Google Health Premium Is Now Bundled With Google AI Pro and Ultra Plans – Here’s What You Get

Ganesh Joshi
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If you’ve been using Fitbit for a while, you might have noticed things are changing. Google has started moving the Fitbit app into a new Google Health app, and along with that, they’re also reshuffling how their subscriptions work. The short version? Google Health Premium is now included with Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra plans. So if you’re already paying for one of those higher-tier Google One plans, you’re getting health features as part of the deal.

Google Health Premium Is Now Bundled With Google AI Pro and Ultra Plans
Google Health Premium Is Now Bundled With Google AI Pro and Ultra Plans 


Let me break down what this actually means for you, what’s changing with the Fitbit app, and whether this new health bundle is worth your attention.

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What’s Happening to the Fitbit App?

Google announced a while back that the Fitbit app would eventually be replaced. That process officially started on May 19. The new Google Health app is taking its place, and it comes with a redesigned interface, some fresh wellness features, and deeper integration with Google’s Gemini AI.

If you open your Fitbit app one day and see a prompt to move to the new app, don’t be surprised. That’s the transition. Google is sending out emails to users as the migration goes live, letting them know that Google Health Premium is now included in Google One. Existing Fitbit Premium subscriptions or free trials will be automatically cancelled as part of this shift.

For those of you currently on a three-month Fitbit Air trial, nothing changes right away. You’ll continue under the same trial period. Google Play will separately notify users about any billing updates.

So in simple terms: if you’re already paying for Google AI Pro or Ultra, you won’t need a separate health subscription anymore. It’s all bundled together.

Google Health Subscription Pricing – What Costs What?

Before we go deeper, here’s a quick look at the current pricing:

  • Google AI Pro: Rs 1,950 per month
  • Google AI Ultra: Rs 6,500 per month
  • Google Health Premium (if bought separately): Rs 99 per month or Rs 999 annually

If you’re already spending on the Pro or Ultra plan, you’re essentially getting the health premium features at no extra cost. That’s a decent value if you were planning to use the health tools anyway. And if you only want the health part, you can still buy it separately for Rs 99 a month, which isn’t too heavy on the pocket.

Google Health Premium – What It Offers

Now let’s talk about the actual features. Because bundling is one thing, but if the tools aren’t useful, nobody really cares.

The main attraction here is the Google Health Coach, which runs on Gemini AI. Unlike basic fitness trackers that just show you step counts or sleep hours, this one tries to actually understand your data and give you personalised suggestions.

Here’s a closer look at what you get as a Google Health Premium subscriber:

Ask Coach

You can ask health-related questions anytime, and the AI gives you answers backed by science. Not just generic responses, but actual evidence-based insights. For example, you could ask something like “Why do I feel tired even after 8 hours of sleep?” and the system will pull from your health data and medical knowledge to give you a useful reply.

Adaptive Fitness Plans

Instead of following a random workout video on YouTube, you get a weekly workout plan that actually fits your goals and lifestyle. Tell the AI what equipment you have at home (or none at all), mention any injuries or limitations, and it adjusts the plan accordingly. It feels less like a one-size-fits-all routine and more like something made for you.

Detailed Sleep Insights

Sleep tracking has been around for years, but most apps just show you a graph and say “you slept poorly.” The new Google Health app gives you personalised sleep summaries and coaching guidance. It doesn’t just tell you what happened; it suggests what to do differently to actually improve your sleep quality.

Proactive Insights

This is where the AI starts to feel genuinely helpful. Instead of you having to open the app and dig through numbers, the system sends you actionable recommendations based on your fitness, sleep, and overall health metrics. Think of it like a friend who gently reminds you to move more or go to bed earlier, but with actual data to back it up.

Medical Record Summaries

This one is interesting. You can give the app access to your medical records, and it will create simple summaries for you. On top of that, it can offer deeper recommendations based on your health history. Obviously, this is not a replacement for a real doctor, but for keeping track of your own health, it’s pretty handy.

