Comparisons

Best Free Workout Tracker App 2026 (Honest Ranking)

9 min read

The best genuinely free workout tracker app in 2026 is IronStreak on iOS — the free tier includes the full 91-exercise library, progressive overload charts, streaks, XP, achievements, and PR tracking, with no account required and no ads. On Android, FitNotes remains the strongest free option. Hevy has a generous free tier across both platforms but caps you at four routines. Strong's free tier is heavily limited and functions more as a trial than a usable free product. Here's the full ranking with what "free" actually means in each case.

Three iPhone devices arranged at angles on a dark charcoal backdrop, screens glowing in IronStreak's Flame Orange palette with workout logging interfaces — visual comparison of free workout tracker apps in 2026

What "Free" Actually Means in Workout Apps

Before the rankings, a word on what you're actually getting. The term "free" covers three very different business models:

  1. Fully free — no premium tier at all. Monetized through nothing, ads, or nothing (rare). Example: FitNotes.
  2. Generous freemium — core logging and tracking unlimited; paid tier adds conveniences like cloud sync, analytics, or cosmetics. Example: IronStreak, Hevy.
  3. Trial freemium — free tier is a functional demo; after 2–3 routines or 14 days, you hit a hard paywall. Example: Strong.

All three advertise as "free" on the App Store. Only the first two actually let you train long-term without paying. This ranking separates them honestly.

The Ranking

1. IronStreak — Best Free iOS Workout Tracker

Platform: iOS 17+ only
Free tier: Generous freemium — entire feature set usable free
Paid tier: $3.99/month or $29.99/year (7-day free trial)

IronStreak is the only app in this list that ships a gamification system (streaks, XP, 20 levels, 50 achievements, trophy tiers) in the free tier. Most competitors lock gamification behind paywalls or don't offer it at all. The free tier also includes the full 91-exercise library across six muscle groups, all three tracking types (weight+reps, bodyweight+reps, time-based), estimated 1RM charts, a full PR board, pre-filled sets from your last session, rest timer, and Live Activity support in the Dynamic Island.

What you do pay for: IronStreak Pro unlocks additional cosmetic trophies and advanced analytics. Core training functionality stays free. No ads on free tier.

Best for: iPhone users who want a modern, gamified tracker without subscription lock-in. Compared to Strong, IronStreak is a game; Strong is a spreadsheet.

2. Hevy — Best Cross-Platform Free Tracker

Platform: iOS, Android, Web
Free tier: Generous freemium — full logging, limited to 4 routines
Paid tier: Hevy Pro ~$5/month or ~$40/year

Hevy has the strongest free tier among cross-platform apps. The social feed is free, logging is unlimited, and you get unlimited workout history. The main friction: you're capped at four saved routines on free, which becomes annoying if you run multiple programs (say, a lifting split + a separate cardio day + a home-gym backup). Hevy Pro removes the cap and adds advanced analytics and progress insights.

Best for: Lifters who want social features (following friends, sharing workouts) and cross-device sync. Hevy is social; IronStreak is personal.

3. FitNotes — Best Fully Free Tracker (Android)

Platform: Android only
Free tier: Fully free, no ads, no premium tier
Paid tier: None

FitNotes is the cleanest fully-free option on Android. It's been around since 2013, has no subscription, no ads, and no tracking. It's also logging-only — no gamification, no social features, no built-in programs. If you want a spreadsheet-like tracker that will never paywall anything, it's the answer. Just not available on iOS.

Best for: Android users who distrust subscription apps and just want to log sets and reps forever.

4. Boostcamp — Best Free Program Library

Platform: iOS, Android
Free tier: Generous freemium — access to 50+ free programs
Paid tier: Boostcamp Pro ~$4/month or ~$40/year

Boostcamp stands out for its library of free pre-built programs (5/3/1, PPL, Greyskull, StrongLifts, etc.) — you pick a program from a known coach and it auto-generates your workouts. The free tier covers most beginner needs. Pro unlocks advanced programs, custom program builder, and detailed analytics.

Best for: Lifters who want a written program handed to them and don't want to design their own routine.

