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FitOn vs Lively: Two Free Fitness Apps for Women Compared

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

FitOn offers a large library of free fitness classes with no cycle awareness. Lively offers cycle phase tips with no real workout programming. Both are free, both are useful starting points, and both have clear ceilings.

Feature FitOn Lively Ondara
Monthly cost Free; FitOn PRO ~$39.99/yr or ~$12.99/mo Free From $12.99/month
Cycle-aware programming No No Yes
Women 40+ longevity track No No Yes
FitOn vs Lively Feature Comparison
FeatureFitOnLively
Cycle awarenessNoYes (basic)
Structured workout programsNo (class library)No
Progressive trainingNoNo
Longevity track (40+)NoNo
Free tierYes (generous)Yes (fully free)
Paid upgrade~$39.99/yr or ~$12.99/moNo
Best forClass variety, free contentCycle syncing beginners

FitOn and Lively are both free, both aimed at women, and both useful in limited ways. The question is what you’re actually trying to accomplish.

FitOn built one of the largest free fitness content libraries available. Classes span cardio, HIIT, strength, barre, yoga, and more — led by a mix of certified trainers and recognizable names. The free tier is genuinely usable without hitting paywalls on basic content. FitOn PRO exists, but many users don’t need it to get real value from the app.

Lively is a different kind of tool. It’s not a workout app at all — it’s cycle education packaged into an app. It explains what each phase of your menstrual cycle means for your energy, recovery, and movement preferences, and suggests appropriate activity types. The suggestions are light: “try lower intensity today” rather than “here’s a 45-minute strength session.” It’s free, with no subscription or upsell.

Where Both Hit a Ceiling

FitOn’s library is wide but flat. You’re choosing classes based on mood and availability, not building toward anything. There’s no progressive structure, no week-over-week programming that builds on your previous sessions, and no awareness that your capacity changes across your cycle. You could do the same HIIT class in your follicular phase and your menstrual phase and the app would treat them identically.

Lively’s ceiling is its scope. It tells you what phase you’re in and what that typically means. It does not give you workouts. You’ll need FitOn, or YouTube, or a gym, or something else entirely if you want to actually train. Lively is a lens, not a program.

Using both together closes part of the gap — Lively gives you the hormonal context, FitOn gives you the classes. But you’re still doing the integration in your head. No app is connecting the cycle data to the training plan.

Where Ondara Fits

That integration is what we built Ondara to handle. Your phase determines your program automatically. During follicular and ovulatory phases, Ondara programs higher intensity and heavier loads. During luteal and menstrual phases, it shifts to recovery-focused work — not as a fallback, but as a deliberate part of the training cycle. There’s also a longevity track for women 40+ that focuses on bone density, muscle preservation, and joint health.

Ondara is $12.99/month or $89.99/year. Seven-day free trial, no credit card required.

Neither option feel right?

Most fitness apps ignore your cycle entirely. Ondara starts at From $12.99/month and adapts to all 4 phases.

Verdict

FitOn is the better choice if you want free workout content and variety. Lively is the better choice if you're just learning about cycle syncing and want phase-based guidance. For structured, cycle-aware programming, both fall short — they occupy different niches without fully serving either.

PROS & CONS

FitOn

Pros

  • Best free workout content library in the market
  • Accessible across fitness levels without paying

Cons

  • Classes don't adapt to your cycle phase or hormonal state
  • No progression built in — you choose classes ad hoc

PROS & CONS

Lively

Pros

  • Introduces cycle syncing concepts in a low-friction way
  • No upsell, no subscription — just free

Cons

  • Can't replace a workout app — it's a guide, not a program
  • Movement suggestions are generic and not progressively designed

Q&A

Which is better for beginners — FitOn or Lively?

It depends what you mean by beginner. For someone new to fitness who wants guided workouts, FitOn is much more useful — it has actual classes across multiple formats. For someone new to cycle syncing who wants to understand their phases, Lively is the better starting point. They're not really competing for the same use case.

Q&A

Can I use FitOn and Lively together?

Yes, and that combination is actually more complete than using either alone. Lively tells you what your cycle phase means for training; FitOn gives you classes to do. The limitation is that you're doing the interpretation manually — no app is connecting the two for you.

Is FitOn PRO worth it?
FitOn PRO adds meal planning, premium classes, and some additional features. If you're mainly interested in the free class library, the free tier is substantial enough that most users won't miss the PRO content. Neither tier adds cycle awareness.
Does Lively work as a standalone fitness app?
No. Lively isn't designed to be your main workout app — it's a cycle education layer. You'd need something else entirely for structured training. Think of Lively as context-setting, not programming.
Is there a single app that does what FitOn and Lively do together — but actually integrates cycle awareness into real programming?
That's the gap Ondara fills. Rather than stitching together a class library and a cycle education app, Ondara adapts your structured programming automatically based on your phase. Follicular and ovulatory phases get higher intensity; luteal and menstrual phases get recovery-focused work. One app, no manual interpretation required. Ondara is $12.99/month or $89.99/year, 7-day free trial, no credit card required.

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