Everything new in Orbi.
Connect your AI assistant (Claude, ChatGPT) to Orbi and ask it about your clients, sessions, and programs — and have it take actions with your approval.
Orbi now runs on Orbi Sans — one consistent, custom typeface across the app and website for a cleaner, more legible look.
Built a great program for one client? Copy it into your library in one tap to reuse and adapt for others.
Tap a session on a client's Program tab and tweak reps, weight, or RPE per set — saved straight to their plan, any week.
Log your body weight on the Progress → Body tab and see your latest, your change over time, and recent weigh-ins — saved for real now.
When you assign a program to a client, Orbi now copies it. Editing the original template later never changes a program a client is already following.
The coach Schedule is now a full calendar: Day, Week, Month, and List views with drag-to-create, drag-to-move, resize-to-reschedule, an event detail panel, your real availability shaded in, and your Google Calendar overlaid.
Check off a set and a rest countdown starts automatically — no separate timer app. Add 15s or skip it.
Reschedule now shows your coach's real openings and moves the session, and your weekly check-in is saved and sent to your coach instead of being discarded.
A week-by-week roadmap on your Program page shows where you are, what's done, and what's coming — deloads included.
Open a session and log each set — weight, reps, and RPE in a clean per-set grid, pre-filled from the prescription. Tick sets off as you go; completing saves it all to your history.
When you open a workout, each set is now pre-filled with what you actually lifted last time — not just the prescription. Confirm or adjust, then log.
Clients can mark a session complete from their program, and it's saved to their workout history — so progress and your coach's view reflect what you actually did.
Finishing a session now shows a recap — sets done, total volume, exercises, and a nudge when you beat last time — instead of jumping straight to history.
Orbi now has a full dark theme. Switch between Light, Dark, and System from Settings → Appearance (coach) or More → Appearance (client).
Clients can connect a health app (Oura, Withings) with a clear, explicit consent step, and coaches get a Health tab showing readiness, sleep, and HRV trends.
The client detail now shows the consents a client accepted at intake (Terms, Privacy, Health data) with dates, and tags each check-in with its category.
Open any client and see their training plan as a week-by-week timeline — browse any week's sessions and set where the client is.
Clients can now see their plan, price, status, and renewal date under More → Plan & billing.
Start a brand-new program from a client's page — build it, and it's assigned to them the moment you're done.
Give a client a program straight from their profile — and a clear confirmation before replacing one they're already on.
The program builder now actually saves. Build a plan of days and exercises, hit Save, and assign it to a client — it shows up in their app.
The program builder now prescribes the way coaches actually program: a rep range (e.g. 8–12), a target load, RPE and rest per exercise — not just sets × reps. Clients see the full prescription in their app.
A ground-up rebuild of the program builder: a day strip you swipe across, a clean card editor for each exercise, a searchable add-exercise sheet with recents, and autosave — no Save button, nothing lost.
Coaches can now build a nutrition plan for each client — daily calorie and macro targets plus a meal-by-meal breakdown — and it shows up read-only in the client's app the moment you save it.
Build a small library of lessons — videos, articles, or PDFs — and publish them to your clients' apps. Drafts stay private until you're ready.
The Plan tab on each client now shows their current plan for real. Assign one of your pricing plans to a client, change it, or cancel it — payment stays manual via mark-as-paid.
Editing a service or offer in your catalog now actually saves, the client detail page shows each client's real nutrition plan, and the placeholder Coupons tab is gone until it's real.
Orbi now has three plans — Basic (€39), Growth (€89), and Pro (€199), all net plus VAT. Pick monthly or save 17% on annual, and every plan starts with a 14-day free trial, no card required. Plans are separated by features, not by how many clients you have.
If you'd rather skip the inbox round-trip, you can now sign in with a password. The default is still a six-digit code by email — passwords are a shortcut, not a requirement, and your 1Password autofill works the same as on any normal login page.
Signup is one page now. Email or Google, six-digit code, then your name and booking-page URL — no more separate coach/client routes, no more bodybuilder photo, just a single quiet flow with your future booking page glowing in the background.
One page tried to ask whether you were new or returning before letting you in. Two pages just let you in. Plus: "Sign in" is gone from the product — it's "Log in" everywhere.
Whether you're new or returning, you now land on the same screen and just type your email. We figure out which one you are. And returning coaches can use a real password again — OTP is for verifications, not for logging in.
Bigger headings, a single solid CTA, the email field always in plain sight — and a Terms line pinned to the bottom of the viewport so the page knows where it ends.
Sign in, request a password reset, accept an invitation, change your password from settings — they all share the same panel, the same header, the same buttons, the same animations. No more visual whiplash crossing from one auth page to another.
A new button in coach Security settings ends every active session for the account at once — phones, tablets, and other browsers. Required for shared- and lost-device scenarios under DSGVO Art. 32.
Coaches can now delete their own Orbi account from Settings → Security. Personal data is wiped immediately, past invoices stay on file for tax retention, and every active session is signed out at once. DSGVO Art. 17 (right to erasure) is now self-service.
The 'this content is a draft' alert is gone from the production legal pages. The pages still aren't lawyer-reviewed yet — that's tracked separately — but rendering a draft banner on a public legal surface is itself a DSGVO transparency issue, so it had to come off the live site first.
Settings → Payments → Manage now opens a hub that shows your live Stripe balance, recent payouts, and a disconnect action — plus a one-click link to Stripe for editing account details.
Three blocks: who needs you today, where revenue is heading, what's holding the business up. No more stacked attendance bars and KPI cards that don't lead anywhere.
Removed redundant page titles. One nav primitive across Bookings, Services, Analytics, and Reports tabs. Killed the empty-cards-with-extra-padding pattern.
Coach messages now appear in the thread the moment you hit send — no more staring at a frozen composer waiting for the round-trip.
The mobile More drawer now opens with a search field — type to jump to Programs, Reports, Shortcuts, or any other secondary nav item.
Dashboard KPI cards now snap-scroll horizontally on mobile instead of cramming into three truncated columns.
Status badges flip the moment you click, rapid sequential clicks no longer cancel each other, and Clients/Home/Bookings now stream in instead of blocking on a blank screen.
Per-exercise notes now render as a labelled callout in the client workout view, not a footnote.
A library of starter programs and workouts you can copy and edit in one click.
See your current plan, switch tiers, and manage billing without leaving Orbi.
Logout is no longer a tab. The client mobile nav has 5 destinations instead of 6.
The Assign program action is now live on every client row — pick a program, set a start date, done.
A public log of what's new in Orbi, written by the team that built it.
Send a message, report a bug, or request a feature without leaving the dashboard.
Skeletons replace blank screens across workouts, exercises, and the program editor.