Fitness Totals puts your weekly, monthly, and yearly activity totals in one app

Fitness Totals Screenshots
Fitness Totals Screenshots (Image credit: Timothy Buck)

What you need to know

  • Fitness Totals simplifies things by showing your weekly, monthly, and yearly totals for all kinds of health metrics.

Apple's Health and Fitness apps are already pretty sweet but they don't show you something that a ton of us find useful – cumulative totals for the week, month, and year. Fitness Totals fixes that by collating your data and putting it all in one place.

Setting Fitness Totals up is pretty simple. All you need to do is tell the app what data you would like it to collate and you're done. There are a few different type of activities the app can work with, too.

  • Steps
  • Standing
  • Walking/Running
  • Exercising
  • Cycling
  • Flights Climbed
  • Resting Calories Burned
  • Active Calories Burned
  • Wheelchair Pushes
  • Wheelchair Distance
  • Swimming Strokes
  • Swimming Distance
  • Downhill Snow Sports
  • Walking (Workout)
  • Running (Workout)
  • Hiking (Workout)

Like all good apps Fitness Totals also comes with iOS 14 Home screen widgets that put your most important data right where you will see it most. There are even 14 different icons to choose from. 14!

You can download Fitness Totals from the App Store right now for just $2.99. It's an app that does something your iPhone and Apple Watch won't do by default and is well worth picking up.

Oliver Haslam
Contributor

Oliver Haslam has written about Apple and the wider technology business for more than a decade with bylines on How-To Geek, PC Mag, iDownloadBlog, and many more. He has also been published in print for Macworld, including cover stories. At iMore, Oliver is involved in daily news coverage and, not being short of opinions, has been known to 'explain' those thoughts in more detail, too.

Having grown up using PCs and spending far too much money on graphics card and flashy RAM, Oliver switched to the Mac with a G5 iMac and hasn't looked back. Since then he's seen the growth of the smartphone world, backed by iPhone, and new product categories come and go. Current expertise includes iOS, macOS, streaming services, and pretty much anything that has a battery or plugs into a wall. Oliver also covers mobile gaming for iMore, with Apple Arcade a particular focus. He's been gaming since the Atari 2600 days and still struggles to comprehend the fact he can play console quality titles on his pocket computer.