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Garmin unveiled a subscription tier for its app last week featuring an AI that promises to provide insights on your training. I liked the companyās policies around training and privacy, but hadnāt seen much of the actual AI output when I wrote about it. Now, Iāve spent a week with the feature, which Garmin says is still in beta. Here are my impressions.
The AI insights are just one of the features that rolled out with the new $6.99/month Garmin Connect+ subscription. Some of the other add-ons look a lot more useful, like the Live Activities feature. I have a full rundown here on what you get if you pay for the upgrade. The subscription only covers new featuresānot existing app features, and not specific features that come with the watch you buy.
Iāve been poking everywhere in the Garmin Connect app, and I can only find AI insights in one place. That would be the home screen, where I get a little āactive intelligenceā paragraph right at the top, above my usual workout and health metric cards.
If you donāt check your Garmin Connect app frequently, youāll miss out on most of the insights. They donāt pop up on your watch or in notifications on your phone. Thereās no chat interface like with Whoop or Oura, where you can ask questions about your data.
I expected the AI to be more like Stravaās, where a little description/motivational message appears on each activity you do. Stravaās AI is notorious for restating the data from the run description, with added errors, though, so perhaps itās best they didnāt try to mimic that.
Credit: Beth Skwarecki
My first few insights were pretty basicājust comparing my intensity minutes to a goal that I didnāt realize I hadābut I figured more interesting analysis was yet to come.
After a week, though, I havenāt seen it. The most exciting moment was when I caught the AI in a flagrant math error. āYou logged two activities today: running and indoor cycling for a total of one hour and twenty-seven minutes,ā it said. My activities were noted in their usual place, immediately below this āinsight,ā and the run was 40:10 while the bike ride was a quick test of this gadget that took less than three minutes. Thatās 43 minutes, silly robot. (I'm not the only one who has encountered some bad math: Two scuba divers posted on Reddit that the AI told them they spent more than a month underwater in a single day.)
The AIās obsession with intensity minutes may be to blame in my case. I canāt make the math work out for this example, but in some other cases, the AI seemed to be adding up intensity minutes and not always including the word āintensity.ā (One minute of vigorous exercise counts for two āintensity minutes,ā an idea that comes from public health exercise guidelines.)
Otherwise, the messages were just basic summaries of data that was already viewable elsewhere in the app. I did my best to screenshot every insight I saw, and hereās the tally of topics:
After a sentence or two with the metrics itās describing, there would be a sentence generically encouraging me to keep up the good work. I could give feedback as to whether the insight was interesting or not, but there was no way to ask questions or get more information. I still donāt know what āsleep stressā is, or how to get a quick overview of my intensity minutes if I did want to keep track of them.
Iām always the wet blanket on AI hype, so I checked Reddit and Garmin forums to see if anybody is having a better time with it than I am. I couldnāt find anyone who admitted to liking Active Intelligence or gleaning any useful insights from it.
āThere is so much that could be done with AI and training software, but all Garmin does is using AI to simply rephrase existing data,ā a Garmin forum user said. āSeems like 'Active Intelligence' is basically just the most basic summary of your workouts possible,ā said a redditor, adding, āI was really hoping that it would be an actual chatbot that you could discuss training with etc to create plans.ā
Other redditors wondered why the AI doesnāt create or adjust training plans, possibly even analyzing usersā data to find which workouts tend to correlate with fitness increases. Garmin hasnāt publicly said what future plans they have for AI, just that the feature is currently in beta.
āI received messages from AI throughout the day and I can say that they have no practical or informational benefit for me,ā one redditor said. Iām afraid I have to agree.
Full story here:
Garmin unveiled a subscription tier for its app last week featuring an AI that promises to provide insights on your training. I liked the companyās policies around training and privacy, but hadnāt seen much of the actual AI output when I wrote about it. Now, Iāve spent a week with the feature, which Garmin says is still in beta. Here are my impressions.
