

💓 Stay ahead of your heart health game with effortless, smart precision.
Withings BPM Vision is an FDA-cleared smart arm blood pressure monitor delivering clinically accurate systolic, diastolic, and heart rate measurements. Featuring a large 2.8” LCD with instant color-coded feedback aligned to US hypertension standards, it ensures easy interpretation. The device offers seamless Wi-Fi and Bluetooth syncing to iOS and Android apps for unlimited data storage and trend tracking. Designed for comfort and portability, it includes a wide-range adjustable cuff and a protective case that doubles as a stand. With a remarkable 12-month battery life, it combines convenience with medical-grade reliability for proactive cardiovascular health management.







| ASIN | B0DYPDF3JD |
| Batteries | 1 Nonstandard Battery batteries required. (included) |
| Best Sellers Rank | #23,185 in Health & Household ( See Top 100 in Health & Household ) #42 in Automatic Arm Blood Pressure Monitors |
| Date First Available | April 2, 2025 |
| Item Weight | 2.3 pounds |
| Item model number | 3700546710452 |
| Manufacturer | Withings |
| Product Dimensions | 8.2 x 3.2 x 1.5 inches |
K**H
Easy to use & accurate, worth the $
I’ve been using this monitor and so far I’m really happy with it. Readings match closely with what I get at my doctor’s office, so I trust the accuracy. The screen is big and easy to read, and it’s very quiet compared to my old cuff. Setup took just a few minutes and then it’s been smooth and reliable. I really like that it syncs to my phone and Apple health automatically. Also I've found that the 3-reading average mode is really useful for more consistent results. For the battery life, so far it's really excellent and the case makes it easy to store or travel with. I'm happy I bought a good quality monitor, it was pricier but for the quality and modern features, I think it’s definitely worth it!
S**S
Reliable, user-friendly blood pressure monitor
Super impressed with the BPM Vision - Smart Arm Blood Pressure Monitor. It showed up the day after I ordered it, and I was able to install and start using it almost immediately. The interface is simple, the readings are quick, and the whole experience feels premium. Personally I'm a big fan of the app which also connected to my Apple Health. This allows me to see all my important health details in the Withings app. Highly recommend for anyone looking for a reliable and user‑friendly monitor.
D**J
Best in its class -- Expensive but Worth It!
Expensive but worth it. Why? Accurate, easy to use. Big color screen. Allows for multiple users to send data to their individual Withings accounts. Transmits blood pressure/pulse information to my iPhone Withings and Apple Health Apps. This allows for accurate long-term results trends. Also allows me to transmit data to my doctor. We've used many of these devices and all have some shortcomings including hard-to-read screens. This device solves all those issues. We also like the hard case it comes in. Don't even need to remove from case to use. If you can afford it, buy this device. You won't be sorry. Highly recommended.
A**R
bad customer service
Withings, oh Withings. The company that has taken the noble French tradition of elegant design and turned it into a masterclass in how to disappoint the very customers who are most inclined to admire sophistication. I speak as someone who, until recently, was quietly charmed by the idea of a blood pressure monitor that looked like it belonged on the bedside table of a Parisian intellectual rather than in the drawer of a suburban garage. The BPM Vision arrived in packaging so tasteful it could have doubled as an invitation to a vernissage. I opened it with the mild excitement one reserves for objects that promise to make middle age slightly less alarming. What I received instead was a $200+ lesson in the difference between aesthetic pretension and actual functionality. The on/off switch—surely the humblest component in any consumer electronics device—has decided, in a moment of Gallic existentialism, that it will not participate in the vulgar business of being pressed. One touch: nothing. Two touches: the same dignified silence. Twenty touches, delivered with the mounting incredulity of a man who has just discovered his espresso machine is a performance artist: still nothing. The screen remains as black and unresponsive as the conscience of a Parisian waiter who has been asked for tap water. One turns, naturally, to customer service. This is the moment when most companies at least pretend to care. Withings, however, has refined indifference into something approaching an art form. The online chat begins promisingly enough: a little animated character waves hello. Then the questions arrive, each more insultingly obvious than the last. “Have you tried charging the device?” Yes. “Have you tried pressing the button for 10 seconds?” Yes. “Have you tried turning it off and on again?” Dear reader, the device has not yet managed to turn on at all; we are not yet at the stage of philosophical debate about whether it can be turned off. After several minutes of this Socratic dialogue with a script, I am informed that a “specialist” will contact me within “two working days.” In corporate time, this phrase is roughly equivalent to “sometime before the heat death of the universe, but we make no promises.” A week passes. Nothing. I send a polite follow-up. Another week. Eventually—an email. Not from a human named Claire or Julien with a Parisian area code, but from [email protected], that great void where personality goes to die. The email’s tone is impeccably professional and utterly devoid of warmth. It offers three options, none of which include “we admit this is defective hardware and will replace it immediately at no cost to you.” Instead: 1. Try yet more troubleshooting steps that I have already performed. 