5. JEFIT — Decent Free, Aggressive Upsell

Platform: iOS, Android, Web
Free tier: Basic logging with ads
Paid tier: JEFIT Elite ~$13/month or ~$79/year

JEFIT has one of the largest exercise databases (1,400+ exercises) and a big free tier, but the experience is heavily ad-supported and the upsell to Elite is constant. If you tolerate ads and want a huge exercise library, it's usable free. If you want a clean interface, look elsewhere.

Best for: Lifters who want maximum exercise variety and don't mind ads.

6. Strong — Skip the Free Tier

Platform: iOS, Android
Free tier: Trial — capped at three routines
Paid tier: Strong Pro ~$5/month or ~$30/year

Strong is an excellent paid app, but its "free" tier is really a trial. You can't build more than three routines before hitting a hard paywall, which is restrictive for anyone running more than one program. If you're going to pay anyway, Strong is fine. If you want a free option, the apps above are all better choices.

Best for: Lifters who've already decided to pay $5/month and want Strong's minimal, strength-focused UI.

Quick Comparison Table

IronStreak active workout screen with multiple exercises logged, showing weight and rep entry, rest timer, and beat-last-session indicators — all free features

App Free Tier Platform Best For
IronStreakFull feature setiOS onlyGamified iOS tracking
Hevy4-routine capiOS, Android, WebCross-platform + social
FitNotesFully free foreverAndroid onlyMinimalist Android
Boostcamp50+ free programsiOS, AndroidPre-built programs
JEFITAd-supportediOS, Android, WebLarge exercise library
Strong3-routine trialiOS, AndroidPaid users only

How to Pick One

Three decisions narrow the field fast:

  1. What platform? iOS-only = IronStreak. Cross-platform = Hevy. Android-only fully-free = FitNotes.
  2. Do you want gamification? Yes = IronStreak. No = Hevy, FitNotes, Strong.
  3. Do you want pre-built programs? Yes = Boostcamp. No (you build your own) = any of the others.

For most iPhone users, IronStreak is the obvious pick — it's the only free option combining serious tracking with the motivational systems (streaks, achievements, XP) that actually keep people consistent. If you run Android, default to FitNotes for free or Hevy if you want cross-device sync.

How IronStreak Keeps the Free Tier Usable Long-Term

Most "free" workout apps front-load generosity and then paywall you after 30 days. IronStreak doesn't. The free tier includes every core tracking feature permanently — the 91-exercise library, progressive overload charts, streaks, XP, achievements, PR board, and Live Activity. Pro exists for users who want deeper analytics and cosmetic unlocks, but the free tier is a complete tool, not a demo.

The business reasoning: a lifter who stays consistent for 18 months is more valuable than one who pays $3.99 once and quits at month two. Free generosity correlates with retention, and retention correlates with an eventual Pro upgrade — or at least a positive recommendation. That's the bet.

FAQ

What is the best free workout tracker app in 2026?

IronStreak on iOS is the most feature-complete free workout tracker in 2026. FitNotes is the strongest fully-free Android option. Hevy is the best cross-platform free tracker, capped at four routines.

Are any workout trackers completely free?

Most use a freemium model. FitNotes (Android) is genuinely 100% free. IronStreak's free tier is unusually generous on iOS — entire feature set accessible without payment.

Is Strong app free?

Strong has a limited free tier — three routines before paywall. Functionally a trial. Pro is $5/month.

Do I need to pay for a workout tracking app?

No. Free options cover the fundamentals — logging, PR tracking, progress charts. Start free, upgrade only if you hit a real limitation.

What's the best free workout tracker for iPhone?

IronStreak — full gamification, 91 exercises, PR tracking, Live Activity support, no ads, no account required.

Key Takeaways

  • "Free" means three different things — generous freemium, fully free, and trial freemium. Know which you're signing up for.
  • IronStreak (iOS) and FitNotes (Android) are the most genuinely free options with no feature handicaps.
  • Hevy is the best cross-platform free tier if you'll stay under four routines.
  • Avoid Strong's free tier — it's a three-routine trial, not a usable free app.
  • The best free app is the one you'll actually open on a Monday in February. Gamification matters for that.

Try IronStreak Free on iOS

Full 91-exercise library, streaks, XP, PR tracking, and Live Activity support — all free, no account required.

Download on the App Store