The AI insights are just one of the features that rolled out with the new $6.99/month Garmin Connect+ subscription. Some of the other add-ons look a lot more useful, like the Live Activities feature. I have a full rundown here on what you get if you pay for the upgrade. The subscription only covers new featuresānot existing app features, and not specific features that come with the watch you buy.
AI insights only appear in one limited part of the app
Iāve been poking everywhere in the Garmin Connect app, and I can only find AI insights in one place. That would be the home screen, where I get a little āactive intelligenceā paragraph right at the top, above my usual workout and health metric cards.
If you donāt check your Garmin Connect app frequently, youāll miss out on most of the insights. They donāt pop up on your watch or in notifications on your phone. Thereās no chat interface like with Whoop or Oura, where you can ask questions about your data.
I expected the AI to be more like Stravaās, where a little description/motivational message appears on each activity you do. Stravaās AI is notorious for restating the data from the run description, with added errors, though, so perhaps itās best they didnāt try to mimic that.

Credit: Beth Skwarecki
The AI "insights" arenāt very insightful
My first few insights were pretty basicājust comparing my intensity minutes to a goal that I didnāt realize I hadābut I figured more interesting analysis was yet to come.
After a week, though, I havenāt seen it. The most exciting moment was when I caught the AI in a flagrant math error. āYou logged two activities today: running and indoor cycling for a total of one hour and twenty-seven minutes,ā it said. My activities were noted in their usual place, immediately below this āinsight,ā and the run was 40:10 while the bike ride was a quick test of this gadget that took less than three minutes. Thatās 43 minutes, silly robot. (I'm not the only one who has encountered some bad math: Two scuba divers posted on Reddit that the AI told them they spent more than a month underwater in a single day.)
The AIās obsession with intensity minutes may be to blame in my case. I canāt make the math work out for this example, but in some other cases, the AI seemed to be adding up intensity minutes and not always including the word āintensity.ā (One minute of vigorous exercise counts for two āintensity minutes,ā an idea that comes from public health exercise guidelines.)
Otherwise, the messages were just basic summaries of data that was already viewable elsewhere in the app. I did my best to screenshot every insight I saw, and hereās the tally of topics:
5 messages about intensity minutes, either comparing them to my goal or weekly or daily averages
3 messages about my stress level or āsleep stress,ā a metric Iād never heard of and still canāt figure out what it means
2 messages about my Body Battery (a number that goes up with sleep and down with exercise or stress)
2 messages about steps
2 messages about run activities (with my mileage, pace, and/or time)
2 messages about bike activities (with my time, heart rate, cadence, and/or power)
1 message about my training status being in ārecoveryā
After a sentence or two with the metrics itās describing, there would be a sentence generically encouraging me to keep up the good work. I could give feedback as to whether the insight was interesting or not, but there was no way to ask questions or get more information. I still donāt know what āsleep stressā is, or how to get a quick overview of my intensity minutes if I did want to keep track of them.
It doesnāt seem like anyone is enjoying the AI feature
Iām always the wet blanket on AI hype, so I checked Reddit and Garmin forums to see if anybody is having a better time with it than I am. I couldnāt find anyone who admitted to liking Active Intelligence or gleaning any useful insights from it.
āThere is so much that could be done with AI and training software, but all Garmin does is using AI to simply rephrase existing data,ā a Garmin forum user said. āSeems like 'Active Intelligence' is basically just the most basic summary of your workouts possible,ā said a redditor, adding, āI was really hoping that it would be an actual chatbot that you could discuss training with etc to create plans.ā
Other redditors wondered why the AI doesnāt create or adjust training plans, possibly even analyzing usersā data to find which workouts tend to correlate with fitness increases. Garmin hasnāt publicly said what future plans they have for AI, just that the feature is currently in beta.
āI received messages from AI throughout the day and I can say that they have no practical or informational benefit for me,ā one redditor said. Iām afraid I have to agree.
Full story here: