Angela Lang/CNET
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<div content="LIST ITEM" superlative="Best thermometer overall " description="
Withings’ Thermo is undoubtedly the sleekest model I tested, but also the most expensive. This instant read thermometer takes temporal readings, meaning you swipe it across your forehead and it captures your body temperature from your temporal artery. The Thermo doesn’t even need to make contact with your skin — it can be up to half an inch away — which makes it one of the most hygienic options and you won’t have to disturb your sleeping kid to take their temperature with this forehead thermometer.
The Thermo has 16 infrared sensors that capture several thousand temperature readings at once — meaning this smart thermometer takes a super accurate temperature reading. I like that the Thermo is also ridiculously easy to use — when it’s done recording measurements, it vibrates twice — no obnoxious beep. You will need to use the Thermo app to set up the thermometer and see a history of readings, but the app is not required to take your temperature. Further, the display on this thermometer is extremely easy to read.
This thermometer isn’t rechargeable — it requires two AAA batteries, but the battery life is about two years.
Look, I get that a nearly $100 instant read thermometer seems absurd to most people, but the sleek design and dead-simple ease of use (about a million times easier than an oral thermometer and about a zillion times easier than a rectal one) make the Thermo a worthwhile choice if that price doesn’t scare you off.
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Withings’ Thermo is undoubtedly the sleekest model I tested, but also the most expensive. This instant read thermometer takes temporal readings, meaning you swipe it across your forehead and it captures your body temperature from your temporal artery. The Thermo doesn’t even need to make contact with your skin — it can be up to half an inch away — which makes it one of the most hygienic options and you won’t have to disturb your sleeping kid to take their temperature with this forehead thermometer.
The Thermo has 16 infrared sensors that capture several thousand temperature readings at once — meaning this smart thermometer takes a super accurate temperature reading. I like that the Thermo is also ridiculously easy to use — when it’s done recording measurements, it vibrates twice — no obnoxious beep. You will need to use the Thermo app to set up the thermometer and see a history of readings, but the app is not required to take your temperature. Further, the display on this thermometer is extremely easy to read.
This thermometer isn’t rechargeable — it requires two AAA batteries, but the battery life is about two years.
Look, I get that a nearly $100 instant read thermometer seems absurd to most people, but the sleek design and dead-simple ease of use (about a million times easier than an oral thermometer and about a zillion times easier than a rectal one) make the Thermo a worthwhile choice if that price doesn’t scare you off.
<div content="LIST ITEM" superlative="Best thermometer for guided coaching " description="
The Kinsa was one of the first smart thermometers on the market, and its products are designed with kids in mind. The Smart Ear thermometer connects to the Kinsa app on your phone to keep a log of each temperature reading, so you can keep tabs on how a fever is progressing.
The app also offers care advice with each reading — like making sure you or your kid is getting enough fluids — and provides information on when you need to see a doctor or go to the ER. You can also tell the app when you took or administered medication to bring the fever down.
The Kinsa thermometer takes temperature in under two seconds, which will help getting an accurate reading on a squirmy kid who doesn’t want to sit still. One of the only downsides to this digital ear thermometer is that you need the Kinsa app to set up the thermometer — so if you aren’t keen on logging your temperature data in an app, skip this model for one of the other ways to measure temperature on this list.
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Braun’s ear thermometer reminds me of the type of thermometer I encountered as a kid at the pediatrician — back when in-ear models weren’t available at home. This older school design feels a tad dated compared to Withings’ or Kinsa’s models, but it works just as well.
This infrared thermometer makes it easy to measure the temperature of infants under 1 month old all the way to adults. There are three preset age ranges you can choose from when taking your temperature: Up to 3 months, 3 to 36 months, and 36 months and up. The infrared technology thermometer stores up to four recent readings and takes your temperature in just a few seconds.
My biggest knock against the ThermScan 7 is that you have to use disposable plastic probe covers in order to take a temperature reading. The thermometer knows if the plastic cover is missing and won’t work until you put one on. Kinsa’s model, in comparison, works without any cover. However, in talking to a colleague who uses this thermometer, he says he doesn’t mind the probe covers because he doesn’t have to clean the thermometer before taking his kid’s temperature.
This thermometer stores up to 35 temperature readings, which is impressive but also unnecessary — especially because there’s no way to assign those temperatures to individual people.
My gripe with this thermometer is that the temperature readings were less consistent than other models I tested, and an accurate reading is kinda the whole point of a thermometer. Depending on where on my forehead I pointed it, I got different results each time, ranging from 96.0 to 98.0 degrees F. By comparison, the Withings Thermo consistently gave me readings between 98.3 and 99.1 degrees F. This is because the iProven model will take a reading wherever you point it, so if it’s not pointed at your temporal artery, you might get inaccurate readings.
Testing it against the two other ear thermometers on this list, the Braun and Kinsa, I again got inconsistent results, despite following the directions from the user manual and taking care to place the probe in my ear in the same position and angle each time. Both Braun and Kinsa gave me consistent readings with only a few tenths of a degree difference.