We Compared Every Major Smart Ring. This Sleek Titanium Option Offered the Biggest Bang for Your Buck
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Once upon a time, fitness trackers were little more than retro-looking wristwatches with step counters. Now, in this day and age where monitoring your biometrics feels like a full-time job, there’s seemingly a tracker for everything, from smart socks to headbands. So if you’re not a watch fan or simply don't want to look like Inspector Gadget on a daily basis, your options are luckily endless. And one device that consistently impressed us with both its accuracy and sleek design is the Oura Ring 4.
For the 2026 Men’s Journal Fitness Awards, we put a wide range of trackers to the test, from niche devices to household-name brands. In the end, the Oura Ring 4 earned our vote as the overall best health tracker ring. Personally, I was skeptical of the popular smart ring, especially after years of using an Apple Watch before converting to the Garmin life. But Oura stands out for its in-depth sleep and recovery insights, 24/7 biometric monitoring, and lightweight design. If you still have your doubts, read on for our full thoughts to see why this tiny ring might just replace your smartwatch for good.
Best Health Tracker Ring: Oura Ring 4
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Health tracking rings have surged in popularity largely because they’re easier to wear around the clock than watches, and Oura Ring 4 makes a strong case for that approach. It’s low profile, comfortable enough to sleep in, and far less intrusive than a smartwatch, which matters if you want consistent 24-hour data. At $349 plus a $5.99 monthly subscription, it also comes in at a lower upfront cost than many high-end health watches, while still offering a broad snapshot of daily health metrics.
Researchers I spoke with believe Oura offers the best sleep tracking available in an all-around health wearable, with the caveat that users should focus on long-term trends like sleep, wake times, and average hours slept rather than night-to-night fluctuations. The Ring 4 is not FDA cleared as a medical device, but it is widely used in academic research, with hundreds of published studies referencing Oura data. If you have serious sleep concerns, a sleep clinic is still the best option, but tracking your patterns with Oura can be a powerful motivator for improving sleep hygiene.
Where the Oura Ring falls short is in sports and fitness tracking. It lacks GPS and will not replace a dedicated watch or phone for logging runs, rides, or hikes, though it does attempt to automatically detect activities with mixed accuracy. Its real advantage is consistency. Oura Ring 4 is comfortable to wear overnight, needs charging only every five to eight days, and is discreet enough to keep on all day. Those qualities make it easier to stick with long-term use and collect the continuous data needed for meaningful health insights over time.
Key Product Features
- Sizes: 4-15
- Sensors: Heart rate & HRV (24/7), respiration, temperature trends, blood oxygen, accelerometer for movement & activity
- Compatibility: Oura App on iOS & Android
- Materials and Build: Non-allergenic titanium, seamless interior, water resistant up to 100m/328 ft
- Dimensions: Width 7.9mm, Thickness 2.88mm
- Weight: 3.3–5.2g, depending on size
- Battery Life: 5–8 days, charges in 20–80 minutes
Why You Should Trust Me
I’m a health and fitness writer for Men’s Journal, covering everything from training trends and workouts to gear reviews. I’m also an ACE-certified personal trainer and lifelong exercise addict who has spent years putting fitness products to the test, from pre-workout formulas to fitness trackers like this. My goal is simple: provide you with practical, experience-backed advice so you can figure out what’s actually worth your time and money in the gym for an elevated workout experience.
Related: I Tested Garmin’s inReach Mini 3 Plus in the Backcountry—Here’s What Happened

