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Amazfit Introduces a New Era of Hybrid Training with Balance 3 and Balance Ultra

Business

Amazfit Introduces a New Era of Hybrid Training with Balance 3 and Balance Ultra
Business

Business

Amazfit Introduces a New Era of Hybrid Training with Balance 3 and Balance Ultra

2026-06-03 01:02 Last Updated At:01:31

MILPITAS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 2, 2026--

Amazfit, a leading global smart wearable brand owned by Zepp Health, today unveiled the Amazfit Balance 3 and Amazfit Balance Ultra, the newest additions to the Balance series and the hero watches for Amazfit’s new Hybrid Training System, connecting performance tracking with intelligent training guidance through the Zepp App.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260602329170/en/

The products were unveiled at a launch event in New York during a panel hosted by leading voices from the fitness and HYROX community. Built around how modern athletes train today, Balance 3 and Balance Ultra are designed for people balancing strength, endurance, recovery, work, stress, and daily life. The devices serve as the engine layer of the connected Hybrid Training ecosystem, capturing how users train, recover, and respond over time, while the Zepp App serves as the intelligence layer, organizing that data into clearer direction.

Balance Ultra is the flagship expression of the Balance series, combining Grade 5 titanium craftsmanship with a refined performance design that moves naturally between training, work, and daily life. Balance 3 is built for everyday hybrid athletes who want one watch for the gym, running, recovery, and daily performance. It is available in stainless steel and titanium options, giving users a choice between durable everyday construction and a lighter premium build.

“The future of training is not about doing more without direction. It is about training with structure,” said Wayne Huang, CEO of Zepp Health. “With Balance 3 and Balance Ultra, we are helping athletes better understand how strength, endurance, recovery, and daily life all affect performance. The Balance series brings those signals together so users can understand their capacity, manage effort, and make more informed training decisions over time.”

A Hybrid Training System Built to Help Athletes Train with Structure

Modern training is becoming more hybrid. Athletes are running, lifting, conditioning, recovering, traveling, working, and managing daily stress, often all at once. The challenge is no longer just collecting more data. The challenge is understanding what that data means for how to train, when to push, when to recover, and how to stay consistent over time.

At the center of the Balance experience is the Zepp App, the intelligence layer of the Hybrid Training System. Balance 3 and Balance Ultra collect the data, while the Zepp App connects training, recovery, sleep, stress, and lifestyle data into a clearer view of how the body is adapting and what to prioritize next.

Within the app, HybridCharge Energy Intelligence brings this system together by combining BioCharge, LifeLoad, and Training Load into one view of capacity. BioCharge reflects the body’s energy and recovery state, LifeLoad adds context from daily stress and lifestyle demands, and Training Load shows the strain created by exercise. Together, these inputs help users better understand what they can sustain in the moment and how to manage effort across training and recovery.

Weekly Focus and Training Balance help users see whether their training is aligned across strength, endurance, and recovery, while Hybrid Training Plans bring more structure to preparation and progression. The result is a system designed to turn connected health and fitness signals into clearer direction, not just more data.

Built for Every Part of Training

Balance 3 and Balance Ultra are built to support the full rhythm of modern training, from structured workouts to recovery, navigation, communication, and daily wear. Both models feature bright 1.5-inch AMOLED displays with sapphire glass and up to 3,000-nit brightness, advanced health monitoring, precision dual-band GPS, six-satellite positioning systems, route guidance, offline map support, strength training support, and official HYROX tools in one connected experience.

Battery life is designed to keep pace with demanding schedules. Balance 3 delivers up to 21 days of battery life, while Balance Ultra extends that endurance further with up to 30 days of battery life, giving users a longer-lasting flagship option for consistent training, travel, and everyday wear.

