Don’t buy an Oura Ring 5 for blood pressure – it’s coming to older rings too

Oura is expanding what its Ring platform does with deeper, more proactive health monitoring, but you don’t need the new Oura Ring 5 to get it.

The company’s new “Health Radar” system builds on its existing Symptom Radar feature. It introduces two major additions: Blood Pressure Signals and Nighttime Breathing. Both are designed to surface longer-term changes in your biometric trends, rather than just daily snapshots. The goal is to flag potential health issues earlier.

Blood Pressure Signals is the more significant of the two. Instead of providing direct blood pressure readings, it uses nighttime PPG data to detect patterns that may correlate with cardiovascular strain over rolling 30-day periods. The idea is to identify changes in overnight cardiovascular behaviour, particularly how blood pressure naturally dips during sleep. It flags when that pattern becomes inconsistent over time.

Alongside that, Oura is adding Nighttime Breathing tracking. This feature analyses breathing disturbances during sleep over a similar 30-day window. Rather than relying on single-night anomalies, the feature builds a broader view of sleep respiration trends. It highlights when disruptions may be affecting recovery or energy levels.

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Oura is also tying these insights more directly into healthcare workflows. Users can log cuff-based blood pressure readings inside the app, while partnerships with services like ResMed aim to connect flagged patterns with sleep assessments and professional guidance when needed.

Crucially, these Health Radar features will roll out to Oura Ring 3 and newer devices in the US starting June 2026. This means the Oura Ring 5 isn’t required to access them.

In other words, Oura’s strategy here isn’t about locking advanced health tracking to its newest hardware. Instead, it’s extending its capabilities across its existing ecosystem, using software and backend analysis to upgrade older devices as well.

That makes the Oura Ring 5 less of a must-buy for these specific features, and more of a design and refinement upgrade — smaller, more comfortable, and incrementally improved, but not a gateway to entirely new health capabilities.

The post Don’t buy an Oura Ring 5 for blood pressure – it’s coming to older rings too appeared first on Trusted Reviews.

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