Related News

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

June 24, 2025
Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

May 8, 2025
Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

May 30, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

Related News

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

June 24, 2025
Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

May 8, 2025
Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

May 30, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
No Result
View All Result
Home Running & fitness

The Three Fitness Apps I Use Every Day

Sarah Taylor by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
in Running & fitness
0
The Three Fitness Apps I Use Every Day
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

You might also like

Huge Athleta sale live from $15 — 9 yoga apparel deals I’d snag now

Summer clearance! I’ve spotted 11 epic shoe deals on New Balance, Hoka, On and more

VR headsets could become a tool for pain management, study finds

I use apps for everything from obtaining free stuff to earning extra income. I also use them for some extra help on the health and fitness journey I’ve been undertaking for the last year and a half. I was always active—I teach spin classes, consistently ride my Peloton, and have always frequented the gym—but something really took hold of me at the end of 2023 and made me want to get, like, super active. Naturally, I downloaded all the apps I thought could help me as I set out to keep track of my protein intake, devise the perfect schedule of workout splits, and monitor all my biodata. Here are the ones I liked best.

For cardio: the Peloton app

Peloton App

$12.99 Per Month
at Peloton
Peloton in iOS
Peloton in iOS

$12.99 Per Month
at Peloton

You don’t need a Peloton Bike, Tread, or Row to enjoy the benefits of the Peloton app, which I’ve written about before. For about $24 per month, you can access cycling, rowing, and running classes that work just fine on non-Peloton equipment, plus walking, yoga, stretching, and even meditation classes. I follow along with these all the time, like when I’m walking outside, running on a treadmill at the gym, or just sitting in my living room, since the app works not only on my iPhone, but on my Roku, too.

I like this app a lot better than having to always come up with my own cardio routine or following the advice of a random fitness influencer—the variety is massive and the instructors are so professional. With the big-name brand comes expertise and some assurance that you’re actually getting useful, efficient, and safe instruction. The instructors’ cues are always clear and direct, new classes get uploaded every day, and I feel like I get a lot more out of this than I would if I just hopped on a rowing machine and worked out based on my own mood.

If you’re not into the Peloton app or you want to shop around, there is another I recommend but don’t personally use frequently: Les Mills+. It provides cardio and strength classes with straightforward instruction and plenty of beats, plus it contains quality educational material that can help you understand what you’re doing on your fitness journey. Check out my full review and my breakdown of how it differs from Peloton.

For strength training: Strong

Peloton also has a Strength+ app that I enjoy, but if I had to choose between that or Strong as my preferred weight-lifting helper, I’d go with Strong. Available on iOS and Android, the app relatively bare-bones, which is why I like it. It keeps track of my lifts, allowing me to enter the exercise I’m doing, the weight I’m using, how many sets and reps I’m doing, and whether or not I do a drop set or train to failure. It then keeps track of all that information so the next time I go to do, say, a lat pulldown, Strong tells me how many reps and sets I did last time and what weight I used.

Strong in iOS

Credit: Lindsey Ellefson

I used to keep track of this information in a note on my phone, then move it into a spreadsheet when I got home. This was unbelievably ineffective. Strong keeps track of the frequency of my workouts, links to my Apple Health seamlessly (which is a benefit I also appreciate from the Peloton app), and comes with extra features I don’t even use, like a tab to jot down the circumference of various body parts as they ideally grow and change. I happily pay $29.99 per year to unlock unlimited custom routines, but you can use the free version if all you want is to mark down a few details about your workouts.

For nutrition: Lifesum

I am a Millennial woman and, as such, have put in my time in the MyFitnessPal trenches for well over a decade. That app has had its claws in my generation for far too long and a few months ago, I finally broke free when I switched over to Lifesum. It was like a totally different world.

MFP has had and still has a lot of features that nutrition pros and eating disorder advocates worry are a little dangerous, like a pop-up notification that tells you what you’d weigh in five weeks if you consistently ate the same amount of calories you ate that day and numbers that turn red when you’ve exceeded your calorie goal for the day. Lifesum, on iOS and Android, is much gentler and is focused more on whole nutrition than calories. When I exceed my calorie goal for the day, there is no red number making me feel bad; the pastel rainbow background is as soothing and encouraging as it is on a day I eat at my goal. If I input a food that is, say, high in fat or calories, though, the app does show me a frowny emoji. If I input something nutritious, I am rewarded with a smiley face. These are much less intimidating than red numbers and they still keep me on track just fine.

Lifesum in iOS

Credit: Lindsey Ellefson

When you sign up for Lifesum, you take a quiz to get a “life score” and it asks you about how much you tend to eat from different categories, like seafood and fruit. You set macronutrient goals, activity goals, and calorie goals, but the app isn’t pushy if you don’t meet them on a given day. You are not rewarded for maintaining a “streak.” The whole thing is so pleasant that it actually encourages me to use it, which is hardly a difficult chore because Lifesum gives you plenty of options for use: I have a widget on my home screen that lets me input water intake and track my macros without opening the app, I can use my camera lens as a barcode scanner or to snap a pic of my meal and let the app estimate the calories, or I can type what I ate into an AI chatbox and allow it to estimate my calories and nutrients based off that. These are not perfect calculations, of course, and it only works well if you’re super specific in your descriptions, but it’s almost freeing to not be bound by extreme strictness. My Apple Health data, including my workouts and my weight, is entered in for me and Lifesum adjusts my recommended intakes based on that information and the goals I set. It’s $99.99 per year, $29.99 every three months, or $7.49 per month.

