The best Garmin watches are tailor-made for the outdoors, whether you’re a dedicated triathlete, a regular golfer, a weekend surfer or an all-round fitness enthusiast. They provide information about your heart rate, calories burned, how well you slept, GPS maps of the routes you took during your workout, and much more. They’re well-suited to supporting an active lifestyle, especially if you love to run, cycle or swim.

Unlike other smartwatches from phone brands like Apple, Samsung or Google, Garmin watches are system-agnostic, meaning they’ll work with any smartphone as long as you have the Garmin Connect app. This makes them popular choices, as you’re not tied to any particular ecosystem.

Written byMatt EvansWritten by

Matt Evans

Senior Fitness and Wearables Editor

Matt is TechRadar’s Senior Fitness and Wearables Editor, which means he’s an expert on workouts, smartwatches, and all things fitness tech. Matt’s spent years covering the health and fitness beat, is a regular Garmin user, and has personally tested the watches below.

Garmin Venu 4
Best for most people

The best Garmin Watch for most people

The Garmin Venu 4 tops our list because it does everything so well for both lifestyle and fitness considerations. It’s not the most expensive, but still packs lots of features, and is ideal for fitness enthusiasts looking for an Apple Watch replacement.

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Garmin Forerunner 165
Best cheap Garmin Watch

The best for new runners

If you’re new to exercise and don’t want to splash on Garmin’s top watches, you can get many of the great features and save a bit of cash by going for the Forerunner 165, which still comes with GPS and great training metrics.

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Garmin Fenix 8
Best Premium Garmin Watch

The best Premium Garmin on the market

The Garmin Fenix 8 is a phenomenal bit of premium kit. It’s got a hefty price tag, but that’ll net you an advanced GPS, a new heart rate sensor, 16 days of battery life, dive computer features and more.

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Load the next three products

Garmin instinct 3
Best outdoor watch

The best Garmin watch for outdoor sports

The Garmin Instinct 3 is our top outdoor pick. It’s reasonably priced, offers an updated design, cool colors, a flashlight, and new fitness tools.

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Garmin instinct 3
Best running watch

The best Garmin Watch for runners

The Garmin Forerunner 570 is an amazing watch for people serious about their running. With new Hill and Endurance scores, advanced metrics, and a gorgeous AMOLED screen, it’s perfect regardless of whether you love the tarmac or the trail.

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Garmin Approach S70
Best for golf

The best for golf

A great golf watch, full of features including shot detection and full-color maps of thousands of golf courses worldwide, and offers superb fitness tools too.

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Apple Watch Ultra 3.

Read our full Garmin Venu 4 review

Fitbit to a dedicated sports watch. It’s a bit more expensive than a Fitbit Charge 6, and you have to pay extra for the version with onboard music storage, but you can control music on your phone just fine with either version.

Read our full Garmin Forerunner 165 review

Apple Watch Ultra 2. In fact, it’s rated for diving up to 40 meters, although Garmin reckons it’ll manage way deeper than that.

There’s improved GPS onboard powering a new “dynamic routing” feature that automatically generates directions to take you home when you’re out cycling or running, as well as route alterations if you take a wrong turn. Our stellar review is based on the smashing 47mm version, but there are three total size options 43mm, 47mm, and 51mm. There’s also a Solar version with a MIP display and commensurately huge 48-day battery life.

While it doesn’t deviate too much from historic Fenix designs, it still looks absolutely fantastic and ranks as one of the very best Garmin’s we’ve ever used.

Read our full Garmin Fenix 8 review

Garmin Instinct 3 review

Garmin Forerunner 570 review

best golf watch overall because it’s really, really good. That’s all there is too it.

During our tests, our reviewer loved the extensive new features, including PlaysLike Distance, which looks at contextual information to help the wearer understand both the actual distance and how conditions affect this. It’s got great battery life, an AutoShot mode that makes life easier on the course, and Green View. Green View allows you to position the pin manually using the large color touchscreen, and shows you the green’s contours: essential if you’re planning a birdie and want a, well, a bird’s eye view of the green to better determine your angle of attack.

All Garmin’s usual Garmin Connect smarts are here, so it doubles as a sports watch too. This is the perfect tool for golfers getting active both on and off the course.

Read our full Garmin Approach S70 review

OLED display is brilliant for mapping.

Garmin Descent Mk 3, which we asked a diver to review. This watch wasn’t included in our list above as it’s a niche piece of kit, but it’s an awesome watch that regular divers will love.

Garmin Fenix 8 skiing

(Image credit: Future / Chris Hall)

Polar H10, which is used by amateur and professional athletes alike, and is my benchmark for accuracy.

When I tested the Garmin Venu 4, with the Elevate V5 heart rate sensor, against the H10 chest strap, there was a difference of 5bpm on average between the strap and the watch. When I tested the Garmin Instinct 3, which uses the V4, there was a sizable 18bpm difference on average. The V5 is clearly more accurate, then, so those using watches with the V4 sensor should bear this in mind.

Your readings will be in the right ballpark if you have a watch with a V4 sensor, but those wanting pinpoint-accurate wellness tracking should look at V5-equipped watches.

Apple Watch Ultra, and a chest-mounted heart rate monitor. If it has mapping capability, we create a new route using Garmin Connect, sync it to the watch, and use it to navigate the route.

We’ll test the watch in a variety of situations, from running to indoor cycling, looking at the details of metrics such as heart rate variability and sleep scores. Does the wealth of information available match up to similar watches in its price range? Is the presentation dense or helpful? Check out our how we test section for more details.