Whoop has backed down, somewhat, from the controversial upgrade plans around its Whoop 5.0 fitness tracker.
When the company first announced Whoop 5.0 this week, it said members who wanted the new device could either extend their subscriptions by 12 months or pay a one-time upgrade fee of $49 ($79 for the model with EKG sensors).
This seemed inconsistent with Whoopโs overall value proposition, where it charges higher subscription prices (ranging $199 to $359 a year) while allowing customers to upgrade their hardware for free. More specifically, it seemed to contradict a statement on the companyโs website promising users free hardware upgrades if theyโve been members for at least six months.
After customers began complaining, the company responded with a Reddit post both announcing a more expansive upgrade policy and claiming to clarify its overall approach.
Now, anyone with more than 12 months remaining on their subscription is eligible for a free upgrade to Whoop 5.0 (or a refund if theyโve already paid the fee). And customers with less than 12 months can extend their subscription to get the upgrade at no additional cost.
While the company said itโs making these changes because it โheard your feedback,โ it also suggested that its apparent stinginess was tied to its transition from a model focused on monthly or six-month subscription plans to one where it only offers 12- and 24-month subscriptions.
โWe also want to acknowledge that a previous blog article incorrectly stated that anyone who had been a member for just 6 months would receive a free upgrade,โ the company said. โThis was never our policy and should never have been posted.โ
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Thereโs been a mixed response to these changes on the Whoop subreddit, with one moderator describing it as a โwin for the community.โ Other posters were more skeptical, with one writing, โYou donโt publish a policy by accident and keep it up for years. Removing it after backlash doesnโt erase the fact [that] it is real.โ
There were also a number of complaints from users who said they had 11 months left on their subscriptions, so they just missed the free upgrade cutoff.