Other phone-based fitness considerations

I like to let my phone and other devices do a lot of work for me when I can, so I’m constantly wearing my Apple Watch, which delivers data on how much I’m walking, standing, moving, sleeping, and generally exerting straight to my Apple Health app, which in turn spreads that information over to Lifesum and my other apps. All the apps listed here connect seamlessly with my Apple Health app, which is important to me; I want everything in one place and all of it working together in sync.

I also use a smart scale to weigh myself and that, too, delivers information for Apple Health to spread around. You can absolutely get too into monitoring your own progress and fitness, so I recommend only getting these sorts of devices if you can exercise some reasonable caution. But overall, the ability to track and access data without doing too much work is really helpful. This is the scale I use, and I love it:

iHealth Nexus Smart Scale

$39.99
at Amazon
$42.99
Save $3.00
iHealth Nexus Smart Scale for Body Weight Bluetooth, Digital Bathroom Scale Body Fat and Muscle, Body Composition Monitor Health Analyzer for BMI Compatible for IOS & Android Accurate to 0.1lb-White
iHealth Nexus Smart Scale for Body Weight Bluetooth, Digital Bathroom Scale Body Fat and Muscle, Body Composition Monitor Health Analyzer for BMI Compatible for IOS & Android Accurate to 0.1lb-White

$39.99
at Amazon
$42.99
Save $3.00

After I weigh myself, that weight is recorded in Apple Health and distributed to the other apps, making it easier for Peloton to make accurate estimates of my burned calories based on my weight, easier for Lifesum to make estimates of my nutritional needs based on it, etc.

All of this said, you don’t want to spend too much time fiddling with your phone—especially during mealtime or when you’re at the gym. The apps above are not time-suckers; Lifesum, especially, works quickly thanks to its barcode scanner and picture-assessing capabilities.

Still, don’t get so wrapped up in tracking and planning that you neglect the actual eating or exercising. If you’re spending a little too much time poring over your nutrition app or scrolling fitness influencers’ pages without actually replicating the exercises they’re showing you, check out the Steppin app, which works with your phone’s pedometer and blocks pre-determined apps, only letting you access them if you are willing to trade time you earned by walking.

Read Entire Article
Tags: Lifehacker
Share30Tweet19
Sarah Taylor

Sarah Taylor

Recommended For You

Huge Athleta sale live from $15 — 9 yoga apparel deals I’d snag now

by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
0
Huge Athleta sale live from $15 — 9 yoga apparel deals I’d snag now

If you're in need of a new durable pair of leggings, a comfortable yoga top, or any other essentials, Athleta is the place to shop right now, with...

Read more

Summer clearance! I’ve spotted 11 epic shoe deals on New Balance, Hoka, On and more

by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
0
Summer clearance! I’ve spotted 11 epic shoe deals on New Balance, Hoka, On and more

Looking for shoes to suit any type of adventure Sun & Ski Sports has discount prices across a range of footwear from flip flops to hiking boots Here's...

Read more

VR headsets could become a tool for pain management, study finds

by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
0
VR headsets could become a tool for pain management, study finds

New research suggests that immersive VR nature scenes may reduce pain sensitivity by activating the brain’s natural pain-relieving pathways

Read more

You Can Now Use Your ClassPass Credits for AMC Movie Tickets

by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
0
You Can Now Use Your ClassPass Credits for AMC Movie Tickets

I'm skipping pilates to go see 'The Naked

Read more

New study says the ‘one-set rule’ could help you build more muscle in the gym (while doing less) — here’s how

by Sarah Taylor
August 12, 2025
0
New study says the ‘one-set rule’ could help you build more muscle in the gym (while doing less) — here’s how

The "one set rule" means performing just one set of each exercise in your routine to failure, prioritizing intensity over reps and sets Here's how it works, according...

Read more
Next Post
Summer clearance! I’ve spotted 11 epic shoe deals on New Balance, Hoka, On and more

Summer clearance! I've spotted 11 epic shoe deals on New Balance, Hoka, On and more

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

I teach weightlifting for a living — 3 moves build full-body muscle and crush your core in just 15 minutes

June 24, 2025
Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

Palace’s New Osaka Shop Opens May 10 and They Hit the Streets to Celebrate

May 8, 2025
Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

Sask. premier, public safety officials provide update as wildfires continue to rage

May 30, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS – AI Curated content

CANADIANA.NEWS will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

CATEGORIES

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

BROWSE BY TAG

Canada News CBC.ca Golf Hockey Lifehacker Ludwig-van.com Skateboarding tomsguide.com

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.