The best Garmin watch 2024: Multisport watches for every outdoor pursuit

Garmin Venu 2 and Forerunner 265 on TechRadar background
(Image credit: Future)

The best Garmin watches on the market will give you unrivaled health and fitness tracking for sports and exercise. Whether you are blazing a trail in the wilderness, playing football, swimming, running, or sleeping, a good Garmin will offer you insight to improve your overall fitness and well-being.

Often more specialized than some all-rounders, Garmins excel when it comes to running and cycling, but are handy in pretty much every other discipline too.

Garmin has recently started adopting higher-tech features to compete with the Apple Watch Ultra, notably new OLED displays in the Forerunner 965 and its Marq range, as well as the new Fenix 8 for 2024.

There are plenty of Garmin watches to choose from, including cheap options and more specialized products that feature in our best running watches guide. You can even grab yourself an extra saving with Garmin promo codes.

So whether you want an all-singing, all-dancing fitness tracker for a triathlon, or a cheap fitness buddy for your couch to 5K, Garmin's got you covered. Here are our top picks for the best Garmin watch in 2024.

Written by
Matt Evans
Written by
Matt Evans

Matt is TechRadar's Fitness, Wellbeing 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 many of the watches below.

The quick list

Want to get straight to the best Garmin watch for your needs? Use our quick round-up below to immediately find a GPS watch that suits you – and you can read more about it by jumping to our full write-ups and explanations using the links.

The best Garmin watch overall

Garmin Venu 3

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin watch overall

Specifications

Screen size: 1.4-inch AMOLED
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: Up to 11 hours with music, 26 hours without
Battery life on standby: Up to 14 days
Onboard storage: 200 hours activity data, 650 songs
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: No

Reasons to buy

+
Stunning AMOLED display
+
Wheelchair user tracking
+
Speaker and mic built-in
+
Intuitive health guidance

Reasons to avoid

-
Priced high
-
Lacks some premium training features

The Garmin Venu 3 is the best in this generation of smartwatch and sport watch blend. You still have all the GPS and GLONASS tracking smarts Garmin is famous for, combined with running, cycling, swimming and more sports options. Yet this also tracks lifestyle well with sleep, stress and the ability to link with third-party gym equipment. It'll even let you see who's at your Ring doorbell with an image preview on the super clear AMOLED screen.

On the smartwatch front, there's offline Spotify allowing you to sync all your tracks to listen directly on bluetooth headphones, no smartphone required. You can view your day's schedule at a glance, check your heart rate, water intake and stress level, log period symptoms, receive smartphone notifications, reply, and more.

This is all made possible by the super high-resolution 1.4-inch AMOLED display, with three brightness settings and an optional always-on mode that allows you to see a huge amount of data at a glance, without digging out your phone.

This third gen model also features a microphone and speaker allowing you to take calls from a connected smartphone. Also useful for audio guided meditations and yoga classes that are stored onboard for use without a smartphone.

Read our full Garmin Venu 3 review

The best cheap Garmin watch

Garmin Vivoactive 5

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin for users on a budget

Specifications

Screen size: 42.2 x 42.2 mm
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: 21 hours
Battery life on standby: 11 days
Onboard storage: 4GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Upgraded AMOLED display
+
On-watch music streaming
+
Powerful health and sports tracking options

Reasons to avoid

-
Minimal buttons
-
No barometric altimeter
-
No Training Readiness

If you don't need a fully-fledged running watch like the Forerunner 265, but still want to get as much data as possible on your health and fitness, the Vivoactive 5 is the Garmin watch for you. It's super small and lightweight, and just shy of 12mm thick, but contains 30 workout profiles, impressive swimming and golf tracking, and still provides an impressive stream of stats for you to pore over.

In our tests, we found its GPS accuracy comparable to its bigger, beefier sibling, the Garmin Forerunner 965, and the designers have done a truly impressive job of cramming in a wealth of data with the modular layout without things ever looking cramped.

Sure, it's not quite as premiun-feeling or as functional for dedicated triathletes as a Forerunner, but it's extremely practical. It compares favorably to Fitbit, and unlike the Google brand, there are no features hidden behind a paywall. Everything in the Garmin Connect app is free to access, with no need to subscribe to a premium service to get deep insights into historic data and trends.

