Smart Ring + TrainingPeaks Integration (2026)
Smart ring and TrainingPeaks integration: Oura syncs natively, Ultrahuman supports it, Galaxy Ring and RingConn do not. What works in 2026.

If you train with TrainingPeaks and wear a smart ring, the integration picture in 2026 is uneven: one ring connects natively, another supports it, and two have no route at all. This guide explains exactly which smart rings sync with TrainingPeaks (a popular endurance training-load and planning platform), what data flows across, and how to set it up.
Do smart rings integrate with TrainingPeaks?
Some do. It helps to understand what TrainingPeaks (an endurance training-load and planning platform used by runners, cyclists and triathletes) actually wants from a wearable. Its core job is logging workouts - GPS runs and rides from watches and bike computers - and modelling your training load from them. It auto-syncs completed workouts from over 100 devices including Garmin, Apple, Polar, Suunto and Wahoo.
Smart rings don't track GPS workouts, so they don't replace a watch in TrainingPeaks. What they add is recovery context: overnight heart rate variability (HRV, a key recovery metric - see the HRV overview on Wikipedia), resting heart rate and sleep. Seeing that alongside your training load is the whole point of connecting a ring. Whether you can do it cleanly depends entirely on the ring.
How does the Oura Ring connect to TrainingPeaks?
Oura is the standout: it has an official, native TrainingPeaks integration, with a dedicated partner page and setup guide in TrainingPeaks' own help centre. You connect it by entering your Oura account credentials in TrainingPeaks and authorising access - no third-party bridge required.
Once connected, TrainingPeaks pulls a daily snapshot of your Oura data: sleep duration, sleep score and sleep stages, nightly average HRV, resting heart rate, blood-oxygen saturation and daily step count. The sync runs once per day, typically in the morning after your Oura app has synced with the ring, so allow a few hours if it doesn't appear immediately. For most TrainingPeaks users wanting recovery data beside their training, Oura is the cleanest option.
What about Ultrahuman, Samsung Galaxy Ring and RingConn?
Ultrahuman is the other ring with a genuine route in: it markets two-way sync with third-party fitness platforms including TrainingPeaks, alongside Apple Health and Google Fit. If you're choosing a ring specifically for TrainingPeaks, Oura and Ultrahuman are the two to consider.
Samsung Galaxy Ring is the opposite: its data stays inside Samsung Health, with no Apple Health and no direct third-party sync, so there is no practical path into TrainingPeaks. RingConn offers only one-way sync out to Apple Health and Google Fit - useful for keeping those hubs updated, but it doesn't feed TrainingPeaks natively. In short, the ecosystem a ring locks into matters as much as the ring itself.
Can Apple Health bridge a ring to TrainingPeaks?
Partly. TrainingPeaks integrates with Apple Health: after a one-time sync from your TrainingPeaks account settings, completed workouts recorded to Apple Health appear on your TrainingPeaks calendar. So a ring that writes workout data to Apple Health can have that surface in TrainingPeaks.
The catch is that rings mostly write recovery metrics (sleep, HRV) to Apple Health rather than GPS workouts, and TrainingPeaks' Apple Health link is workout-focused - so the bridge is far less complete than Oura's native integration. Note too that, unlike with watches, TrainingPeaks and Strava do not offer a direct sync; you connect the source device instead.