# Why Bevel Offers a Smarter Way to Track Fitbit Air Data

Fitbit Air users now have a solid alternative to Google Health. Bevel, a free app, delivers a cleaner interface for viewing your fitness metrics without the clutter of AI-driven features that many parents find distracting or privacy-concerning.

Google Health, Fitbit's native tracking ecosystem, bundles your activity data with algorithmic recommendations and cross-platform connections that feel invasive to some families. Bevel strips this away. The app focuses on what matters: displaying your steps, heart rate, sleep data, and exercise minutes in a straightforward layout.

Parents appreciate apps that respect their privacy boundaries. Bevel doesn't push notifications aggressively or use your data to train machine learning models. For families tracking fitness alongside kids' devices, this transparency matters. You see your metrics. You control what gets stored.

The interface ranks high for usability too. Bevel's dashboard loads faster than Google Health's portal, and you can customize which metrics appear first. If you care most about sleep data, that's what greets you when you open the app. If steps matter most, adjust accordingly.

For parents using Fitbit Air to monitor their own health, Bevel solves a real problem: bloat. Google Health wants to be everything. It recommends wellness programs, suggests dietary changes, and connects to other Google services. That ecosystem approach works for some people. Others find it exhausting.

Bevel keeps things simple. Download it free from the App Store or Google Play, connect your Fitbit account, and start viewing your data instantly. No sign-ups for health coaching services. No partnership offers. Just metrics presented clearly.

The catch? Bevel is smaller, so it updates less frequently than Google Health. For most parents tracking basic fitness activity, this matters very little