Best fitness watch of 2025

The best fitness smartwatches combine all of the most accurate health tracking features with a few premium perks that you won't find in your basic running band. I'm talking about GPS/NFC, onboard storage, AI assistants, and so much more. If you're buying your very first fitness watch, all of these metrics may be a bit overwhelming, which is exactly why I'm here. 

I've tested dozens of smartwatches and fitness trackers over the years, and I can tell you exactly what to look for and expect when you start your shopping journey. Devices from the minds of Google, Samsung, Mobvoi, and beyond combine smartwatch features with fitness tracking specs, it's simply a matter of finding the wearable that's right for your needs. Whether you're an active runner, hiker, or simply counting your steps throughout the day, these are the best fitness watches on the web right now. 

Photo of Michael Hicks, Senior Editor of Android Central
Michael Hicks

Michael Hicks is Android Central's resident smartwatch geek, having reviewed or tested dozens of wearables from Samsung, Google, Apple, Garmin, Fitbit, Coros, Polar, Withings, Amazfit, and others. He spends his free time running or hiking while wearing several watches at once, testing which is most accurate.

At a glance

Best overall

A Gmail notification on the Garmin Venu 3

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
The best fitness watch

Specifications

Display: 1.2- (390x390) or 1.4-inch (454x454) AMOLED touch
Materials: Polymer case, steel bezel
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass 3
Tracking: All-Systems GNSS
Sensors: HRM; ECG; Skin Temp; Pulse Ox (SpO2); accelerometer; ambient light sensor; barometric altimeter; compass; gyroscope
Connectivity: NFC, Bluetooth, ANT+, Wi-Fi
Smarts: Music (8GB), Bluetooth calling, voice assistant passthrough
Weight: 40–47g

Reasons to buy

+
Gorgeous 1.2- or 1.4-inch AMOLED
+
Up to 14 days of battery life
+
All-systems GPS, HRM, SpO2, music
+
Built-in mic and speaker
+
Sleep Coaching and wheelchair mode

Reasons to avoid

-
Pretty expensive
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Garmin watches aren't the "smartest"

We could list the best Garmin watches since they offer different models with the same core training, health data, and recommendations to help athletes improve. Our choice is the Venu 3 since it's the closest option to a "mainstream" smartwatch. The Venu 3 model is lighter and slimmer than most bulky Garmins, and it has a Spotify playlist, a built-in mic, voice assistant commands, and a built-in mic and speaker.

For health tracking, you have constant heart rate, blood oxygen (SpO2), HRV stress data, nighttime skin temperature data, and spot ECG readings for AFib. Venu 3 uses this data for an improved Body Battery chart that'll point out how alcohol is stalling your recovery or how meditating gives you energy. Its Sleep Coach guides you in enhancing your sleep quality.

The Venu 3 can also tell you how much recovery time you need using its intensity and your abilities. Thanks to the "Workout benefits" screen, you can also know if your VO2 Max fitness is improving. The readings you get can also help you see if you need to do more or less. You can also create custom indoor workouts from thousands of exercise types, including animations showing how to perform the exercise. 

Our Venu 3 review called the watch a "tightrope walk between casual smarts and serious fitness," and for good reason. It doesn't have the app ecosystem of an Apple or Galaxy Watch. Still, the two-week battery life, better GPS satellite accuracy, more reliable heart rate data, and Garmin Coach tools will help you where a mainstream smartwatch would fall short.

Best fitness smartwatch

Sleep score tile on the Google Pixel Watch 3.

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
Best fitness smartwatch

Specifications

Display: 1.27-inch (408x408) or 1.43-inch (456x456) Actua AMOLED LTPO display
Materials: Aluminum
Protection: 5ATM/ IP68, Gorilla Glass 5
Tracking: GPS
Sensors: Accelerometer, altimeter, ambient light, cEDA, compass, ECG, gyroscope, magnetometer, optical heart rate, skin temperature, SpO2
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi, NFC, 4G LTE (optional)
Smarts: Storage (32GB), Bluetooth calling, Google Assistant, Wear OS 5 apps, 2GB RAM
Weight: 41mm: 31g; 45mm: 37g

Reasons to buy

+
Brighter, smoother, and larger display than before
+
Comes in two sizes
+
Lasts far longer than Google's 24-hour estimate
+
Still dependable for health and sleep tracking
+
Workout builder, Cardio Load, and Morning Brief will gratify athletes

Reasons to avoid

-
Not especially durable, with no sapphire glass
-
Workout accuracy could be better, especially GPS

The Google Pixel Watch 3 is our second favorite Android smartwatch. Although its specs and design might suggest otherwise, it's a significant improvement over the Watch 2.

