
You currently cannot fully sync Google Health to Apple Health. Google's current Apple Health support page says the Google Health app can read data from Apple Health, but it does not write or export Google Health data back to Apple Health. According to Google, they do plan on adding support for writing data back to Apple Health in 2026.
That means the current connection works mostly in this direction:
Apple Health → Google Health
Not this direction yet:
Google Health → Apple Health
If you are trying to view your Apple Health metrics inside your Google dashboard, you can simply toggle on the connection in your app settings. However, if you need to push Google Health, Fitbit or Pixel Watch data into Apple Health, you'll need to bridge the gap using a third-party app like Sonar to unify and sync your metrics across everything.
Not in both directions, at least not yet. Google Health can pull your Apple Health data in, but it can't send anything back out. Here's an easier way to understand the current integrations:
| Connection | Status | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Apple Health to Google Health | Works | Your iPhone and Apple Watch data shows up in Google Health once you grant permission. |
| Google Health and Apple Health | Not yet | Google Health cannot write your data back into Apple’s Health app yet. |
| Health Connect and Google Health | Works both ways on Android | Android users can pull Health Connect data into Google Health and share Google Health data back out to other apps through Health Connect. |
| Google Fit to Apple Health | One way only | Google Fit has its own iPhone permission flow with Apple Health. |
Before connecting Apple Health to the Google Health app, make sure:
Google's App Store listing describes the current iOS app as Google Health, formerly Fitbit, and says it can sync with Fitbit, Pixel Watch, health tracking apps and medical records where supported.
Follow these steps:
Google Health can read numerous Apple Health metrics, depending on the permissions you've granted. Current supported categories include:
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Fitness | Steps, VO2 max, floors, active calories burned, distance, exercise and exercise routes. |
| Sleep | Sleep sessions and sleep stages. |
| Vitals | Heart rate, HRV, oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, resting heart rate and blood glucose. |
| Body measurements | Weight and fat percentage. |
| Nutrition | Energy, macros and water quantity. |
| Mental wellbeing | Mindfulness. |
| Cycle health | Periods, flow, ovulation, symptoms, moods and related cycle data. |
Google also says the app currently reads and displays three months of historical Apple Health data, with support for more history expected later this year.
You have complete control over which Apple Health categories Google Health can access.
To manage permissions from the Google Health app:
To manage permissions from Apple Health:
Apple also says you can manage data permissions by going to your profile in the Health app, tapping Apps under Privacy, selecting the app and toggling on the health categories you want that app to track.
There's a few common fixes:
Not yet. As of mid-2026, Google Health only reads data from Apple Health and does not write or export anything back into Apple's Health app. Google has said two-way support is coming later in 2026 but hasn't given a specific date.
Not directly. Health Connect is Google's Android health data platform and Apple Health is the iPhone equivalent, so they don't talk to each other on their own. Google Health bridges the two separately instead, connecting to Health Connect on Android and to Apple Health on iOS, according to Google's support documentation.
Around three months of your past data will sync initially. Google has said it plans to support a longer history window later in 2026, though has yet to confirm an exact timeline.
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