Apple is bringing two fresh fitness challenges to its Apple Watch lineup later this month. These new goals give users a simple way to stay active and unlock a few digital rewards along the way. The upcoming events will celebrate Earth Day and International Dance Day.
The company uses these community goals to encourage movement, bringing the usual mix of special profile badges and animated stickers for anyone who successfully finishes the required exercise tracking. This adds a fun element to daily fitness routines.
Work out for thirty minutes to grab the Earth Day badge
The first tracking challenge for the Apple Watch lands on Wednesday, April 22. Anyone wearing the device just needs to record a single exercise session lasting at least thirty minutes. You do not have to do anything complicated to participate. A fast walk, a yoga session, or a quick bike ride will easily satisfy the requirement.
You can use the built-in tracking application or any third-party option that syncs data directly with the main Health system on your phone. Finishing this goal unlocks a specific Earth Day badge inside your profile. It also grants access to a set of exclusive animated stickers that you can send to friends in your text messages to show off your progress.
Complete a short dance routine to secure the final reward
The second event happens exactly one week later on Wednesday, April 29. To grab the International Dance Day award, users have to log a dance session that runs for twenty minutes or longer. You can pick any style of dancing as long as the watch is actively tracking the movement.
Just like the earlier challenge, finishing this activity gives you another unique digital badge and more custom messaging stickers. The company regularly runs these types of limited events to help motivate its user base.
These late April goals follow similar tracking milestones held earlier this year for Heart Month and the general New Year fitness push. The company is releasing these challenges soon after rolling out the watchOS 26.5 beta 2 update to the public.