Like the Pixel Watch 2, the new Watch 3 is a smarter Fitbit. You'll find the exact health sensors as the Fitbit Sense 2, like constant body response (cEDA) for stress, skin temp, and SpO2 at night, and passive AFib readings for heart health. Google throws in six months of Fitbit Premium for in-depth health reports, but you can still see daily data once the trial lapses.

The Pixel Watch 3 offers reliable fitness tracking similar to the previous model. It finally comes in two sizes, including a larger 45mm model. The displays are also larger with slimmer bezels, making it feel like an A-tier device. The Watch 3 satisfactorily addresses our battery life woes with the Pixel Watch 2, as it lasted for more than the rated 24 hours when we reviewed it.

Google claims the Pixel Watch 3 has the "most accurate heart rate for running " as a fitness watch. When we took it for a standard 10K run, it stayed within 1 bpm of dedicated fitness trackers like the COROS armband. It was equally responsive during a 10-mile ruck with numerous hills and valleys. The Pixel Watch 3 offers reliable health and sleep tracking, plenty of workout modes, and enhanced battery life and displays.

Best budget fitness watch

Post-workout heart rate zones on the COROS PACE 3

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
Best budget fitness watch

Specifications

Display: 1.2-inch (240 x 240) MIP LCD touch
Materials: Polymer
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass
Tracking: Dual-frequency GPS
Sensors: HRM, optical pulse oximeter, barometric altimeter, accelerometer, gyroscope, compass, temperature, wear detection
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.0, WiFi 2.4GHz/5GHz
Smarts: Music storage (4GB)
Weight: 30g (nylon) or 38g (silicone)

Reasons to buy

+
Dual-band GPS tracking
+
24-day battery life
+
EvoLab training guidance
+
Regularly receives new feature updates
+
Lightweight and affordable

Reasons to avoid

-
No NFC, ECG
-
Band can be hard to fit

In our review, we called the PACE 3 the "best affordable running watch of the year," we doubt any fitness watch will supplant it. COROS may not be as well known as Garmin, but it's a brand that packs some incredible training tools into watches that aren't quite as rugged but at half the price.

The PACE 3 offers some of the most accurate GPS tracking for outdoor athletes. It provides trustworthy data that helps you judge your post-workout training load, effect, and recovery time. If you're new to training and need help, there's even a running test that helps you specify your current VO2 Max level.

One of the coolest things about COROS, in general, is how it releases new software for all its watches, not just the expensive ones. In the last few months, COROS has added a wellness check feature, HRV-based stress tracking, custom workouts, personalized marathon training plans, turn-by-turn map navigation, and a running form analysis tool to the PACE 3. We can anticipate the launch of additional tools in the next few months. 

Best of all, it weighs less with a band than most smartwatches without a band. The band itself can be uncomfortable to fit and hard to swap out, but overall, this is a fitness watch you'll hardly notice while running.

If you're looking for a cheap but balanced fitness tracker, consider brands like Amazfit, which emphasize traditional smarts like voice assistants. But for serious, frugal athletes, we recommend the COROS PACE 3 as the starting point and end of your search.

Best fitness smartwatch for battery

The Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
Best for battery and power

Specifications

Display: 1.5-inch (480×480) AMOLED touch
Materials: Titanium
Protection: 5ATM, Sapphire glass
Tracking: dual-band GPS
Sensors: Samsung BioActive Sensor (Optical Heart Rate + Electrical Heart Signal + Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis), Temperature Sensor, Accelerometer, Barometer, Gyro Sensor, Geomagnetic Sensor, Light Sensor
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n 2.4+5GHz, NFC, LTE
Smarts: Storage (32GB), Bluetooth calling, Google Assistant, Wear OS 5 apps, 2GB RAM
Weight: 60.5g (w/out strap)

Reasons to buy

+
Striking design makes a real impression
+
Dual-band GPS comparable to Garmin
+
Noticeable Exynos & battery boost
+
Revamped heart rate accuracy
+
Built-in LTE support

Reasons to avoid

-
Too heavy, thick for some wrists
-
Should've had a proper crown

Most of our favorite fitness smartwatches repeat the same pattern of having a poor battery life. If you use GPS tracking, you must charge the watch daily. Like its spiritual predecessor, the Watch 5 Pro, the Ultra has the same battery size. Still, its more power-efficient processor and latest OS give it a noticeable boost in battery life.

The good news is that the device lives up to Samsung's estimations in our Galaxy Watch Ultra review. You get three days of continuous heart rate, blood oxygen monitoring, and sleep tracking, even taking some dual-band GPS tracking into account.

