Best swimming watch 2025: The best watches for pool & outdoor swims

Garmin Fenix 8
(Image credit: Future)

The best swimming watches are designed to track your workouts in a pool or in open water. They are designed to do this accurately, with GPS to measure your route and speed, and to count your swimming strokes.

Some of the best watches for swimming have specific profiles which give you special metrics like SWOLF, which is a measurement of swimming efficiency. They will also be able to estimate your heart rate while in the water, which is very useful for tracking your workouts more comprehensively.

Some of the best swimming watches are also the best running watches, so they’re perfect for triathlon users. We’ve included several of the best Garmin watches here, as they’re some of the highest-quality sports watches available for triathletes, along with Coros and mainstay smartwatch brand Apple.

The most expensive entries here also contain dive computer functionalities for snorkelers and scuba divers. One watch we’ve not included here is the Garmin Descent Mk 3, a dedicated dive computer, and we’re aiming to add this to the guide very soon.

The Quick List

The best swimming watch overall

Garmin Fenix 8 AMOLED watch on wrist

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
A feature-packed swimming watch perfect for triathletes

Specifications

Waterproof rating: 10ATM
Screen size: 1.4-inch diameter AMOLED
Battery life, GPS: Up to 47 hours
Battery life, smartwatch mode: Up to 16 days
Dive mode: Yes
Multisport: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Heart rate sensor works underwater
+
Excellent swim tracking tools
+
Built-in music player

Reasons to avoid

-
Not very stylish

The Garmin Fenix 8 is our top choice for the best swimming watch overall. From pool swims and snorkeling to open-water adventures and deep-sea dives, this is a watch that can handle all of it, and then some.

Its bright watch face can be seen in the murky depths underwater, it packs a multi-sport triathlon mode for athletes, and safety tools like TracBack to stop you from getting lost. It even has an LED light if you need to attract some attention during a swim. It’s also got better battery life than the Apple Watch Ultra 2, which is next on our list.

There was an issue with the Garmin Fenix 8 and its resistance to cold water: on first release, watches would brick when exposed to cold water under around 7 degrees. However, that’s since been rectified with a software update, and we’re now left with a watch suitable for even the hardiest athletes and adventurers.

Read our full Garmin Fenix 8 review

The best swimming watch for Apple users

Apple Watch Ultra 2 review

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
The best swimming watch for Apple users

Specifications

Waterproof rating: WR100
Screen: 1.9-inch Always-On Retina LTPO2 OLED display
Battery life, GPS: Up to 12 hours
Battery life, smartwatch mode: Up to 36 hours
Dive mode: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Action Button is a great addition
+
Waterproof to 100m
+
New swimming features

Reasons to avoid

-
Expensive 
-
Tracking not accurate

The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is our pick for the best smartwatch overall, but it also compares favorably with specialist training and swimming watches. This is largely thanks to its rugged titanium construction, SWOLF score support (a metric representing strokes per length, or strokes per 25 meters in open water), and dive mode.

Like the Fenix 8, the Apple Watch is a working dive computer, and can be used with the Oceanic+ app to calculate depth, oxygen levels, entry and exit points, decompression, and more. It’ll warn you against diving too deeply or rising too fast, calculating safe diving parameters and displaying them on-watch.

For non-divers, it’s still a great swimming watch for indoor or outdoor swims, with a nice Ocean watch band available as standard and longer battery life than any other Apple Watch, although still nothing to compare with Coros or Garmin. As the best functional smartwatch on the list, it’s the choice to beat for most Apple users.

Read our full Apple Watch Ultra 2 review

The best cheap swimming watch

Coros Pace 3 on wrist

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
The best cheap swimming watch

Specifications

Waterproof rating: 5ATM
Screen: 240 x 240 pixels, always-on LCD
Battery life, GPS: Up to 38 hours
Battery life, smartwatch mode: Up to 24 days
Dive mode: No
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Outstanding value
+
Lots of metrics
+
Terrific battery life

Reasons to avoid

-
Very light and plastic
-
Stripped-back smart features

The Coros Pace 3 is the cheapest watch on this list, and it’s a fantastic tracker for swims. It’s light, crucially, so you’ll barely feel it on the wrist, made from a cheaper polymer than the metal of the more expensive watches. It’ll accurately track strokes for butterfly and front crawl: I personally tested it in the pool and found the Pool Swim mode representative and useful, with the option to set up intervals and drills on the watch.

It’s a great watch for indoor swims, but it’s also a solid tri watch, with accurate heart rate readings (and can be connected to one of our best heart rate monitors for greater accuracy) multisport modes, and fantastic running metrics. It’s top of our best cheap running watch list and outstanding value for money. It may not be a flashy smartwatch, but it's a dependable, low-power training tool with outstanding battery life.

