biomarkers during exercise, training, or personal health monitoring. [1][2][3] Sweat is of particular interest as a target fluid given its easy access and the wealth of information contained in it, including various salts, proteins, and hormones, that reflect both the transient and chronic health status of an individual. [3] Planar, "tattoo" format electrochemical sensors have demonstrated great promise in monitoring and elucidating trends in many of the constituent compounds in sweat. [4] Transitioning these sensing configurations to a fiber-based format could offer seamless integration throughout a textile, allowing for simultaneous measurements across muscle groups and different sweat regions with increased comfort for the individual. Fiber-based sensors allow for readout and sensor locations to be independent, enabling distributed sensing in textile with a single readout interface. [5] Carbon dipped thread-based sensors were the first demonstration of ion-selective electrodes (ISEs) in a flexible 1-D textile format and continue to be improved. [6][7][8][9] The desire for smaller diameter sensors has pushed material needs beyond carboncoated threads or filaments. Recent fiber-based ion-selective sensors have used various electrode materials, including carbon nanotube fibers, gold nanowire impregnated elastomeric fibers, and conductive polymer-based fibers. [1,[10][11][12] These materials are costly to produce and, in some cases, present health and environmental concerns. [13] A promising alternative is the use of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) fibers, as they can be produced from inexpensive and abundant graphite flakes without additional binders, to realize a mechanically strong electrode with a near-pristine electrochemically active surface that can be tailored for the sensing application, and are less prone to swelling in aqueous environments than coated threads or fibers. [14][15][16][17][18] While short segments of these rGO fibers have been used as temperature sensors, gas sensors, and benchtop hydrogen peroxide sensors, they have yet to be applied to wearable sweat sensing. [19][20][21][22] rGO fibers have a wide electrochemical window (−0.9V to 1V), excellent mechanical properties, strong chemical resistance, and biocompatibility, all of which make them ideal to generate fiber-based sensors for wearable or implantable electrochemical applications. [14,20,23] Additionally, graphene oxide (GO) offers many functional groups, including epoxy and hydroxyl groups, enabling facile grafting of chemical modifiers or nanoparticles Thread or fiber-based sensors can be integrated into wearable textiles paving the way for re-engineered electrochemical sensing units for exercise or training analytics in real-time. Textile-based sensors currently have limitations such as large diameters, low conductivity, poor electrochemical performance and sensing stability, or expensive manufacturing processes-preventing many commercial applications in sweat sensing. Pure reduced graphene oxide (rGO) fibers show much promise as low-...