Learn how to use your Apple Watch with gym equipment like treadmills, elliptical machines, indoor bikes, stair steppers, and more to get accurate workout metrics such as speed and elevation.
Your Apple Watch and cardio machines inside gyms can talk to each other. Using your Apple Watch with gym equipment gives you a better, more complete set of metrics such as heart rate, distance, speed, elevation, and so forth.
You can use Apple Watch with gym equipment, pair it with cardio machines, and start and end a workout on the gym equipment.
What is GymKit?
GymKit is Apple’s technology platform that lets you connect Apple Watch workouts with cardio equipment such as treadmills, ellipticals (cross-trainers), stair steppers, and indoor bikes.
Syncing Apple Watch data with GymKit-enabled machines gives you the most accurate distance, cadence, pace, energy burn, and other metrics possible. Your heart rate continues to be measured by the heart rate sensor built into the watch but gets displayed on the machine’s screen. Apple explains that only a software update, along with a small upgrade of the contactless NFC sensor, is required in order to add GymKit compatibility to these machines.
Wearable.com explains why that’s a good thing:
In isolation gym equipment and the Apple Watch used for indoors can be a little incomplete. The watch is good for heart rate, but distance, accuracy and elevation on a treadmill is impossible. Likewise, no-one actually calibrates their treadmill in the gym so even if you do use a chest strap, calorie burn is normally way off.
A GymKit stair climber, for example, is able to calculate floors you’ve climbed more accurately by polling its own sensors rather than relying on the Apple Watch sensors, which can only track actual flights of stairs as you change altitude.
Use your Apple Watch with gym equipment
Follow the steps below to learn how to use Apple Watch with gym equipment, from pairing the wearable device with compatible machines to starting and ending workouts.
Pair Apple Watch with gym equipment
With NFC technology in the Apple Watch, you can effortlessly connect the wearable device with compatible pieces of gym equipment, and here’s how:
1) Start by enabling the ability for your Apple Watch to detect gym machines. You can do this by switching on Detect Gym Equipment in the Workout section of your iPhone Watch app. This is also visible in the Apple Watch Settings app > Workout > Detect Gym Equipment.
2) Verify that your favorite gym machine is compatible with HomeKit by looking for the sticker “Connects to Apple Watch” or “Connect to Apple Watch” on the equipment.
3) To quickly connect, hold the watch within a few centimeters of the contactless NFC reader on the gym machine, with the display facing the reader as if you were using Apple Pay.
This will automatically launch the Workout app. You will feel a gentle tap on your wrist and hear a beep as a confirmation that the watch is paired.
Did you forget to switch on the Detect Gym Equipment option in Settings?
Not to worry, you can also start a workout by launching the Workout app, then hold the watch near a gym machine — again, with the display facing the machine’s contactless reader. The amount of rich data from the gym machine that’s displayed on the watch depends on the type of the selected workout, as explained by Wearable:
From a run you’re able to see calories, distance, time, average pace, elevation gain, average heart rate and recovery heart rate. And from a treadmill run, that’s actually a staggering amount of data. You’d be hard pressed to find that level of detail anywhere else from an indoor workout.
Cyclists will also be pleased. In addition to that same data you’ll get power wattage and RPM from the bike, which is data that even outdoor cyclists struggle to capture. And if you’re into the stepper, you’ll get floors climbed too, which would previously have been impossible to measure from just the Apple Watch.
Forgot to pair the watch with the gym machine before your workout?
No problem, simply tap the watch to your gym equipment while in a workout session and watchOS will automatically sync up the data. But wait, that’s not all — you will even get full credit for the workout session both on the watch itself and within the Workout app.
How to start and end workouts
Upon connecting the watch to a piece of gym equipment, you can start and end a workout using its onboard controls rather than the Workout app:
- Start your workout: Press Start on the gym equipment to begin the workout.
- End your workout: Press Stop on the gym equipment to end the workout.
Like before, you can also start and end your session in the Workout app like you normally would. Apple says, “When you end your workout, data from the equipment appears in the workout summary in the Activity app on your Apple Watch and iPhone.”
GymKit and your privacy
GymKit was designed to protect your privacy.
You can choose what you share with your gym equipment at any time. After pairing your watch to a GymKit-compatible machine, the devices exchange data as soon as you start and stop workouts on the watch. With your workout ended, the gym machine saves data to the watch.
According to Apple’s privacy policy regulating GymKit data sharing, the gym equipment is required to discard the data as soon as it has been transferred to the watch. However, as the privacy policy spells out, the equipment manufacturer may collect and retain data about your workout that is synced to the equipment from your Apple Watch.
On a related note: