Google is moving to calm frustration around its redesigned Google Health app, which has replaced Fitbit and is now available to Android and iOS users as version 5.0.
The first repair is basic but important. Runs that appeared as general workouts for some users are due to be corrected this week, with run splits also being added to summaries.
That gives Google an early test it can’t dodge. The company says it will keep updating its public list as changes roll out, with the summer rollout focused on tracking accuracy, sleep data, nutrition logs, Coach responses, sharing, and account migration.
Why workouts lead the repairs
Exercise tracking is where the update plan gets concrete fastest. Google is improving map load times and making maps easier to find in exercise summaries, which should make recorded workouts easier to review after the fact.
It’s also targeting export reliability across different tracking setups. That includes TCX export problems tied to Fitbit Air, connected GPS, and exercises recorded through multiple devices or apps connected to Google Health.
A health app can survive a missing convenience feature. It has a much harder time recovering when basic activity history feels shaky, especially for former Fitbit users who expect a run to look like a run.
How daily tracking gets cleaner
Sleep, nutrition, and Coach updates all hit the same user concern, whether the app records and explains health data clearly. Google is addressing missing Sleep Scores in parts of the app, adding a 24-hour sleep view that combines main sleep and naps, and making naps easier to find across current and previous days.
Nutrition gets its own set of corrections. Planned changes include stopping duplicate logs when the same third-party app is connected in multiple ways, fixing meal types from MyFitnessPal, Cronometer, and LoseIt, and correcting over-reported energy burned for Pixel Watch users.
Coach is part of that cleanup because bad timing or vague responses can make the app feel noisy instead of useful. Google plans shorter, more visual messages in the Today tab, along with better instruction recall, fewer unnecessary non-answers, and more logging support in Ask Coach.
What Google has to prove next
Google is preparing Health for heavier data-sharing work. Apple Health sharing, Smart Health Links for medical records, and support for tools like command line interfaces and AI skills all appear on the roadmap.
Those features raise the execution bar. An app that handles workouts, food logs, sleep summaries, and medical records has to make routine information feel consistent before users hand it more sensitive data.
For now, the thing to watch is delivery. If the mislabeled-workout repair and run splits arrive cleanly this week, Google gets a better starting point for the larger summer rollout.