Read our full Garmin Vivoactive 5 review

The best premium Garmin Watch

Garmin Fenix 8 AMOLED watch on wrist

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
The best premium Garmin watch

Specifications

Screen size: 1.4-inch diameter AMOLED
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: Up to 47 hours
Battery life on standby: Up to 16 days
Onboard storage: Up to 32GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Advanced GPS
+
New heart rate sensor
+
Garmin’s trademark modularity

Reasons to avoid

-
Expensive
-
Bulky

The Garmin Fenix 8 was one of the most hotly-anticipated launches from the company in years, and it certainly lives up to the billing. Iterating on the Fenix 7, historically one of Garmin's best offerings, the Fenix 8 features brilliant hardware including an AMOLED display, speaker and microphone for calls, an LED torch.

There's new waterproofing and you can even use the Fenix 8 as a dive watch a-la 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 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

The best outdoor Garmin watch

Garmin Instinct Crossover on a run

(Image credit: Matt Evans)
The best Garmin watch for outdoor sports

Specifications

Screen size: 0.79 x 0.79-inch or 0.9 x 0.9-inch
Touchscreen: No
Battery life using GPS: Up to 48 hours (Instinct 2 Solar)
Battery life on standby: Indefinite (Instinct 2 Solar)
Onboard storage: Up to 32MB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Choice of sizes
+
Slimmer, but still tough
+
Advanced training tools
+
Excellent GPS tracking
+
Extra long battery life

Reasons to avoid

-
Doesn't display maps well

We were big fans of the original Garmin Instinct, but it was always a very functional looking watch – chunky and stoic. The Instinct 2 keeps all the features of its predecessor (including a shockproof fiber-reinforced resin case and exceptional battery life) and tucks it all into a slimmer package that's now available in two sizes: 45mm or 40mm for smaller wrists.

It's a full multi-sports watch, with carefully designed tracking modes for a wide range of activities, and runners, cyclists and swimmers are particularly well served. You get the advanced training tools you'd expect from a modern Garmin watch, including workout suggestions, recovery time guidance, and load monitoring so you can strike the right balance between effort and rest

The standard Instinct 2 offers impressive battery life, but While the first-gen Instinct Solar could hypothetically keep running indefinitely on a single charge, the company says that it's now a practical possibility if you spend enough time outdoors. We were certainly impressed by its performance in our tests; even with regular workouts, the power meter barely budged when we got enough sun.

The only downside is the fact that its monochrome memory-in-pixel display isn't great for maps, and you'll get far less detail than you would with a watch like the Fenix 7 or Epix (Gen 2). The Instinct 2's mid-range price makes it very tempting though, and it comes highly recommended. If you want a cheaper version, the Garmin Instinct Solar, a version of the original watch, can be bought for a lot less than the updated model.

Read our full Garmin Instinct 2 review

The most advanced Garmin watch for athletes

best Garmin watch Garmin Enduro 2

(Image credit: Matt Evans)
The most advanced Garmin outdoor watch

Specifications

Screen size: 1.4-inch diameter
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: Up to 150 hours
Onboard storage: Up to 32GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Premium build
+
Epic battery life
+
Topographical maps
+
New route guidance functionality
+
Bright flashlight

Reasons to avoid

-
Heavier and bigger than most smartwatches
-
The price might be hard to justify for more casual users

The Garmin Enduro 2 is a big beast, and it's not for people who just regularly train, even if they might run one marathon a year. If you're going to spend this amount of money on an outdoor watch ($1,099.99 / £929.99 / AU$1,749) you're most likely a triathlete, long-distance or an ultrarunner.

For serious athletes with money to burn, the Garmin Enduro 2 is perfect. It comes laden with an impressive amount of features. It's got outstanding battery life for one thing, even in battery-sucking GPS mode while viewing full-color topographical maps on the big AMOLED screen.

It has tons of premium features: Training Readiness score we've mentioned, but one standout is NextFork which alerts you to upcoming splits in the trial, and grade-adjusted pace, which tells you how your gradient pace (i.e. hill climbing) translates to running on a flat surface, to give you some standardized fitness information. Automatic rest time calculates the time you spend at race aid stations. Plus, all the usual features from pretty much all the other Garmin watches released before it.

For it's price, it's hard to justify for casual exercisers. But as a performance tool for ultra-competitors, the Enduro 2 is perfect.