Samsung also updated the Galaxy Watch Ultra's design, which might be a love-hate relationship for some. We wish Samsung had given it a proper crown to complete the Watch experience. It's pricey, but if you can find a good deal, we highly suggest you buy it. The fitness and health monitoring features are close to what Garmin watches can achieve. Samsung gives the watch four generations of Wear OS upgrades and excellent build quality that can withstand the elements.

Best for health tracking

Fitbit Sense 2 stress tracking

(Image credit: Android Central)
Best fitness watch for health tracking

Specifications

Display: 1.58-inch (336x336) AMOLED touch
Materials: Aluminum
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass
Tracking: GPS only
Sensors: Multi-path HR, SpO2, ECG, cEDA, skin temp, accelerometer, altimeter, ambient light, gyroscope
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.0, NFC
Smarts: Fitbit Premium, Google Maps
Weight: 37.6g

Reasons to buy

+
Sleek, slim design
+
Six days of battery life
+
Built-in mic and speaker
+
Google Maps/ Wallet
+
HRM, SpO2, cEDA, ECG, temperature

Reasons to avoid

-
No Google Assistant
-
No music storage
-
Fitbit Premium required
-
Short GPS tracking life

Resembled to the original Sense, which struck a delicate balance between fitness and smartwatch tools, the Fitbit Sense 2 leans more onto the fitness side of the smartwatch spectrum. That's why we have the Pixel Watch 2 listed above it. However, if you're looking for something lighter and more affordable, the Sense 2 could be your top choice. It works with Android and iOS users and can last for days rather than hours.

You won't find Google Assistant, music storage, or limited third-party apps on the Fitbit Sense 2. But thanks to Google's acquisition of Fitbit, which includes Google Wallet and Google Maps, the latter is fascinating because it helps guide you during runs or bike rides towards your destination. You can also count on a mic and speaker to take Bluetooth calls or speak to a smart assistant like Alexa or Siri.

Our Fitbit Sense 2 reviewer noted that despite the "baffling" cutbacks in smart features, he valued the new and improved interface, a light version of Wear OS. The new physical button for selecting widgets is much more trustworthy than the last generation's capacitive touch button. The AMOLED display remains bright and readable, too.

Its battery life is six days with regular use, though it's only rated to last five hours with GPS tracking. That makes it hard to recommend for "serious" athletes compared to a Garmin watch, but it should be plenty for casual fitness tracking and easily beats the Pixel Watch 2.

Best all-around alternative

TicWatch Pro 5 in sunflowers

(Image credit: Andrew Myrick / Android Central)
Best all-around alternative

Specifications

Display: 1.43-inch (466x466) AMOLED touch + ultra low-power
Materials: Metal/aluminum, nylon with fiberglass
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass, MIL-STD-810H
Tracking: GPS only
Sensors: HR, SpO2, skin temp, accelerometer, ambient light, barometer, compass, gyro, off-body sensor
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi 2.4GHz
Smarts: Storage (32GB), 2GB RAM, Wear OS 3 apps, Bluetooth calling
Weight: 44.3g (w/out strap)

Reasons to buy

+
Qualcomm Snapdragon W5+ Gen 1 performance
+
Powerful 628mAh battery w/ Essential Mode
+
HRM, SpO2, skin temp
+
Military-grade durability
+
Reliable rotating crown

Reasons to avoid

-
Too large for some wrists
-
No Google Assistant yet

The Mobvoi TicWatch Pro 5 doesn't necessarily "win" in any fitness category, but it does well in the various categories where Google, Samsung, and Garmin excel. We determined it's worth enclosing here, especially if you're more inclined to the Galaxy Watch 5 Pro but prefer something quicker, more recent, and more affordable.

Similar to the excellent TicWatch Pro 3 Ultra GPS, the TicWatch Pro 5 has a tremendous battery, a MIL-STD-810G rating, and a dual-layer display that enables a low-powered "Essential Mode." However, it has added a top-tier Snapdragon Wear chip with twice the RAM, quadruple the storage, and a new temperature sensor.

You're looking at the same massive watch with a three-day battery life as its predecessor, only with far superior Wear OS 3.5 software—though still no Google Assistant. It's currently running the Wear OS 4 beta, and you never know we could see a full update soon with even more improvements.

Our TicWatch Pro 5 review praises the watch's "incredible performance" and "better than expected" health tracking across heart rate, blood oxygen, and skin temperature. Its fitness app calculates your VO2 Max and tells you how long to recover after a workout, something most smartwatches either lack or charge you for. Otherwise, you can pick other Wear OS fitness apps like Strava to rely upon.