Workout Library

You get access to a library of trainer-led workout sessions and guided exercise routines. Nothing too surprising here — many fitness apps offer this — but having it integrated into the same app that tracks your sleep and activity is convenient.

Mindfulness Sessions

Guided meditation, breathing exercises, relaxation sessions — all of that is included. If you’re someone who likes to wind down with a short mindfulness practice before bed, this could be useful. And again, it’s all in one place with your other health data.

The AI Health Coach – Is It Actually Useful?

Let’s be real for a second. We’ve all seen “AI health assistants” before, and many of them are just chatbots with fancy names. But Google is trying to make this one different by tying it directly to your actual health data.

The Google Health Coach is designed to play multiple roles: fitness trainer, sleep advisor, and wellness assistant. You can share personal details like injuries, the workout equipment you own, your daily habits, and your fitness goals. The AI then tailors its recommendations accordingly.

What I find interesting is the conversational aspect. Instead of just getting a list of tips, you can have back-and-forth conversations with the coach. There are quick-reply prompts to make tracking and guidance simpler. It feels less like you’re filling out a form and more like you’re talking to someone who actually listens.

That said, it’s still an AI. It’s not a real coach or a medical professional. But for daily guidance, habit tracking, and motivation, it seems genuinely well-built.

What About the New Weekly Health Email?

Alongside the subscription changes, Google is also redesigning the weekly health email experience. If you’ve been getting those summary emails from Fitbit or Google Health, expect them to look different soon. The idea is to give you a cleaner, more useful snapshot of your week — how active you were, how you slept, any patterns the AI noticed, and a few suggestions for the coming week.

It’s a small change, but for people who don’t want to open the app every day, a good weekly email can be surprisingly helpful.

Should You Get Google Health Premium?

That depends on your situation.

If you’re already paying for Google AI Pro or Google AI Ultra, then you don’t have to do anything. The health features are now included. You might as well open the new Google Health app and see what works for you.

If you’re not on those plans, you can still get Google Health Premium separately for Rs 99 a month or Rs 999 a year. That’s not expensive compared to other fitness apps out there. For reference, many standalone fitness or meditation apps charge similar or higher amounts for fewer features.

But here’s the honest take: if you’re someone who just wants basic step tracking and sleep monitoring, the free version of the Google Health app will probably be enough. The premium features are for people who want personalised coaching, detailed insights, and deeper integration with their health data.

Also, if you’re already using another fitness app that you love, switching might not make sense. But if you’re in the Google ecosystem anyway — using Gmail, Google Drive, YouTube Premium — then bundling everything under one plan does simplify things.

One Last Thing – The Transition Might Take Time

Google is rolling this out gradually. Not everyone will see the changes on the same day. The Fitbit app migration started on May 19, but depending on your region and device, it could take a few weeks to show up.

Also, keep an eye on your email. Google will notify you when your existing Fitbit Premium subscription is cancelled and replaced by the Google One bundled plan. If you were on a trial, that trial will continue as normal until it ends.

If you’re someone who pays for Fitbit Premium through Google Play, you’ll get a separate notification about billing changes. Nothing to worry about — just read the email when it comes.

Wrapping It Up

So here’s the bottom line. Google is moving away from the Fitbit app and into a new Google Health app. Along with that, Google Health Premium is now bundled with Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra plans. If you’re already on those plans, you get the health features at no extra cost. If not, you can still buy the health plan separately for Rs 99 a month.

The main value is the Gemini-powered Health Coach — a system that gives you personalised fitness plans, sleep advice, medical record summaries, and proactive insights. It’s not a replacement for a real doctor or trainer, but for everyday health tracking and motivation, it seems well-designed and genuinely useful.

If you’re already in the Google ecosystem, this bundling makes things simpler. If you’re just curious about the health features, the free version of the new app might be enough to start with. Either way, it’s worth keeping an eye on how this rolls out — because the way we track our health is clearly changing, and Google seems to be putting real effort into making it more useful.

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