One dashboard for all your wearables
The problem is app-switching. Recovery is in one app, sleep stages in another, body composition in a third, blood pressure in a fourth — and none of them talk. To combine Whoop and Oura, or any set of devices, BioTrackr pulls each source into a single dashboard of about 120 metrics on a grid you arrange yourself. The picture that was spread across your home screen becomes one view.
It consolidates and displays the data you already generate. It does not diagnose or interpret your numbers as medical advice — it puts them where you can actually see them together. That sounds modest until you have lived without it: the moment your recovery, sleep, weight and blood pressure share one screen, patterns that were invisible across four apps — a rough night showing up in the next day’s HRV, weight tracking a change you made — become something you can simply notice.
Which devices connect
BioTrackr reads from the sources most self-trackers already own. If you want to sync Oura, Whoop and Apple Health together with your scale and blood-pressure readings, they land on the same grid. You connect each source once, and from then on the app pulls new data on a schedule — roughly every six hours — so the dashboard stays current without you opening five apps to refresh it.
| Source | What it brings |
|---|---|
| Whoop | Recovery, strain, HRV, resting heart rate, sleep |
| Oura | Readiness, sleep stages, HRV, resting heart rate, temperature |
| Apple Health | Steps, workouts, heart rate, and metrics from connected apps |
| Xiaomi smart scale | Weight and body composition |
| Omron blood pressure | Systolic, diastolic, pulse |
You don’t need all of them. One device is enough to get a single tidy dashboard; the value grows as you add sources, because that is when the picture stops being one app’s view and starts being yours. Apple Health is a useful hub in its own right — anything writing into it, from a connected app to a third-party sensor, can ride along into BioTrackr without a separate integration.
When Whoop and Oura disagree
Two good devices will report different HRV and sleep numbers, and that is not a fault — they sample at different times and compute differently. A ring reads through the night from your finger; a strap reads from your wrist or chest on its own schedule. Neither is lying; they are answering slightly different questions, so their absolute numbers were never going to match. Most aggregators gloss over this and pick one. BioTrackr shows both side by side, so you can see when they agree (a strong signal) and when they diverge (a reason to look closer), and follow the trend in each rather than fixating on a single night's figure.
That side-by-side view is the honest way to read multi-device data: not one blended number pretending to be truth, but each source shown for what it is.
Build your own metric grid
No two people track the same things. BioTrackr's grid is configurable — add the widgets that matter to you from the ~120 available metrics, size them, and arrange them so the numbers you check daily are front and centre and the rest are a scroll away.
The point of arranging it yourself is that a dashboard you built is one you will actually read. Someone chasing sleep quality wants deep sleep, HRV and resting heart rate up top; someone tracking body composition wants weight and body-fat trends first; someone watching cardiovascular numbers pins blood pressure. The same underlying data, laid out for the question you personally care about — and re-arrangeable the day that question changes.
The layout is yours to keep tuning. As your focus shifts — a new training block, a season where sleep matters more, a stretch watching blood pressure — you drag the grid to match, without losing any history. The metrics you demote are still recorded and still there when you want them; they just move out of your daily eyeline. A dashboard that adapts to the question in front of you is one you keep using, rather than one you configured once and never opened again.
From data to a verdict
Consolidation is step one. The reason to have everything in one place is so you can ask whether something you changed actually did anything. BioTrackr sets a baseline from your combined metrics and tells you if an intervention moved them beyond normal variation — one before/after read instead of a hunch. See how that works on does my protocol work.
This is where combining sources pays off rather than just looking tidy. A verdict is only as trustworthy as the baseline behind it, and a baseline drawn from several devices at once is harder to fool than one metric read in isolation — if weight, resting heart rate and HRV all move together against your established range, that agreement is a stronger signal than any one of them alone. The app measures that movement in your own data; it never claims the thing you changed “works.”
Cheaper than clinic-priced aggregators
The same consolidation promise does not have to cost clinic money. BioTrackr is $15/month — a fraction of practitioner-priced platforms like Heads Up Health, whose professional plans start at $299/month. If you came here from one of those, the Heads Up Health alternative page lays out the comparison honestly. The consolidation, the multi-device view and the before/after verdict are all included in the one plan — there is no higher tier to unlock the useful parts. See pricing.
Your data stays private
Your combined data lives in your account on a private server. Zero third-party trackers, no data resale, export or delete whenever you like. Pulling everything into one place is only an improvement if that place is trustworthy — an aggregated profile of your health is more revealing than any single feed, so the privacy stance matters more here, not less. More on the stance on private health tracking.
Frequently asked questions
- Can you combine Whoop and Oura data?
- Yes. BioTrackr connects both and shows their metrics side by side on one dashboard, so you can read recovery, HRV and sleep from each in the same place instead of switching apps.
- Is there one app for all my wearables?
- BioTrackr aggregates around 120 metrics from up to six sources — Whoop, Oura, Apple Health, a Xiaomi smart scale and Omron blood pressure — onto a single customizable grid you arrange yourself.
- How do I aggregate health data from multiple devices?
- Connect each source once and BioTrackr pulls its data on a schedule into one dashboard. You pick which of the ~120 metrics to show and how to lay them out; the app keeps them in sync.
- Why do Whoop and Oura HRV numbers differ?
- Each device measures HRV at different times and with different methods, so the absolute numbers rarely match. BioTrackr shows both together so you can watch the trend and see where they agree and where they diverge, rather than trusting one in isolation.
- Do I need to wear both devices?
- No. BioTrackr works with whatever you connect — one device or several. Wearing two is only useful if you want to compare how they read the same day.
- Can I export the combined data?
- Yes. Your data is yours: you can export it at any time and delete it on request. BioTrackr runs no third-party trackers and never sells your data.
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