The TicWatch Pro 5 Enduro and the Pro 5 are electronically identical, with the difference between a Sapphire Crystal Glass screen and a refreshed rotating crown. That's not enough of an upgrade to warrant paying $350 for the Enduro when the Pro 5 is usually on sale for $75-$125 off. When both are at list price, grab the Enduro, but save your money, buy the Pro 5, and then use the savings to buy some swankier bands.

Best for runners

Garmin Forerunner 265 watch face

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
Best fitness watch for runners

Specifications

Display: 1.1- (360x360) or 1.3-inch (416x416) AMOLED touch
Materials: Polymer
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass 3
Tracking: Dual-frequency GPS
Sensors: HRM, barometric altimeter, compass, gyroscope, accelerometer, thermometer, ambient light sensor, SpO2
Connectivity: Bluetooth, ANT+, Wi-Fi, NFC
Smarts: Music (8GB)
Weight: 39-47g

Reasons to buy

+
All-systems GNSS/ dual-frequency GPS
+
12-day battery life
+
Gorgeous AMOLED display in two sizes
+
HRM, SpO2, NFC
+
Robust Forerunner fitness suite

Reasons to avoid

-
Basically no smartwatch features
-
Fairly expensive and heavy

During our tests, the Garmin Forerunner 265 won the title of the best running watch. However, it's not what you'd call a smartwatch, as is the custom. The watch has a gorgeous display and music storage apps, like our top pick, the Venu 3. Unfortunately, the watch doesn't have a speaker or mic, and the plastic on the case (not aluminum) is on the plain side for the same price.

Despite that, we're cramming in a second Garmin watch on our best fitness watch list simply because no other pick on this list gives runners, cyclists, or swimmers the precise coaching and post-workout body examination that the Forerunner 265 offers. Compared to the other great Garmin Forerunner models available, it's the rare model with an AMOLED that's readable for notifications instead of the low-res, non-touch MIP displays most Garmin watches use.

Our Garmin Forerunner 265 review goes in-depth on the laundry list of features you get to help you before, during, and after a run. Where most lifestyle watches tell you to hit your daily targets without any context, the Forerunner 265 tracks your current tiredness and training load during the last week to show you your present training readiness and adjust your automated daily proposed workout — or tell you not to work out at all — based on that capacity. After your run ends, you'll see how your aerobic and anaerobic fitness has improved, with a suggestion of how long to wait before your next run.

If that sounds like a lot, believe it or not, I'm just scratching the surface! Unless you want to upgrade to the Forerunner 965 for full-color maps and real-time stamina tracking. The Forerunner 265 offers the best fitness watch experience possible. While it lacks the speaker and mic of the Venu 3, it has a more tailored feature set.

You can also try the much cheaper Forerunner 165, which has the same GPS/HR accuracy as the 265, for $200 less. However, it omits some key data points we love, like training load and status.

Best for beginners

Amazfit GTR Mini smartwatch worn on a wrist, showcasing the UI.

(Image credit: Namerah Saud Fatmi / Android Central)
Best affordable fitness watch for beginners

Specifications

Display: 1.28-inch (416x416) AMOLED touch
Materials: Plastic case, steel bezel
Display: 5ATM, tempered glass
Tracking: GPS only
Sensors: HR, SpO2, accelerometer, ambient light, geomagnetic
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2
Smarts: PAI score, Zepp apps
Weight: 36.2g

Reasons to buy

+
Onboard 5-system GPS
+
Continuous HRM, SpO2, stress
+
Automatic workout detection
+
Bright AMOLED display
+
14-day/ 25-hour battery life

Reasons to avoid

-
Lacks third-party apps
-
No mic, speaker, NFC
-
No altimeter

For some, buying a smartwatch for the first time can be overwhelming, given the options and pro-level price tags. Not to fear, though. Since various fitness options create their watches with beginners in mind, you may not need a watch with every fancy feature. That's where the Amazfit GTR Mini comes in, which costs significantly less than every other pick on our list.

Even though Zepp OS is limited, it's very easy to use and understand, and its simplicity helps the watch last for two weeks per charge (or one with heavy use). While "120 sports modes" encompass the full range of exercises and sports, the GTR Mini can automatically detect seven core sports modes: running, cycling, walking, indoor walking, treadmill, rowing machine, and elliptical.

Our Amazfit GTR Mini reviewer praised the watch's capabilities and beautiful AMOLED display. Its 326ppi matches many of the other picks on this list, and its 36g weight (with strap) makes it much more comfortable for daily wear and sleep tracking.

