Your smartwatch isn't counting your steps accurately
Step counting depends on how tight your watch sits on your wrist. If it's too loose, the motion sensor can't track properly. Tighten the band or move it higher up on your wrist, right above the bone — this fixes it for most people.
Smartwatches use a tiny motion sensor to count your steps. It needs to be held firmly against your skin to feel your arm movement. If the watch is too loose, the sensor can't detect proper motion and misses a lot of steps. The other common reason is that the sensor needs to recalibrate after the watch has been worn differently, or it just needs a restart to work properly again.
Fix-IT-Bot will walk you through each step — just tap, no typing needed.
Skip — I just want a technicianCommon mistakes to avoid
- Comparing your watch step count to someone else's watch — different brands and models count differently, so an exact match is rare. What matters is consistency.
- Wearing the watch loose thinking it will be more comfortable — a loose watch will never track steps accurately. Tightness is more important than comfort for accuracy.
- Not recalibrating after repositioning the watch — if you move it to a new position on your wrist, tell the watch app so it can learn your new walking pattern
Signs you need professional help
- You've tightened the band, positioned it correctly, and restarted the watch but it's still way off — the motion sensor is failing and we can help you get a replacement
- Step count dropped suddenly without any changes to your setup — give us a call and we can check if a software update broke something
Book a technician
We can fix most issues remotely in 15 minutes. Weekend appointments — book your slot and we handle the rest.
Can't fix it yourself?
Most issues are resolved remotely in 15 minutes. Weekend appointments only — no parts, no in-home visit needed.