Allow us to move or delete Cardio Load prompt

There is a new Activity called Cardio Load on my home page and I cannot move or delete it. I don't care about it. I want to see my Steps on the top of the list and now I can't see them because of this new Activity and the size of my iPhone mini. This is ridiculous.

 

Moderator Edit: Clarified subject

541 Comments
Whatakik2
First Steps

I HATE that Ready to Hit your target today!!!! PLEASE GET RID OF IT!!! First it's telling me I'm overtraining when I'm not, then I'm undertraining when I'm not. Is this run by AI??? It is so incredibly annoying. Please moderator, tell me when it's gone.

PersonHuman
First Steps

Seriously Fitbit, get out of here with this. Do not tell me first thing in the morning I’m under training when I’m sore and can’t move. These messages are stressing us out. 

emda271
Jogger
Allow users to permanently disable cardio load prompts
It is absolutely unhinged that there is no way to turn this nagging prompt off. It is frequently flat out wrong, and it blocks what I actually want on my Home Screen. It even comes back repeatedly after closing it whenever the app refreshes. Let us disable it permanently.
GrahamStr
First Steps

There must be an option to remove the Cardio load notifications.  I have no idea what they mean and they are driving me nuts.   They serve no purpose and should be removed.

LizzyFitbit
Premium User
Fitbit Moderator
Fitbit Moderator

Hi @emda271. Thank you for your product feedback about being able to delete the Cardio Load prompt on the Fitbit app with us! We've found a similar request and merged yours with it. You can find it here. Please vote on the existing thread to help us track interest. To learn more about how Fitbit decides what product feedback is developed, visit our FAQs.

old_ultrarunner
First Steps

Yes, please allow us to remove the “ready to hit your target” notifications! I’ve been running ultramarathon trail distances for decades (yep, I’m getting old) and began using a Fitbit about six years ago to track activity and cap it so as to keep from overtraining and getting (more) stress fractures in my feet. The cardio load algorithm is deeply flawed. A training program should operate on a long term basis with cyclical rises and falls in activity to allow muscle recovery, but the “you’re at risk of <<undertraining, overtraining>>” messages appear to be based on the highest level of recent activity, so if you do a once-every-two-weeks long run, you’ll be informed for the next week or two that you’re undertraining if you don’t then go for long runs again…and again…and again. There’s also no way to implement an every-other-day training schedule, and the heart rate measurements and estimated load measurements are inaccurate (my simple Fitbit sometimes gets my heart rate wrong against other heart monitors, and in addition, it has no altimeter, so it misses things like gaining a couple of thousand feet in altitude while running. With measurements like those, the app has no business estimating a cardio load for an activity). Being unable to turn off the chirpily incorrect messages is aggravating even though I know they’re wrong, but it’s even worse—irresponsible and even dangerous—to force this flawed algorithm on potentially naive users.

epresco
Jogger

Agree that Cardio Load is a load of hooey. At best it is fickle - after a big week working out I am "overtraining" but if I take a day or two off - or god forbid get sick I am "at risk of undertraining". I also am told that twenty thousand steps and a three mile run with scores me a cardio load of 70 when I "need" to be reaching one hundred to one hundred thirty. It's bonkers. At best it is uninformative and at worst it encourages dangerous exercise habits or greets me with a shameful scold that I'm not doing enough. And, even when I do hide the load the **ahem** banner comes back every time I check the app. I hate it - this is the first thing in ten years that is making me consider quitting fitbit and moving to an apple watch. 

Calif.Sharon
Runner

You are not alone! 

LadyBel
Jogger

I've tried to delete Cardio Load data several times, for months now, to stop it appearing in the app, but it keeps popping up. 

This "Cardio Load" concept is harming me. It is making me feel terrible and demotivated. I don't want to see it at all. So much so that I am now researching which tracking device I will replace my fitbit with that also has no or minor affiliation with Google. I don't want to support companies that ignore me and others when we tell them they are causing harm. I encourage other users to start thinking about a change, too. 

Calif.Sharon
Runner

Apparently, you're not the only one!

CoCoLove10
Jogger

You have to file an official complaint. (And get the # to document) Our comments are doing nothing here. 

Calif.Sharon
Runner

It would help if you provided instructions on how to file an official complaint. I'm sure there are many who would be willing to do that!

CoCoLove10
Jogger

Go to “Contact Us” in the Fitbit Help Center. Fill out the form to be connected with a member of the customer care team that will give you a case number to reference.

https://support.google.com/fitbit/gethelp?sjid=2043273529407629257-NC

Tomdub
Jogger
Get rid of the cardio load prompt. It is trash.

It was better before.

Moderator edit: Clarified subject
Calif.Sharon
Runner

Submitting a ticket just resulted in a link that sent me to an answer that "it's not possible."  The feedback shows almost 800 upvotes to turn this feature off.  No action by G.  Useless.  *sigh* 

LizzyFitbit
Premium User
Fitbit Moderator
Fitbit Moderator

Hi @Tomdub. Thank you for your product feedback about being able to delete the Cardio Load prompt from the Fitbit app with us! We've found a similar request and merged yours with it. You can find it here. Please vote on the existing thread to help us track interest. To learn more about how Fitbit decides what product feedback is developed, visit our FAQs.

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