Bodix starts from a simple observation: progress tracking gets messy when weight lives in one place, measurements live somewhere else, and the habit itself feels like admin work.
The goal is not to build the loudest health app in the room. The goal is to make daily tracking feel light enough that you keep coming back.
What Bodix is trying to do well
The early product focus is intentionally narrow:
- quick weight logging;
- repeatable body-measurement tracking;
- Apple Health weight import when you already have history there;
- readable progress without a bloated workflow.
That scope matters. It keeps Bodix from turning into another app where setup feels heavier than the habit it is meant to support.
Why measurements matter beside weight
Weight alone rarely tells the whole story. Body measurements can show direction that the scale does not explain clearly, especially across longer stretches of training, diet changes, or maintenance.
Keeping both in one place makes the trend easier to understand later.
Why the product is staying private by default
Bodix is being built as a personal record, not a social feed.
That means leaning on local-first storage, Apple-native sync when available, and a straightforward model where your entries belong to you instead of a public profile or community layer.
What to expect next
Because Bodix is still pre-release, the product is evolving in public. The changelog and docs on this site are here to make that evolution easier to follow without guessing what changed.