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Fitbit Integration

How to connect Fitbit directly to Veri for sleep and exercise insights

Alex avatar
Written by Alex
Updated over a week ago

What you can do with the Fitbit integration

With the Fitbit integration, you can:

  • Automatically receive sleep and exercise events - no more manual logging.

  • See your heart rate overlayed with your glucose data to understand how to fuel for workouts.

How to set up the FitBit <> Veri Integration

Fitbit can be connected to Veri by following the instructions below:

  1. Open the Veri app

  2. Tap the hamburger menu button in the upper left corner

  3. Tap Connected Apps

  4. Toggle ON Fitbit

  5. Tap Settings

  6. Toggle ON the data that you want to import

***Using Fitbit with Veri requires an active account with Fitbit.

Here are photos of the instruction steps for reference:

Toggling Fitbit ON will require you to log in with your Fitbit credentials and authorize Veri to connect with Fitbit.

You will be asked to permit Veri to read the Sleep, Readiness, Activity data, Heart Rate Data, and Workout Data in accordance with Veri’s privacy policy.

Make sure each point is toggled on, then tap Accept.

You can manually toggle off any of these permissions later if you'd like. However, not enabling them at this point will require you to reauthorize Veri if you decide that you want to enable them later.

At any point, you can remove the authorization by toggling the authorization OFF. Under the settings of the Fitbit section, you can select which data types are synced to Veri at any point in time.




You are now ready to use Fitbit! By default, Sleep, Heart Rate, and Workouts should be enabled. If you have a mix of devices (For example: Apple Health for Heart Rate, Fitbit for Sleep), you can make the appropriate adjustments here by toggling on or off the data points you want from each source.

Using the integration: exercise

Your exercise events should now come in automatically. To see your heart rate data, tap the exercise event on your Timeline.

When you exercise, your heart rate increases. Depending on exercise intensity, your glucose will increase or decrease.

Take low to moderate-intensity exercise like walking or cycling where your heart rate is around 110-120 beats per minute (BPM) for instance.

If you recently ate a meal with carbs, your blood glucose will decrease because your body will always favor the more readily available fuel source.

When fasting, your blood glucose levels remain stable or decline slightly since your body primarily uses fat for fuel which is a more abundant resource.

If you did a HIIT exercise while fasting where your heart rate is above roughly 150 BPM, you may see a glucose spike, even though you haven’t eaten. That’s because your liver and muscles provide glucose for fuel by breaking down stored glycogen in a process called glycogenolysis.


Use this information to experiment with exercise type, intensity, and timing that work for your health goals.

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