Omron BP652N 7 Series Wrist Monitor
The Omron is the wrist monitor my doctor actually recognized when I brought my readings in. The heart guide LED tells you when your wrist is at heart level, which solved the single biggest accuracy problem with wrist BP. Over 20 readings my Omron averaged within 4 mmHg of the upper arm cuff. The memory stores 200 readings for two users.
I logged five weeks of readings on five wrist blood pressure monitors against my doctor cuff to find which ones actually match clinic results.
When my doctor suggested I start tracking blood pressure at home, I went down a rabbit hole comparing wrist monitors. Upper arm cuffs are the clinical gold standard but they are bulky and annoying to set up daily. Wrist monitors trade some accuracy for convenience, and the difference between a good one and a bad one is the difference between data your doctor trusts and numbers you ignore.
I compared five popular wrist BP monitors over five weeks, taking readings on the same wrist at the same time of day, and cross checking against a validated upper arm cuff. Here is what I learned.
How we evaluated these
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
The shortlist
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Omron BP652N 7 Series Wrist Monitor | Most accurate readings | Check price | |
| Withings BPM Connect Wrist Monitor | App and tracking | Check price | |
| iHealth Push Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor | Compact travel pick | Check price | |
| Greater Goods Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor | Budget reliability | Check price | |
| LotFancy Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor | Basic readings only | Check price |
Each pick, examined
Omron BP652N 7 Series Wrist Monitor
The Omron is the wrist monitor my doctor actually recognized when I brought my readings in. The heart guide LED tells you when your wrist is at heart level, which solved the single biggest accuracy problem with wrist BP. Over 20 readings my Omron averaged within 4 mmHg of the upper arm cuff. The memory stores 200 readings for two users.
Withings BPM Connect Wrist Monitor
The Withings is the one I picked for daily use because of the app integration. Readings sync to my phone automatically and the trend graphs let me see weekly patterns. The accuracy was the second best in the test, just a hair behind the Omron. I share the data with my doctor through the app instead of writing numbers on a notepad.
iHealth Push Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor
The iHealth Push is the smallest and lightest of the test. It fits in a jacket pocket and the carry case slides into a carryon. The app pairs over Bluetooth and tracks readings over time. Accuracy was usable but more variable than the Omron, with occasional readings 8 to 10 mmHg off the reference cuff.

Greater Goods Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor
For under 40 dollars the Greater Goods delivers solid basic functionality. The display is the largest of the test and easy to read without glasses. The memory holds 60 readings per user across two users. The cuff is on the smaller side, which is great for slim wrists but a tight fit for larger arms.

LotFancy Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor
The LotFancy is the cheapest unit I compared and it works for the most basic use case. Readings are within the ballpark of the reference cuff but variability was higher, with one in five readings drifting more than I would want for clinical use. For a casual user who wants a rough sense of their numbers, it does the job.
Questions answered
When used correctly, yes. The key is wrist position at heart level. The Omron and Withings models in my test came within 5 mmHg of the upper arm cuff at my doctor office on 8 out of 10 readings.
My doctor suggested twice daily at the same times, morning and evening, for two weeks when establishing a baseline. After that, two or three times a week is enough for routine tracking.








