The outside of Peloton Studios in New York.

Peloton Teases Third Party Integrations for Sleep & Recovery Data (Garmin or More?)

Peloton may soon be expanding its ability to track and analyze sleep and recovery data through new third-party integrations.

During an appearance at the Citi Global TMT Conference, Peloton Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Liz Coddington highlighted the importance of sleep and recovery within the platform. She revealed that 1.2 million members engaged with Peloton’s sleep and recovery content in FY 2025 Q4, highlighting the growing demand for this type of wellness programming.

Coddington went on to hint at new integrations designed to give members more personalized training recommendations. She stated:

“Sleep and recovery is also a relatively scaled category on our platform. We are investing in third-party integrations so that members who choose to share their sleep and recovery data with us, that will enable us to recommend better workouts for them.”

Coddington did not share specifics on which devices or platforms Peloton may partner with, but members already have some clues. Earlier this year, we shared that Peloton is preparing a Garmin Connect integration, which would allow Garmin device users to sync their fitness and health data directly with Peloton. Since Garmin already supports detailed sleep and recovery tracking, a connection like this could naturally extend to this category.

Peloton also has existing integrations with Apple Health and Google Fit, both of which already support sleep and recovery metrics.

The outside of Peloton Studios in New York.
The outside of Peloton Studios in New York.

It is worth noting that there are many other devices that have come to market and gained popularity in recent years. Other wearables and apps, such as Oura and Whoop, specialize in recovery tracking and could provide valuable insights if connected with Peloton’s training recommendations. At this point, however, it is unclear whether Peloton plans to pursue a wide range of integrations, or focus primarily on Garmin alongside its existing Apple and Google partnerships.

The mention of using this data to allow them to “recommend better workouts for them” references Peloton personalized plans – which added the ability to personalize rest days earlier this year. Numerous Peloton executives have spoked recently about how Peloton will use AI with personalized plans and other features.

For now, members will have to wait to see which direction Peloton takes. Nonetheless, with growing emphasis on holistic health and recovery – or even “healthspan,” as Peloton leadership recently discussed – it seems clear that sleep tracking is about to play a larger role in the Peloton experience.

This update from Coddington came at the same conference where she revealed that Peloton plans to close all legacy showrooms by next summer.


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Katie Weicher
Katie Weicher is a writer for Pelo Buddy. She purchased her Peloton Bike in 2016 and has been riding, strength training, and yoga flowing ever since. You can find her on the leaderboard at #kweich.

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