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Digital scales are the largest part of our weight scales range, and they cover two genuinely different jobs. Some simply show your weight. Others estimate what that weight is made of, body fat, muscle, water, and bone, using a small electrical signal. Both look similar standing in a bathroom, so it is worth knowing which one you are actually buying.
This range sits within our Weight Scales category, alongside Kitchen Scales, Baby Weight Scales, and Analogue Scales. Brands here include Beurer, Certeza, and CareCheck.
These show one number and nothing else. Certeza GS-807 and GS-808, the CareCheck digital scale, and the Beurer GS and PS series all fall here. If all you want is a reliable, easy to read weight each morning, this is the simpler and usually cheaper option, and there is nothing lacking about it for that purpose.
The Beurer BG-51 XXL and the Bluetooth BF-105 go further, estimating body fat, muscle mass, water percentage, and bone mass using bioelectrical impedance. A small, harmless current passes up through one foot and down the other. Fat resists the current more than muscle and water do, and the scale uses that resistance, along with your height, age, and sex, to estimate composition.
Treat these numbers as estimates, not lab results. Hydration shifts the reading, so a measurement taken after exercise will differ from one taken first thing in the morning. The trend across weeks is the useful part, not any single reading.
Anyone with a pacemaker or another implanted electronic medical device should not use a bioelectrical impedance scale. A plain weight scale carries no such restriction and is the safer choice if this applies to you or anyone in your household.
A plain digital scale shows one number: your weight. A diagnostic scale, such as the Beurer BG-51 or BF-105, additionally estimates body fat, muscle mass, water percentage, and bone mass using a small electrical current passed through your feet. Both are accurate for weight. The diagnostic models simply give you more information beyond that single number.
No. Diagnostic scales work by passing a small electrical current through the body, and this should be avoided by anyone with a pacemaker or another implanted electronic medical device. A plain weight scale has no such restriction and is the safer option.
They are useful for tracking change over time and less reliable as a precise, one off number. Hydration affects the electrical resistance the scale measures, so a reading taken after exercise or a salty meal will differ from one taken in the morning. Weigh under the same conditions each time and watch the direction of the trend rather than the exact percentage.
Mostly water and food, not fat. Eating, drinking, and salt intake can shift your weight by one to two kilograms within a single day, which is completely normal. This is why weighing at the same time each morning, before eating or drinking, gives the most comparable readings.
Not strictly, but it removes the friction of writing numbers down, which is usually the reason people stop tracking weight consistently. A Bluetooth model like the Beurer BF-105 logs every reading automatically, making the weekly trend easy to see without any extra effort on your part.