2. Accept a discount code toward the purchase of another Withings product. 3. Return the device—at my expense—for inspection. Let us pause on option two for a moment, because it is a small masterpiece of psychological tone-deafness. The company is essentially saying: “We are aware that our product has failed you catastrophically. Rather than fix the problem, we invite you to deepen your emotional and financial commitment to a brand that has already demonstrated it cannot be trusted with something as elementary as a power button. Please buy more of our unreliable technology. Here is 10% off to make the insult sting less. “This is not customer service; this is behavioral sunk-cost manipulation dressed up as generosity. It is the corporate equivalent of a cheating spouse offering flowers and saying, “Let’s not throw away seven years over one small indiscretion.” Except here the indiscretion is a $200 device that refuses to wake up. What makes this particularly galling is the context. Withings sells health-monitoring equipment to people who are already anxious enough to want constant reassurance about their cardiovascular status. These are not impulse buyers of fidget spinners. They are people who wake up at 3 a.m. wondering whether that slight twinge in the chest is indigestion or destiny. The last thing they need is additional stress introduced by a company that turns a routine health check into a week-long Kafka parody. And yet Withings has managed precisely that. They have taken a vulnerable moment—someone trying to take control of their health—and transformed it into an exercise in corporate contempt. A human being with even minimal discretion could have said, “Monsieur, this is clearly a manufacturing defect. We are sending a replacement tomorrow, prepaid label enclosed, and we apologise for the inconvenience.” Instead, the system appears optimised to do the precise opposite: to extract maximum effort from the customer while expending minimum effort itself. This is not mere incompetence; it is engineered indifference. It is the triumph of cost-centre thinking over customer experience. It is what happens when companies become so enamoured of “efficiency” that they forget the oldest rule in service: people remember how you made them feel far longer than they remember what you actually did. I now own a blood pressure monitor that functions as an exceptionally expensive paperweight. More importantly, I own a diminished opinion of an entire product category. Because when a company that trades on health, precision, and French refinement behaves this way, it does not merely damage its own reputation—it damages trust in the very idea that technology can meaningfully improve our relationship with our bodies. I would rate Withings zero stars if the platform permitted such honesty. Since it does not, I award one solitary star—for the exquisite packaging that arrived with such promise, and for reminding me that in 2026, even the most beautifully wrapped disappointment is still disappointment. Should you be contemplating a Withings purchase, ask yourself a simple question: do you really want your blood pressure monitored by a company that appears constitutionally incapable of raising its own? Robert Bryce (Former admirer of French design, now happily using a Japanese cuff that turns on when asked)
J**T
Worth purchasing.
Absolutely. Awesome. Can communicate with my provider and give him accurate up-to-date information.
A**R
Withings BPM Vision – Smart Arm Blood Pressure Monitor
This machine is simple to use while allowing 8 people store information of their BP readings, if the AI is correct. The machine and app are pretty straight forward and will tie in with your Apple Watch or IPhone running iOS 16 and later. You can either take 1 reading or 3 readings that are averaged while giving you the readings of each. I thought it would take a long time to take 3 readings but it doesn't. You can set the time delay for each reading starting at 30's, in 30's increments up to 120's. The only drawback is the price. While it is very accurate and easy to use, with a super storage container/carrying case, if you do not have a blood pressure or heart problem it may be over kill. I would have given a 5* review but for the price. Welch Allyn makes a clinical grade BPM for $35 less.
Z**K
Super easy to use
Super easy to use. Set it up in minutes and my grandma uses it daily with no problems. Clear display and works great. 👍
D**V
Easy smart blood pressure monitor
I was worried about the set up reading other reviews however it was not difficult at all. It’s a smart blood pressure monitor so you just need to know how to download an app on your phone and link it. It’s pretty cool and easy to use. The blood pressure x3 feature is pretty cool so it automatically does a good job.
A**E
Schlechte Informationen in der Verkaufsanzeige, für Schrittmacherpatienten nicht geeignet.
C**N
Parfait, rempli les fonctions. Intuitif et très simple d’utilisation. J’apprécie beaucoup le côté automatique, à savoir 3 prises de tensions à intervalles réguliers (et en plus réglables) et calcul de la moyenne
J**Z
Es perfecto. Silencioso y preciso.
L**I
Appareil répondant à mes attentes, je possédais un BPM Connect, celui-ci est bien plus simple à utiliser grâce à son écran et l’ECG complète bien l’ensemble. Autre avantage, enfin de l’USB C.
M**E
excellent
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
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