You can upgrade to the Amazfit T-Rex Ultra or Amazfit Cheetah Pro for higher-quality fitness tools, including the Zepp Coach AI to guide your fitness routine. The Cheetah Pro has a mic and speaker for Bluetooth calling and the Alexa assistant, making it a decent smartwatch option. However, these pricier watches have stiff competition in the $300–$400 range; if you want the essentials in a more affordable package, the GTR Mini stands alone.

Best for iPhone users

A hiking activity on the Apple Watch Ultra 2

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)
Honorable mention: Best fitness smartwatch for iPhone users

Specifications

Display: 1.92-inch (502x410) AMOLED touch
Materials: Titanium
Protection: IP6X, WR100, EN13319, MIL-STD 810H, Sapphire crystal
Tracking: Dual-frequency GPS
Sensors: HR, SpO2, ECG, skin/water temp, depth gauge, accelerometer, altimeter, ambient light, compass, gyroscope
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi 4, UWB, NFC, LTE
Smarts: Storage (64GB), watchOS 10 apps, Bluetooth calling, Siri,
Weight: 61.4g (w/out strap)

Reasons to buy

+
1.9-inch, 3,000-nit display
+
Military-grade protection and premium materials
+
Double battery life of most smartwatches
+
Dual-frequency GPS tracking
+
HRM, SpO2, ECG, temperature, LTE, UWB

Reasons to avoid

-
Absurdly expensive
-
Too heavy, bulky for some

As an Android-focused site, we don't typically focus as much on Apple devices that our readers can't use. However, we reviewed the Apple Watch Ultra 2 to see how the other side handles health and fitness tech. We came away very impressed — as you'd expect, with such a high price tag!

On the hardware side, it has a titanium case, sapphire glass display with 3,000 nits of brightness, MIL-STD-810H protection, 10ATM water resistance with protection for "high-speed water sports" and diving, a rotating crown and two buttons for tactile feedback during workouts, and a ton of health sensors for an in-depth look at your health. It can last 12 hours with GPS tracking, 36 hours with regular use, and 60 hours with the low-power setting.

As for software, the last two updates (watchOS 9 and 10) added lots of valid fitness-tracking data and watch faces. During runs, you can see your heart rate activity zones, elevation, running power, stride length, vertical oscillation, and more on your wrist. At the same time, cyclists can connect to Bluetooth accessories for cadence or power metrics. You can also count on cellular waypoints added to the Copass app to retrace your steps to call or send a text. You can also make emergency calls.

In practice, it does very well for heart rate, GPS, and elevation accuracy compared to other brands like Garmin. However, Apple doesn't offer daily workout recommendations (beyond what's officially available through Fitness+), a daily readiness score, or recovery recommendations; plus, its SpO2 sensor was disabled due to legal issues. So we've kept it low on this list but still recommend it over the more generic Series 9.

How to choose

The ultimate fitness smartwatch has numerous sporting and workout modes that you can apply to the real world, such as comprehensive health and workout tracking functionalities. It provides valuable feedback and analytics from which you can benefit. It is important to get a wearable with a heart rate monitor and as many other sensors as you need for health, sleep, and stress tracking.

It would be great if it had Google Wallater, but it's not essential when choosing your next watch. Your smartwatch needs to be a portable health and fitness trainer for your fitness needs. The best fitness smartwatch will help you on your journey, aid your workouts, and track your progress.

The Garmin Venu 3 is the best fitness watch for most athletes. You have a little of everything, including an attractive design, solid fitness features, and a few extra smartwatch perks. But it sits closer to the fitness side than the "smart" side, even with its mic/speaker and music storage. A Galaxy or Apple Watch will serve you better if you need fitness tools but don't want to make them the focus of your watch.

On the other hand, if fitness is your number one priority, you'll want to turn to Garmin, Fitbit, Polar, or another fitness-focused brand. These watches may not have superfluous battery-draining apps. Still, they'll actively guide your training with recommendations for today's workout and subsequent recovery time. In contrast, a lifestyle watch will tell you to close your rings every day with little other guidance.

Your preferences are your own, but whichever way you lean, these picks should guide you toward a healthier body or your next PR.

Michael L Hicks
Senior Editor, Wearables & AR/VR

Michael is Android Central's resident expert on wearables and fitness. Before joining Android Central, he freelanced for years at Techradar, Wareable, Windows Central, and Digital Trends. Channeling his love of running, he established himself as an expert on fitness watches, testing and reviewing models from Garmin, Fitbit, Samsung, Apple, COROS, Polar, Amazfit, Suunto, and more.

With contributions from