Read our full Garmin Enduro 2 review

The best Garmin watch for runners

Garmin Forerunner 265S on wrist

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin watch for most runners

Specifications

Screen size: 1.3-inch diameter
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: 25 hours
Battery life on standby: 13 days
Onboard storage: 8GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
First small Forerunner with a touchscreen
+
Bright, crisp AMOLED visuals
+
Small and pretty
+
Run button easier to use with gloves

Reasons to avoid

-
More expensive than 255 & 255S
-
Screen boost means (slightly) worse battery life

The Garmin Forerunner 265 was released as an update to the 255 series, which was less than a year old. The fact it's a fairly iterative update, changing too little about its predecessor, and it loses some battery (no doubt rerouted into power for that new AMOLED screen) is the only thing stopping it from getting our elusive five stars. It's the reason the 265 has supplanted our previous best watch for runners, the Forerunner 955 from our list.

It's an excellent running watch by any metric, and would do well on the wrist of any runner. It packs a lot of features into a compact package, with an impressive range of workout modes, dedicated feedback on your training load including the new Training Readiness score feature, which debuted on the 955. Onboard storage comes as standard, so you can download music onto your phone or just use it to control Spotify.

If you're primarily a runner and are looking to upgrade your entry-level watch to something more advanced, the 265 is well worth your consideration. Even if you're a regular marathon runner, this will see you right. It's lightweight and unobtrusive enough for everyday wear and is tough enough to shrug off rough treatment. With a gorgeous new screen, it'll stand up to modern conventional smartwatches too, and won't look out of place in the office.

Read our full Garmin Forerunner 265 review

The best hybrid Garmin watch

Garmin Instnct Crossover Apple Watch Ultra

(Image credit: Matt Evans)
The best hybrid outdoor sports watch

Specifications

Screen size: 0.9-inch diameter
Touchscreen: No
Battery life using GPS: Up to 25 hours
Battery life on standby: Up to 71 days
Onboard storage: Up to 64MB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Analog hands!
+
New GPS chipset with 5 satellite systems
+
Good battery life

Reasons to avoid

-
More expensive than Instinct 2
-
No maps is a miss at price point
-
Hands break up the screen

The Garmin Instinct Crossover is a Garmin smartwatch with all the intelligence of an upgraded Garmin Instinct 2, but with analog hands supported by satellite technology to ensure pinpoint-accurate timekeeping. When you're using the smart aspects, the hands rotate to get out of the way, and the watch connects to satellites when it's time to rotate the hands back to the right time.

It's a fantastic idea and a great mix between a serious outdoorsy analog watch such as G-Shock Mudmaster with satellite and smart tech. The Garmin Instinct 2 the Crossover is based on allows the watch to do things your average G-Shock never could, with recovery metrics such as Garmin's Body Battery ensuring you can get ready for your next race.

It shines on trails with navigational tech such as TracBack, compass, stride length during running, and stroke counting during swimming. Due to its analog hands and sacrifices made to its screen, it doesn't have any topographical maps, which means due to its higher price point, it's tough to recommend if you're looking for a watch to guide you through rough terrain much easier.

However, if you want something more traditional-looking and feeling, which can still offer advanced health and fitness metrics, this is the watch for you. It'll take any knocks you can throw at it and last for weeks, especially if you spring for the solar model.

Read our full Garmin Instinct Crossover review

The best Garmin watch for new runners

Garmin Forerunner 165

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin watch for new and improving runners

Specifications

Screen size: 1.2-inch x 1.2-inch
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: 19 hours
Battery life on standby: 11 days
Onboard storage: 4GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: No

Reasons to buy

+
Retains many previously-premium training features
+
Good-looking AMOLED touchscreen
+
13 days of battery life

Reasons to avoid

-
Not cheap enough to replace the Forerunner 45 or 55
-
Music storage is extra

The Garmin Forerunner 165 is Garmin's new beginner-friendly running watch, and is similar to the 265 and 965 generation of Forerunners in design, sharing the redesigned Run button and lovely AMOLED touchscreen.

Once it's on your wrist, newcomers will discover an array of excellent training tools inside that'll help you monitor your fitness and optimize your training. These include new suggested workouts based on your past activities, which help give your training some structure even if you're not following a dedicated plan, and Garmin's Body Battery functionality. After a workout, you'll also see advice on how long to rest and recover before your next effort.

