"Why most fitness apps fail their users — and it has nothing to do with features" from Reddit r/saas, ranked #23. By LanceDoesThings, 1 score, 0 comments. Data from Daily Trends.
Why most fitness apps fail their users — and it has nothing to do with features
- Rank
- 23
- Subreddit
- r/saas
- Author
- LanceDoesThings
- Score
- 1
- Comments
- 0
- Posted
- 3/26/2026, 10:04:37 PM
- Snapshot
- 3/27/2026, 12:00:00 AM
Links
Content
I spent a while talking to people who'd tried and failed at fitness routines multiple times. The pattern that kept coming up wasn't what I expected. It wasn't motivation. It wasn't the workout program. It was their setup. Workout tracker on one app. Calories on another. Habits somewhere else. A note in their phone for their weekly plan. Every Monday started with a 10-minute session just to figure out what they were supposed to do that day. That decision overhead — not laziness — is what kills most people's consistency. The insight I kept coming back to: **fitness apps have optimized for recording what happened, not for reducing friction at the moment of decision.** The "what do I actually do right now?" problem has barely been touched. I ended up building something around this thesis — an AI fitness coach that connects your training, nutrition, habits, and schedule into one daily plan. If you're curious, it's called **Yoked AI** and it's on the App Store. But more interested in w...