Fitbit Charge 6 and Ace LTE drop in Prime Day sales
The deals bring lower prices to Fitbit’s adult fitness tracker and child-focused LTE smartwatch, according to The Verge.
By Hana Yoshida · Markets Reporter
2 min read
Fitbit’s Charge 6 fitness tracker and Ace LTE smartwatch for children are being discounted during Amazon’s Prime Day sale, according to The Verge. The cuts matter for shoppers weighing a lower-cost wearable for fitness tracking, kids’ communication or location sharing.
The Verge reported that the Fitbit Charge 6 was available at Amazon for $85.45, described as $74.50 off. A deal card in The Verge’s coverage also listed the Charge 6 at $100 at Amazon and $110 at both Google and Best Buy, showing that pricing may vary by listing or timing.
For the Fitbit Ace LTE, The Verge reported a $69.99 price with a $110 discount. Its deal card also listed the child-focused smartwatch at $60 at Amazon and $70 at Google and Best Buy.
What the Charge 6 offers
The Verge described the Fitbit Charge 6 as a strong fitness tracker with health tools and some smartwatch-style features. Sheena Vasani of The Verge, who said she uses the device daily, cited its reliability, quick charging and secure band as strengths.
According to The Verge, the Charge 6 tracks activity, sleep, blood oxygen and heart rate. It also includes an FDA-cleared EKG reader, a feature The Verge said is not common among fitness trackers even around the Charge 6’s standard price.
The tracker can send heart-rate data over Bluetooth to compatible gym equipment, according to The Verge. The publication also noted that Fitbit added a haptic side button, replacing the touch-sensitive approach used on earlier models.
Other features listed by The Verge include built-in GPS, Google Maps turn-by-turn directions, Google Wallet payments and YouTube Music controls. The Verge said Google Maps support includes driving directions.
What the Ace LTE offers for families
The Fitbit Ace LTE is aimed at children and mixes activity tracking with games that respond to movement, according to The Verge. The publication said the device is designed to encourage kids to be active while giving parents more oversight.
The Verge reported that the Ace LTE supports LTE connectivity, location sharing, calls and texting through Fitbit’s Ace Pass subscription, which costs $9.99 per month. Those communications features are tied to Fitbit’s service rather than a child’s smartphone, according to The Verge.
Parents can use the Fitbit Ace app to control approved contacts and view a child’s location, The Verge reported. That setup is meant to let children communicate and share where they are without carrying a phone, according to the publication.
The discounts were covered as part of The Verge’s Prime Day 2026 shopping guide. As with many event-based electronics sales, the listed prices may change by retailer and availability.
This story draws on original reporting from The Verge.