The Balance series also supports a deeper view of health and recovery, with advanced metrics including heart rate, HRV, sleep, stress, blood oxygen, and breathing rate. For strength training, both watches support 25 auto-recognized strength exercises, helping users track effort across gym sessions without manually logging every movement. Bluetooth calling, Zepp Flow voice control, voice notes, and onboard storage help users stay connected and in control without interrupting their rhythm.

Official HYROX Tools for Training and Race Day

As Amazfit continues as the official wearable partner of HYROX, Balance 3 and Balance Ultra serve as the ultimate tools for HYROX training and racing.

Built-in HYROX features connect structured preparation with race-day execution. HYROX training plans, race simulations, HYROX Virtual Pace, and race-specific workout support help athletes prepare with greater intention.

Post-race analysis helps users better understand pacing, station performance, rankings, cumulative race time, and where performance was gained or lost. These tools are designed to support HYROX athletes while also reinforcing the broader Hybrid Training System: strength, endurance, recovery, and structure working together.

Pricing and Availability

All models will be available on Amazfit.com.

About Amazfit

Amazfit, a global smart wearable and fitness leader is part of Zepp Health (NYSE: ZEPP), a health technology company with its principal office based in Gorinchem, the Netherlands. Zepp Health operates as a distributed organization, with team members and offices across the Americas, Europe, Asia, and other global markets.

Amazfit builds smart wearables designed around movement — training with intention, recovery with balance, and evolution over time. Built for the way people train today, Amazfit blends endurance, strength, and recovery into a single, coherent rhythm to support sustainable progress over time.

Behind Amazfit is Zepp, which builds the intelligence that supports its training experience. For more information, visit www.amazfit.com.

Built around how modern athletes train today, Balance 3 and Balance Ultra are designed for people balancing strength, endurance, recovery, work, stress, and daily life. The devices serve as the engine layer of the connected Hybrid Training ecosystem, capturing how users train, recover, and respond over time.

Built around how modern athletes train today, Balance 3 and Balance Ultra are designed for people balancing strength, endurance, recovery, work, stress, and daily life. The devices serve as the engine layer of the connected Hybrid Training ecosystem, capturing how users train, recover, and respond over time.

BEIRUT (AP) — Israeli drone strikes on southern Lebanon on Tuesday killed 11 people, including a man along with his son and daughter, the state-run news agency said, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump said Israel and the militant group Hezbollah agreed to dial back fighting.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, launched dozens of projectiles and drones toward Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon and Israeli cities and towns in recent days as Israel's airstrikes killed dozens, including women and children, in Lebanon. Hezbollah did not carry out any attacks on Israel after Trump's announcement.

The ongoing hostilities — despite Trump's announcement and a nominal ceasefire that began in April — are deepening displacement for Lebanon's conflict-weary population. They also are a significant sticking point in negotiations to extend a ceasefire in the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran, as the Islamic Republic wants any such deal to end fighting in Lebanon, too.

Two semiofficial Iranian news agencies reported Tuesday that the country cut off communication with mediators facilitating the ceasefire talks.

Another round of talks between Israel and Lebanon began Tuesday in Washington, where Lebanese negotiators will seek a full ceasefire that will prevent future attacks. The talks began in April and were the first in more than three decades between the countries, which have no formal diplomatic relations. Hezbollah has rejected direct talks, counting on pressure from Iran.

The planned talks come days after Israeli ground troops made their deepest incursion into Lebanon in 26 years and Israel then threatened to strike Beirut’s southern suburbs, causing panic in the Lebanese capital as thousands fled.

Trump said Monday he'd spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and had communicated with Hezbollah through mediators, and that no troops would be “going to Beirut." But the intensity of attacks between Israel and Hezbollah continued.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Tuesday that Israel previously refrained from attacking Beirut out of deference to negotiations between the U.S. and Iran. But he said Netanyahu informed Trump in a phone call late Monday that Israel will attack Beirut's southern suburbs if Hezbollah continues targeting northern Israel, echoing comments from the prime minister the previous day.

