionally recorded video demo and coaching cues, and the pricing page shows a $15.99 monthly plan or $95.99 annual plan after a three-workout trial. Fitbod's FAQ also lists iOS, Android, and web onboarding, offline mode, plus sync options with Apple Health, Fitbit, Garmin, Strava, and Health Connect. (fitbod.me)

Best for: busy lifters, travelers, and home-gym users who want the workout built for them.

Trade-off: it is a subscription-first app, so it makes the most sense if the time savings matter to you.

5. Boostcamp

Boostcamp sits in a sweet spot between program library and workout tracker. The official site says you can follow free science-based programs, create custom multi-week programs, and log training with a lightning fast workout tracker. Its premium page shows a free version, a 7-day trial for Pro, and Pro pricing of $4.99 per month billed annually or $14.99 per month. Boostcamp also says the app is available on iOS and Android. (boostcamp.app)

Best for: lifters who want ready-made programs and enough tracking to stay consistent.

Trade-off: if you do not care about following a program, some of the app's value may feel unnecessary.

6. Caliber

Caliber is a lean, coaching-style option for people who want logging without a lot of clutter. The official site says the free tier includes workout logging, a 65+ exercise library, PR detection, a rest timer, Apple Health sync, and workout history. It also offers Pro at $2.99 per month or $24.99 per year, plus a one-time founding member option. (usecaliber.app)

Best for: lifters who want a minimalist app with smart feedback and simple progression tools.

Trade-off: the app is centered on iPhone users, so Android shoppers should double-check availability before they commit.

7. FitNotes

FitNotes is the best no-frills answer for Android users. The official site says it is free to use, no ads, and Android only, while the help docs cover routines, supersets, exercise notes, a rest timer, a 1RM calculator, a body tracker, CSV export, and backups. It is a strong choice if you want a focused log without a lot of extra noise. (fitnotesapp.com)

Best for: Android lifters who value speed, simplicity, and export over community features.

Trade-off: it is intentionally simple, so you will not get the same coaching and AI planning that Fitbod and Caliber offer. (fitnotesapp.com)

8. Gymwolf

Gymwolf is a practical choice if you log more than just barbell work. The official site says you can track gym workouts, cardio workouts, and bodyweight work, and its pricing page says the main web, iOS, and Android features are free. Gymwolf Pro adds Excel export, advanced charts, flexible plans, comparisons, and calculators starting at $5 per month. (gymwolf.com)

Best for: hybrid athletes and anyone who wants to keep training data online with fewer sync headaches.

Trade-off: the personal-trainer side is a bigger part of the product than in some of the pure logging apps.

How to choose the right app for your training style


A person comparing workout apps on a laptop and phone

Pick the app that matches your training style. Hevy and Strong are the cleanest picks for fast logging, JEFIT and Boostcamp are better if you want routines, Fitbod and Caliber lean into guided training, FitNotes is the free Android choice, and Gymwolf is the easiest way to keep gym, cardio, and bodyweight data together. (hevyapp.com)

If long-term access matters, check export and backup tools before you pay. Strong supports CSV export, Hevy can export workouts or measurements and import Strong CSV files, FitNotes can generate CSV files and backups, and Gymwolf can download workouts as Excel spreadsheets. Those features make it much easier to switch apps later without losing your training history. (apps.apple.com)

If you want more help deciding how a routine should be structured after you pick an app, the Setgraph training guide is a useful next read.

FAQ

Can I log workouts offline?

Fitbod says offline mode is available. For other apps, offline behavior can vary by platform and sync setup, so it is worth checking before you commit if you train in a dead zone or basement gym. (fitbod.me)

Which apps are free forever?

Several options are usable without paying. Hevy, JEFIT Basic, Boostcamp, Caliber Free, FitNotes, and Gymwolf all have free core tiers, and Strong also has a free version. Fitbod is the most restrictive of the group because it gives you three free workouts before asking for a subscription. (hevyapp.com)

Can I transfer workout history from another app?

Usually yes, if the app supports export. Strong supports CSV export, Hevy can export workouts or measurements and import Strong CSV files, FitNotes can generate CSV files and backups, and Gymwolf can download workouts as Excel spreadsheets. (apps.apple.com)

Which app is best for beginners?

If you want the app to guide you, Fitbod and Caliber are the easiest starts. If you want a simpler log that you can learn in minutes, Hevy and FitNotes are easier to keep up with, and JEFIT sits in the middle if you want more structure. (fitbod.me)

Which app is best for Apple Watch or Android?

Hevy, JEFIT, Fitbod, and Gymwolf all cover Android, while Strong and Caliber are more iPhone-centric picks, and FitNotes is Android-only. If watch support matters, Hevy, Strong, JEFIT, Fitbod, and Gymwolf are the stronger places to start. (hevyapp.com)

Final take

If you want one app to start with, Hevy is the most balanced option for most lifters. Strong is a good iPhone log, JEFIT is best when you want templates and a deep exercise library, Fitbod is the smartest planner, Boostcamp is ideal for free programs, Caliber keeps the interface lean, FitNotes is the simplest Android-only pick, and Gymwolf is the easiest way to keep gym, cardio, and bodyweight work together. If you want more lifting-focused reading, the workout articles hub has more guides to browse. (hevyapp.com)

Article created using Lovarank

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