

If you’re not interested in the additional fitness modes, a physical button, or the addition of Google Pay, there’s very little to differentiate the two. The Fitbit Versa 4 is much the same as its predecessor, with a few small increments. You can use Fitbit Premium with either, too, to gain access to additional metrics, workout and diet plans, and the Daily Readiness Score. Still, Google Assistant is expected as a post-launch addition. While Google’s Wear OS hasn’t been added to Fitbit devices yet, Google Pay has – and it’s a more consistent way of paying using your device than Fitbit’s own version was.

There’s also no onboard storage for music, something that sadly didn’t make the jump from the Versa 2 to the Versa 3. The downside is that everything runs through the Fitbit app, so there’s no scope for installing third-party apps.