Lebanon's top political authorities insist that the talks must continue, despite Beirut's struggles in stopping the strikes, and the mounting pressure from over 1 million displaced people living in difficult conditions.

“Negotiations is the least costly option on Lebanon and the Lebanese people,” Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said. “It is the shortest road to the occupation and allow our people in the south to return to the cities and villages.”

An Israeli drone strike hit a car on the road linking the southern town of Marjayoun with the city of Nabatiyeh, killing James Karam, a dentist from the nearby Christian town of Qlayaa, along with his daughter and son, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported Tuesday.

The Lebanese army said two soldiers were lightly wounded when another drone targeted them on a road outside the city.

Drone strikes killed two Syrians working at a plant nursery in the village of Jibchit and two people in the nearby village of Toul, the news agency reported. A third strike hit a car near the village of Harouf, killing one person.

Two other airstrikes on southern Lebanon killed three people, according to NNA.

The Israeli military said it wasn't aware of any Israeli strikes in the area where Karam and his family members were killed.

NNA also reported that an Israeli airstrike in the southern village of Marwaniyeh on Monday killed six people from the Abdullah family. Hassan and his wife Hanan were killed alongside four children Ali, Ibrahim, Leen and Julia. A third son survived but is undergoing treatment.

Hezbollah said Tuesday its fighters fired anti-tank missiles on Israeli troops who were pushing into the southern village of Hadatha, about 7 kilometers (4 miles) from the Israeli border.

Sirens sounded in several areas in northern Israel, its military said in a statement. It added that “a suspicious aerial target" was identified in the area where Israeli soldiers are operating in southern Lebanon, but that no injuries were reported.

The latest round of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah has killed 3,468 people in Lebanon and displaced more than 1 million people. According to Netanyahu’s office, at least 27 Israeli soldiers and a defense contractor have been killed in or near southern Lebanon. Two civilians have also been killed in northern Israel.

Israel’s military said late Monday that a soldier was killed in southern Lebanon. It added that seven more soldiers were wounded in the incident, three of them severely.

Hezbollah’s use of hard-to-detect fiber-optic drones has been deadly for the Israeli military, which is struggling to respond.

This story has been corrected to say Hezbollah fired at Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon.

Lidman reported from Tel Aviv, Israel.

Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike that hit Qlaileh village, as it seen from the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike that hit Qlaileh village, as it seen from the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

Rescue workers use an excavator, as they search for victims under the rubble of a building that was hit Monday in an Israeli airstrike in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

Rescue workers use an excavator, as they search for victims under the rubble of a building that was hit Monday in an Israeli airstrike in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A man looks through the shattered windows of the damaged Jabal Amel Hospital, following Monday's Israeli airstrike that was hit a nearby building, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A man looks through the shattered windows of the damaged Jabal Amel Hospital, following Monday's Israeli airstrike that was hit a nearby building, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A sick boy lies in a damaged room in the Jabal Amel Hospital, following Monday's Israeli airstrike that hit a nearby building, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A sick boy lies in a damaged room in the Jabal Amel Hospital, following Monday's Israeli airstrike that hit a nearby building, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A nurse looks through a shattered window of the Jabal Amel Hospital into a destroyed building that was hit Monday in an Israeli airstrike, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

A nurse looks through a shattered window of the Jabal Amel Hospital into a destroyed building that was hit Monday in an Israeli airstrike, in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

Israeli soldiers carry the coffin of Staff-Sergeant Michael Tyukin, who was killed in a drone attack in southern Lebanon, during his funeral in Ashkelon, Israel, Monday, June 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

Israeli soldiers carry the coffin of Staff-Sergeant Michael Tyukin, who was killed in a drone attack in southern Lebanon, during his funeral in Ashkelon, Israel, Monday, June 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli airstrike that hit a building and damaged a hospital in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Monday, June 1, 2026. (AP Photo)

Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli airstrike that hit a building and damaged a hospital in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Monday, June 1, 2026. (AP Photo)

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