Read our full Coros Pace 3 review

The best swimming watch for beginners

Apple Watch SE 2

(Image credit: Future)

4. Apple Watch SE 2

The best swimming watch for beginners

Specifications

Waterproof rating: WR50
Screen: 40mm or 44mm retina OLED
Battery life, GPS: Up to 6 hours
Battery life, smartwatch mode: Up to 18 hours
Dive mode: No
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Light and comfortable
+
Inexpensive
+
All-rounder smartwatch

Reasons to avoid

-
Not as durable as dedicated swim watches
-
Battery life low

The Apple Watch SE 2 is a cheap smartwatch and a fantastic entry point into the category, and if you’re someone with an iPhone just looking for a training watch to record your pool swims and be a good smartwatch, you can’t go wrong with an Apple Watch SE 2.

During our tests, we found the basic workout app to be all most people will need. It shares the same operating system as its Ultra sibling, so gets the same settings: you’ll still get stroke counts, distances, and SWOLF score estimates. It’s water-resistant despite its much lower price, but won’t sustain as many knocks and can’t be used for scuba diving.

The Apple Watch SE 2 is also a great all-rounder fitness watch, suitable for runs, walks, and all manner of fitness tracking, as well as using Apple Pay, notification functionalities, third-party apps, and all the usual smartwatch malarky. However, its low battery life means it’s unsuitable for multiple GPS workouts, sleep tracking, and by extension workout recovery tracking.

Read our full Apple Watch SE 2 review

The best swimming watch for triathlons

Garmin Forerunner 265

(Image credit: Future)
The best swimming watch for triathlons

Specifications

Waterproof rating: 5ATM
Screen: 416 x 416 px AMOLED Gorilla Glass
Battery life, GPS: Up to 25 hours
Battery life, smartwatch mode: Up to 15 days
Dive mode: No
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Feature-packed dive computer
+
Rated for depths of 100m

Reasons to avoid

-
Extremely expensive
-
Transmitters sold separately

The Garmin Forerunner 265 is a perfect balance between the all-encompassing training tool of the Garmin Fenix 8 and the cheap-and-cheerful Apple Watch SE 2. Slimmer than some other chunky, expensive Garmin fitness watches like the Fenix, it is missing some of the ultra-premium features such as the dive mode, the LED light, and some advanced software features.

However, it retains Garmin’s best-in-class run tracking, the Training Readiness Score and Morning Reports to inform you of your recovery, and advanced swimming metrics, including stroke tracking and different profiles for pool and open-water swimming. Its long-lasting GPS battery life and sporty profile also make it perfect for amateur triathletes.

Its bright AMOLED screen, touchscreen option, and smartwatch functionalities, with notifications, Garmin Pay, and third-party apps via the Connect IQ store, also make it a great day-to-day companion. It's cheaper than the Fenix and Ultra 2, while being more expensive than the budget options on our list. For most serious amateur athletes, the Forerunner 265 fits the bill.

Read our full Garmin Forerunner 265 review

How to choose the best swimming watch for you

When choosing one of the best swimming watches, one of the first things that you’ll need to consider is your budget. How much money have you got to spend? That’ll determine which swimming watch is within your reach and might mean you’ll need to prioritize some features. If you’re looking on the lower end, would you prefer a stripped-back training tool from Coros, or a full smartwatch with lower battery life such as the Apple Watch SE 2?

The other factor to consider is what features you’ll need. If you’re looking for an elite-tier watch for all sorts of endurance exercise or deep-sea diving, you’ll need a watch to support those workouts. If you’re just looking for a watch to measure pool swims, you could save yourself some money and opt for a cheaper watch without the serious diving and triathlon-focused features.

How we test swimming watches

We test swimming watches the same as we test all smartwatches: by putting them on the wrists of exercisers and letting them loose. We drain the battery down, look at GPS and heart rate accuracy, and examine as many features as we can over the course of the review process.

For example, we tested the cold-water properties of the Garmin Fenix 8 by dunking it into a glass of extremely cold water, tested against a Garmin Fenix 7. When possible, we swim with the watches ourselves, but if not, we also send them to swim-focused or dive-focused writers to test after the initial review process is finished.

Matt Evans
Fitness, Wellness, and Wearables Editor

Matt is TechRadar's expert on all things fitness, wellness and wearable tech. A former staffer at Men's Health, he holds a Master's Degree in journalism from Cardiff and has written for brands like Runner's World, Women's Health, Men's Fitness, LiveScience and Fit&Well on everything fitness tech, exercise, nutrition and mental wellbeing.

Matt's a keen runner, ex-kickboxer, not averse to the odd yoga flow, and insists everyone should stretch every morning. When he’s not training or writing about health and fitness, he can be found reading doorstop-thick fantasy books with lots of fictional maps in them.