The Apple Watch is one of the most capable health sensors you can strap to your wrist, but the hardware is only half the story. Out of the box it tracks your heart rate, activity, sleep and a growing list of vitals, yet the apps you install are what turn that raw data into something you actually understand and act on. The right app can surface a recovery score that tells you whether to train hard or rest, log every set in the gym, or quietly nudge your sleep into a better rhythm.
After testing the most popular options, here are the ten best health apps for Apple Watch in 2026, covering recovery, sleep, strength, heart health and everyday habits.
1. Athlytic — Best for Recovery and Readiness

If you have ever looked at a Whoop band and wished you could get the same insight without a separate device or a monthly fee, Athlytic is the app for you. It uses your Apple Watch heart rate and HRV data to generate a daily recovery score, a readiness rating and a training load estimate, then tells you in plain language whether your body is primed to push or needs to recover.
It is the closest thing to a Whoop experience that lives entirely on hardware you already own, and for most people that makes it the single most valuable health app on this list. You pay once (or a small annual fee) instead of an ongoing subscription tied to a wristband.
2. Hevy — Best for Strength Training

Anyone serious about lifting needs a proper workout logger, and Hevy is one of the best. It lets you build routines, log every set, rep and weight from your wrist, and watch your progress climb over weeks and months with clean charts and personal-record tracking. The Apple Watch companion means you can rest between sets without pulling out your phone, and the social side lets you follow friends and share routines. For tracking strength progress over time, it is hard to beat.
3. Sleep Cycle — Best for Smarter Sleep

Apple’s built-in sleep tracking has improved, but Sleep Cycle still does more with the data. It analyses your sleep stages, scores your nights and uses a smart alarm window to wake you during light sleep so you feel less groggy. Over time its trends help you connect late nights, caffeine or stress with how rested you actually feel, which is the whole point of tracking sleep in the first place.
4. Welltory — Best for Stress and Energy

Welltory leans heavily on heart rate variability to measure your stress and energy levels throughout the day. It translates HRV readings into an easy-to-read balance between stress and recovery, and pulls in data from your Apple Watch to build a picture of how your lifestyle, work and workouts affect your nervous system. It is a great companion for anyone who wants to manage burnout rather than just count steps.
5. AutoSleep — Best Set-and-Forget Sleep Tracker

AutoSleep does exactly what the name suggests: it tracks your sleep automatically, with no buttons to press at bedtime. Wear your watch to bed and wake up to a detailed breakdown of sleep quality, heart rate and time in bed. It is a long-standing favourite for a reason and pairs nicely with a dedicated recovery app like Athlytic.
6. Gentler Streak — Best for Training Balance

Gentler Streak takes a kinder approach to fitness. Instead of pushing you to close rings every single day, it shows you when you are training too hard and when you can afford to do more, helping you avoid burnout and overtraining. The visualisations are gorgeous and the philosophy is refreshingly sustainable for people who want fitness to be a long-term habit rather than a sprint.
7. Bevel — Best Modern All-Rounder

Bevel pulls your Apple Watch metrics into a single, beautifully designed dashboard that covers cardiovascular fitness, recovery, sleep and activity. It is aimed at people who want a holistic view of their health without juggling five separate apps, and its coaching-style insights make the numbers feel actionable rather than overwhelming.
8. Cardiogram — Best for Heart Health Insights

Cardiogram has been analysing wrist heart rate data for years, and it remains a strong pick for anyone who wants deeper context around their cardiovascular numbers. It visualises your heart rate patterns and flags trends that are easy to miss in Apple’s native app, making it a useful companion for the health-conscious.
9. WaterMinder — Best for Hydration

Health is not all heart rate and sleep stages. WaterMinder is a simple, effective hydration tracker that lets you log drinks straight from your wrist and reminds you to keep topping up through the day. It is a small thing that makes a real difference, especially if you train regularly.
10. Strava — Best for Runners and Cyclists

If your idea of health revolves around running or cycling, Strava remains the social and analytical home for your workouts. It records routes, pace, segments and effort straight from the Apple Watch, then connects you with a community that keeps you motivated. For endurance athletes it is practically essential.
Don’t Forget Apple’s Own Apps
Before you fill your watch with third-party software, it is worth remembering how much Apple now includes for free. The Fitness app and Activity rings cover the basics, the Vitals app surfaces overnight health trends, and Mindfulness helps with stress and breathing. For many people, a recovery app like Athlytic plus one or two specialists from this list is the perfect combination.
The Bottom Line
The best health app for your Apple Watch depends on your goals. If you want one app to rule them all, Athlytic delivers Whoop-style recovery insight without the subscription hardware. Lifters should start with Hevy, sleep-focused users with Sleep Cycle or AutoSleep, and anyone chasing balance with Gentler Streak or Welltory.
Of course, an app is only as good as the watch it runs on. If you are still deciding whether the hardware is a smart buy, read our take on whether the Apple Watch is worth it in 2026, and if you are weighing up other options, check out our guide to the best Apple Watch alternatives.
Featured image: cottonbro studio on Pexels.

