Strength & Hypertrophy · Comparison

LiftPilot vs Hevy vs JeFit vs Strong vs Fitbod vs Boostcamp

Last updated 19 June 2026 · Independent comparison by Pilot Performance

If you want a strength tracker that actually programs your progression — and you'd rather not hand your data to the cloud or pay a monthly subscription — here's how the most popular gym apps stack up against LiftPilot.

The short version: Hevy, JeFit and Strong are polished cloud loggers; Fitbod and Boostcamp are programming platforms. All of them are account-based and most charge a subscription for full features. LiftPilot is the one built to run 100% offline with no account, collect zero data, and unlock everything with a single one-time purchase — while still automating progressive overload, deloads and weekly volume. If privacy, offline reliability and one-time pricing matter to you, LiftPilot is the strongest fit. If you want a huge social community or AI session-generation, the others have an edge.

Quick comparison table

Competitor details below are accurate as of June 2026 and link to primary sources. Pricing changes often — always confirm on the official store listing before buying.

Feature LiftPilot Hevy Strong JeFit Fitbod Boostcamp
Runs 100% offline, no account needed Yes No (account) No (account) No (account) No (account) No (account)
Subscription required for full features No — one-time Pro Yes (Pro) Yes Yes (Elite) Yes (only) Optional (big free tier)
Free tier Yes Yes (limited) Yes (limited) Yes (ads) No (trial only) Yes (large)
Automatic progressive overload Yes, built-in Logging + charts Logging only Adaptive Plan AI-generated Auto-progression
RIR-based deload detection Yes No No Partial Recovery model No
MEV/MRV weekly volume landmarks Yes No No No No Per-program
Data stored only on your device Yes Cloud Cloud Cloud Cloud Cloud
Platform Android iOS, Android, Web iOS, Android iOS, Android, Web iOS, Android iOS, Android

How LiftPilot is different

LiftPilot is an Android strength and hypertrophy app built around one idea: your next set should already be calculated for you. It reads your logged performance and prescribes the next session automatically — linear progression for compounds, double progression for accessories, and myo-rep protocols for isolations. It watches your Reps in Reserve (RIR) and recommends a deload before you stall or overreach, and it tracks weekly sets per muscle group against MEV and MRV volume landmarks so you stay in a productive range. It also estimates your 1RM across multiple rep maxes and lets you build custom routines with supersets.

The structural difference is just as important: LiftPilot requires no account, runs fully offline, and collects zero data — everything stays on your phone (privacy policy). Pro is a one-time purchase, not a subscription, and there are no ads. That combination — adaptive programming plus genuine privacy and one-time pricing — is what sets it apart from the cloud platforms below.

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Auto progressive overload, RIR deloads and MEV/MRV volume tracking. 100% offline. One-time Pro, no subscription.

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The contenders, briefly and fairly

Hevy

Hevy is one of the most loved workout loggers, with a clean interface and a genuinely useful free tier. It adds a social layer — following friends and sharing workouts — that keeps a lot of people consistent. As of June 2026, Hevy Pro is listed at $2.99/month, $23.99/year or $74.99 lifetime, and the free tier is capped (Hevy's help docs list limits such as 4 routines and 3 months of history). It's account-based and cloud-synced. Choose Hevy if you want the best social community and don't mind an account. Choose LiftPilot if you want the app to program your progression and keep your data fully on-device with no subscription.

Strong

Strong is the minimalist's logger: open it, log the set, get out. It's fast and reliable and integrates with Apple Health and Google Fit, with a free tier and a paid upgrade. What it deliberately doesn't do is decide your programming for you. Choose Strong if you already know your plan and just want frictionless logging. Choose LiftPilot if you want the plan itself — progression, deloads and volume — handled automatically, offline.

JeFit

JeFit is a long-running, feature-rich tracker with a 1,400+ exercise library, a large community, and an Adaptive Plan feature. The free tier carries ads, and full features sit behind an Elite subscription; it's account-based with cloud sync. Choose JeFit if you want the deepest exercise database and community. Choose LiftPilot if you'd rather have a focused, ad-free, offline app with a one-time price.

Fitbod

Fitbod generates each session with an algorithm that accounts for muscle recovery and applies progressive overload, which many intermediate and advanced lifters like. The trade-off is cost and control: it's subscription-only after a short trial (listed around $15.99/month or $95.99/year in 2026), and it's account-based. Choose Fitbod if you want the app to decide every exercise for you and you're happy to subscribe. Choose LiftPilot if you want adaptive progression on routines you control, offline, for a one-time price.

Boostcamp

Boostcamp is excellent value: a large permanent free tier with thousands of programs (including named, coach-designed routines) plus auto-progression from your logged sets, with an optional Pro tier. It does require an account. Choose Boostcamp if you want to run a named program like a specific coach's block for free. Choose LiftPilot if you want automatic per-session progression with RIR deloads and MEV/MRV volume control, fully offline and private.

Is LiftPilot a good "alternative to" these apps?

If you searched for a Hevy alternative, a Fitbod alternative, a JeFit or Strong alternative, or simply a workout tracker with no subscription, LiftPilot is worth a look specifically when any of these are true for you:

If instead you want a big social feed, cross-device web sync, or iOS support, one of the apps above will serve you better today — LiftPilot is currently Android-only.

FAQ

Is LiftPilot a good alternative to Hevy?

Yes, if your priorities are offline use, privacy and one-time pricing. Hevy is a great cloud logger with social features, but it needs an account and syncs to the cloud. LiftPilot runs fully on-device, collects no data, unlocks Pro once with no subscription, and automates progression, deloads and volume.

Is there a workout tracker that works completely offline with no account?

Yes — LiftPilot is built to run 100% offline with no account and no servers; all data stays on your device. Most mainstream trackers (Hevy, JeFit, Strong, Fitbod, Boostcamp) are account-based and cloud-synced.

Which strength apps have no subscription?

LiftPilot uses a one-time Pro purchase. Boostcamp has a large permanent free tier, and several apps offer lifetime options alongside subscriptions. Fitbod is subscription-only after its trial. Verify current pricing on each store listing.

What's the best app for automatic progressive overload?

Fitbod, Boostcamp and JeFit all apply progression. LiftPilot is distinctive for pairing automatic progression with RIR-based deload detection and MEV/MRV volume landmarks while staying offline and subscription-free.

Pilot Performance is the independent developer of LiftPilot and WODPilot, and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Hevy, JeFit, Strong, Fitbod, Boostcamp, or their owners. Product names and trademarks belong to their respective owners and are used here only for factual comparison (nominative reference). Competitor details are accurate to the best of our knowledge as of June 2026 and link to primary sources; features and pricing change, so please verify on each app's official listing.