Best cycle tracking wearables in 2026
This is a 2026 comparison of cycle tracking wearables focused on the metrics that actually drive cycle prediction (overnight body temperature, HRV, resting heart rate), not on marketing claims. We separate "good wearable" from "good cycle wearable" because they are not the same.
What cycle tracking on a wearable actually measures
Three signals drive wearable-based cycle prediction:
- Overnight skin temperature. Basal body temperature rises about 0.5°F after ovulation and stays elevated for 12 to 14 days. A wearable that samples skin temperature overnight captures this shift continuously.
- Resting heart rate. RHR is typically lower in follicular and higher in luteal. The shift is small (1 to 3 beats per minute) but detectable across cycles.
- Heart rate variability (HRV). HRV is generally lower in luteal due to reduced parasympathetic tone (progesterone-mediated). Some wearables use HRV trends to refine cycle phase predictions.
The combination beats calendar-only prediction substantially, especially for irregular cycles or post-pill users where calendar prediction is unreliable.
Oura
The strongest dedicated cycle tracking wearable.
- What it measures: Overnight finger temperature (continuous), resting heart rate, HRV, sleep stages, activity.
- Why it leads on cycle: Finger temperature sampling produces a cleaner signal than wrist-based measurement. Vascular density in fingertips is higher; thermal noise is lower.
- Form factor: Ring. Worn 24/7. Many women prefer the discretion of a ring over a wrist device.
- Cost: Hardware (Oura Gen 4 priced as a ring + ongoing subscription). Total 2-year cost is moderate.
- Privacy: Data on Oura servers; privacy policy is detailed but standard cloud-based wearable.
- Best for: Users who want maximum cycle prediction accuracy and value the ring form factor.
Caveats
Finger temperature can be affected by hand position during sleep, room temperature, and circulation issues. Most users settle into reliable readings within 2 to 4 weeks. The subscription requirement is a recurring concern for some users.
Apple Watch
The best general wearable that also tracks cycles competently.
- What it measures (Series 8+): Overnight wrist temperature, heart rate, HRV, activity, sleep, ECG.
- Why it works for cycles: Apple Health's cycle tracking integrates the temperature data and produces retrospective ovulation estimates. Less accurate than Oura on cycle-specific metrics, more accurate than calendar-only.
- Form factor: Watch. Many users prefer not wearing a watch to sleep; this affects overnight temperature data quality.
- Cost: Hardware purchase only; no subscription. Higher upfront, lower ongoing.
- Privacy: Best of the wearable category. On-device processing where possible; encrypted iCloud sync if enabled.
- Best for: iPhone users who want a wearable that does everything reasonably well, including cycle tracking.
Caveats
Wrist temperature is noisier than finger temperature. Cycle accuracy lags Oura. For users with already irregular cycles, the trade-off matters more.
Whoop
The best wearable for athletes who also want cycle awareness.
- What it measures: HRV, heart rate, sleep, strain, recovery, cycle phase as one input among many.
- Why it works for athletes: Whoop's positioning is recovery and strain management. Cycle phase is integrated into the recovery scoring, which is genuinely useful for hard training schedules.
- Form factor: Wristband, no display. Some users prefer no-screen design.
- Cost: Subscription-based with hardware included. Recurring cost.
- Privacy: Cloud-based; broad data collection (it is the product); review policy.
- Best for: Athletes or training-focused users who want cycle data as part of training optimization rather than as the headline feature.
Caveats
Less cycle-specific than Oura. Subscription is non-negotiable; you cannot use Whoop hardware without active subscription.
Garmin
A reasonable option for runners and outdoor users.
- What it measures: Heart rate, HRV, sleep (basic), GPS, training metrics. Some recent models add wrist temperature.
- Why it works: Garmin's Connect app includes period tracking with reasonable predictions. Less polished than Oura or Apple, but functional.
- Form factor: Watch (various sizes).
- Cost: Hardware purchase only, no subscription.
- Privacy: Garmin Connect privacy policy is standard cloud-based; some third-party sharing for analytics.
- Best for: Runners and outdoor athletes who already use Garmin; not worth switching to for cycle tracking alone.
When you do not need a wearable
A wearable is not essential for cycle tracking. For most users with regular cycles, calendar-based prediction (the kind any tracker or Lumen calculator provides) is accurate within 1 to 2 days after 3 to 4 cycles of data.
You benefit from a wearable if:
- Your cycles are irregular (variability over 4 to 5 days) and you want better prediction.
- You are post-pill and rebuilding cycle predictability.
- You are actively trying to conceive and want accurate ovulation detection.
- You are using a fertility awareness method for contraception and want to back up oral temperature with continuous overnight data.
- You already wear a watch or ring; the marginal cost of cycle tracking is zero.
You do not benefit if:
- Your cycles are regular and predictable.
- You are on hormonal birth control that suppresses cycles.
- You want a wearable mostly for general fitness; calendar tracking is enough for the cycle question.
Pair with an app
Wearables are sensors. The app turns sensor data into predictions and recommendations. Most cycle wearables pair best with their own app, but third-party app integration is improving:
- Oura → Oura app, also integrates with Apple Health, Natural Cycles.
- Apple Watch → Apple Health, integrates with many third-party apps.
- Whoop → Whoop app, less third-party integration.
- Garmin → Garmin Connect, syncs with most platforms.
See best period tracking apps for the right software pick.
Total cost over 2 years
Approximate ranges, not current prices (verify on each manufacturer's site):
- Oura: hardware moderate + subscription moderate annually → moderate total.
- Apple Watch: hardware higher + zero subscription → moderate total, frontloaded.
- Whoop: subscription with hardware included → similar moderate total, distributed.
- Garmin: hardware varies by model + zero subscription → flexible, often lower if you already train with one.
The cost differences are real but not enormous over 2 years. Pick by fit, not by 6-month cost.