6-day battery on Wear OS: Dual-chip design keeps the main Snapdragon W5 dormant during light tasks, dramatically extending battery life beyond any rival Wear OS watch.
Early in release cycle
Updated July 9, 2026 · 8 picks, ranked
Most "best smartwatch" lists tell you what to buy but not when — and with smartwatches, timing is half the decision. Every major watch here follows a roughly annual release cycle, which means a pick that's excellent in spring can be a bad purchase two weeks before its successor is announced.
This list ranks the current smartwatch generation and pairs every pick with our buy-or-wait radar: where each model sits in its release cycle, and whether you should buy now or hold out for the next version. Rankings update automatically as new models launch and cycles progress.
6-day battery on Wear OS: Dual-chip design keeps the main Snapdragon W5 dormant during light tasks, dramatically extending battery life beyond any rival Wear OS watch.
Early in release cycle
ECG and Garmin Body Battery: The Venu 4 adds on-demand ECG (a first for the Venu line) alongside Garmin's signature Body Battery energy score — combining health monitoring and daily readiness in one watch.
Early in release cycle
Full watchOS at a lower price: Access the entire watchOS app ecosystem, Apple Pay, Siri, and Family Setup — for $150 less than the Series 11.
Early in release cycle
21-day battery with sapphire AMOLED display: 21 days typical use and 33 hours GPS — combined with a scratch-resistant sapphire glass 1.5" AMOLED that outshines most watches at this price.
Reaching maturity, next model expected soon
5-day Wear OS battery — finally: The dual-engine Snapdragon W5 + BES2800 co-processor architecture delivers up to 5 days in Smart Mode — 2–3× longer than most Wear OS rivals. A 10-minute charge provides a full day of use.
First-generation product — no release history to base predictions on
Loss of Pulse Detection: Pixel Watch 4 can detect when your heart stops and automatically call emergency services — a unique safety feature not found on Galaxy Watch or Apple Watch.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
Hypertension detection: The Series 11 is the first mainstream smartwatch to offer FDA-cleared hypertension (high blood pressure) detection — a feature that could flag silent health risks.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
Best-in-class health tracking: ECG, blood pressure, body composition, SpO2, and advanced sleep coaching — all processed on-device with Galaxy AI.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
| Model | Price | Battery | Weight | Water res. | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiaomi Watch | $285 | ~6 d | 56 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Buy now |
| Garmin Venu | $549 | ~12 d | 42 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Buy now |
| Apple Watch SE | $249 | ~0.75 d | 26 g | 50m | ⏰ Buy now |
| Amazfit Balance | $269 | ~21 d | 42 g | 10ATM | ⏰ Caution |
| OnePlus Watch | $329 | ~5 d | 50 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Caution |
| Google Pixel Watch | $349 | ~1.5 d | 31 g | 50m | ⏰ Wait |
| Apple Watch | $399 | ~1 d | 30 g | 50m | ⏰ Wait |
| Samsung Galaxy Watch | $349 | ~1.5 d | 29 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Wait |
Our top-ranked pick below is the strongest overall choice at its current point in the release cycle. If its badge says "Wait", the next model is close — check the pick's device page for the expected launch window before buying.
The one to two months before a brand's annual event: Apple announces watches in September, Samsung in July, Google in August/October. Buying in that window usually means paying full price for a model about to be superseded.
We rank the current generation of each smartwatch line by where it sits in its release cycle (fresher is better), current value against launch price, and each model's standout strengths. Superseded models are excluded — they appear on our device pages as clearance options instead.
Rankings are recomputed from our release-cycle data on every site update. See how we rate.