Every product is carefully selected by our editors. If you buy from a link, we may earn a commission.

How Siri on Your Apple Watch Just Got Way Better

You can finally ask Siri more detailed questions about your workouts, general fitness and health data, but there's a catch.

apple watch ultra 2
Tucker Bowe

If you're a seasoned Apple Watch wearer, you likely use "Siri" or "Hey Siri" (old habits die hard) voice commands for a whole bunch of things. To call or text your friends. To set timers and alarms. To start or end workouts. To play music. Or to answer the odd question about the weather. Basically anything to prevent you having to navigate its tiny screen or take your iPhone out of your pocket.

Well, as of recently, you can ask Siri some new things — specifically about your health and fitness.

Thanks to a software update, watchOS 10.2, you can finally grant Siri access to information from your Health app. This allows you to ask the voice assistant specific things about your fitness and health. Here are some examples.

  • "How far did I run yesterday?" or "How far have I ran this week?"
  • "What's my heart rate?" or "What's my average heart rate today?"
  • "Did I close my exercise ring?"
  • "How much did I sleep last night?" or "How much sleep did I average this week?"

    You can also give Siri voice commands to log various information into the Health app for you. Once you weigh yourself, you can ask Siri to log your weight. If you took certain vitamins or medications — provided you've added the specifics manually in the Health app beforehand — you can have Siri log those in, too. For more information about what you can ask Siri, check out Apple's press release.

    However, there's a catch.

    You can only do all this if you have one of the newest Apple Watches, the Series 9 and Ultra 2. The reason is that these newer models have the newest S9 chip that enables on-device Siri processing; they're the only models that don't risk your health data getting sent to the cloud.

    You can use Siri on your iPhone (running iOS 17.2 or later) to log this same data but not directly on an older Apple Watch.

    How to Give Siri Access to your Health Data

    apple watch ultra 2
    Before you can use, you need to give Siri access to your Health app.
    Tucker Bowe

    In order to grant Siri access to your health data, you first have to make sure your Apple Watch and iPhone are running the latest software, watchOS 10.2 (or later) and iOS 17.2 (or later), respectively. From there, you can grant access right from either device.

    On your Apple Watch:

    1. Open the Settings app.
    2. Scroll down and select Health.
    3. Select Apps and Services.
    4. Select Siri.
    5. Make sure Access Health Data is toggled on.

      On your iPhone:

      1. Open the Settings app.
      2. Scroll down and select Health.
      3. Select Data Access & Devices.
      4. Select Siri.
      5. Make sure Access Health Data is toggled on.
        Advertisement - Continue Reading Below