Garmin's signature GPS accuracy makes it a great entry point for anyone upgrading from a 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

The best Garmin watch for style

Garmin MARQ Athlete (Gen 2)

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin watch for style and practicality

Specifications

Screen size: 1.2-inch diameter
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: 28 hours
Battery life on standby: 16 days
Onboard storage: 32GB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Stunning design and build quality
+
Fantastic AMOLED display
+
Crammed full of training metrics
+
Fast charging

Reasons to avoid

-
Expensive upfront cost for style
-
Slightly smaller screen than Fenix
-
No solar charging

Some Garmin watches are pretty utilitarian in design, but the Garmin MARQ range is designed to look like it wouldn't feel too out of place under a shirt cuff, with an ultra-premium, stylish finish. The MARQ Athlete (gen 2) offers a rotating bezel designed to help you mark target running times, a gorgeous AMOLED screen with sapphire crystal lens, and a grade 5 titanium metal casing.

A stylish, super-premium alternative to the Fenix and Epix models, this is the athletic watch to get if you want to look the business and money is no object. Like the Garmin Instinct Crossover above, it's a good marriage of traditional dive watch and smartwatch. Except instead of a G-Shock hybrid, the Marq is more like a Patek Phillipe.

Read the full Garmin MARQ Athlete (Gen 2) review

The best Garmin Watch for golf

Garmin Approach S42

(Image credit: Future)
The best Garmin watch for golf

Specifications

Screen size: 1.2-inch diameter
Touchscreen: Yes
Battery life using GPS: 20 hours
Battery life on standby: 10 days
Onboard storage: 64MB
Bluetooth connection: Yes
Smartwatch capabilities: Yes
Multisport mode: Yes

Reasons to buy

+
Stunning design and build quality
+
Fantastic AMOLED display
+
Crammed full of training metrics
+
Fast charging

Reasons to avoid

-
Expensive upfront cost for style
-
Slightly smaller screen than Fenix
-
No solar charging

The Garmin Approach S42 was rated our best golf watch overall because it's quite cheap now, and still really good. That's all there is too it.

During our tests, our reviewer did sorely miss the Virtual Caddie feature, but loved a lot of this watch, including 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.

Now it's been lowered in price to £249.99, it strikes an excellent balance between value and function. Definitely the golf watch to get, unless you have the budget for its super-premium alternatives.

Read our full review

How to choose the best Garmin watch for you

When choosing a Garmin watch, there are three key points to consider: what sport are you interested in, what level are you at, and what is your budget?

If you're starting your fitness journey and want a watch that will help improve your habits, that's fantastic – a watch in the Venu line will suit you perfectly. They're pretty small and discrete, making them great for all-day wear, and offer a good range of general fitness tracking tools. If your budget runs to it, the Venu 2 and Venu 2 Plus are our top picks, thanks to their onboard GPS and fantastic displays.

Suppose you're a beginner or intermediate runner. In that case, the Forerunner 165 or 245 will work very nicely for you. If you also enjoy cycling, swimming or both, the Forerunner 265 or 965 are superb triathlon watches that will serve you well. Worried about scuffs and scratches? Take a look at the Instinct 2; it's built like a tank and has incredible battery life.

If you're seriously into your training and want the most profound insights into your health and fitness, the Fenix 7, Epix Gen 2 and their newer Pro variations are excellent choices. The latter is perfect if you want to explore new routes, as its high-res OLED display is brilliant for mapping. It does come at a cost though, and the Fenix 7 (although not cheap) is a more budget-friendly option.

How we test

When testing a Garmin watch, we wear it night and day for at least two weeks so it can build up a full picture of our health and fitness and ensure battery scores live up to specifications. We slept, exercised, and recovered with all the Garmin watches on this list to determine which is best for what purpose. We weighed up the accuracy of their GPS tracking, the responsiveness of their heart rate monitors, and the quality of their training tools. We've even evaluated their battery life, display quality, and overall design.

We enable SpO2 tracking if available and track at least five workouts across those two weeks to give us an idea of how long the watch's battery will last in typical use. If the watch supports app downloads from Garmin Connect, we can also use a battery monitor app to check how quickly it drains.

To test the accuracy of the watch's GPS, we take it for several runs on pre-measured courses and compare the results to similar route-mapping software from our phones and a competitor watch, usually an Apple Watch Ultra. 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.

Latest updates

26/09/24: Added the Garmin Fenix 8 as Best Premium option.

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.

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