Most people get good value from a 3–4 year upgrade cycle. Smartwatch improvements tend to be incremental year-to-year — a new chip, a slightly better sensor. The meaningful jumps happen every 2–3 generations. If your watch still gets software updates and the battery holds a day's charge, there's usually no rush.
If a new model has been officially announced, waiting is almost always worth it — you'll either get the new watch, or the current one will drop in price. If the successor is 6+ months away and there's a good deal, buying now is reasonable. Each watch page on Wear Radar gives you an explicit buy/wait verdict.
Yes, if the discount is meaningful (typically 20%+). Outgoing models often drop sharply once a successor is announced. The trade-off is fewer years of software support and missing the new features. For fitness trackers and sports GPS watches, this is often a great deal — the hardware is robust and rarely changes dramatically.
Hardware typically lasts 4–6 years. The practical limit is software support: Apple Watch models receive watchOS updates for around 6 years; Wear OS watches vary more. Battery degradation is the other factor — if a watch no longer lasts a full day after 2–3 years, it's a common reason to upgrade.
Smartwatches (Apple Watch, Samsung Galaxy Watch) focus on notifications, apps, and everyday health tracking with a phone-like experience. Sports GPS watches (Garmin Fenix, COROS Apex) prioritise battery life, built-in GPS, and advanced training metrics for runners, cyclists, and triathletes. Fitness trackers (Fitbit Charge, Xiaomi Smart Band) are slim, affordable, and focused on steps, sleep, and basic heart rate — minimal screen interaction.
Apple Watch only works with iPhone and is the most polished smartwatch experience for iOS users. Android smartwatches (Samsung Galaxy Watch, Google Pixel Watch) work best with Android phones and offer more hardware variety. There is no meaningful cross-platform option — your phone choice should drive your watch choice.
Heart rate tracking during exercise is generally reliable, within a few BPM of a chest strap. SpO2 (blood oxygen) and skin temperature readings are useful for trend-spotting rather than clinical measurement. ECG features on Apple Watch and Samsung are consumer-grade and can flag potential irregularities, but are not substitutes for medical devices. Sleep tracking accuracy varies considerably by brand.
Cellular lets you leave your phone at home and still take calls, stream music, and receive notifications. It's most useful for runners and cyclists who want phone-free workouts. The trade-off is 20–30% higher cost, reduced battery life, and a monthly carrier fee ($5–$15). For most people, Bluetooth-only is the better value.
Black Friday / Cyber Monday (late November) and Amazon Prime Day (July) consistently produce the deepest discounts — often 15–30% off retail. A third window opens in autumn when new Apple Watch and Samsung Galaxy Watch models release, triggering clearance on the prior generation.
Dashed windows represent typical seasonal sale events (Prime Day in July, Black Friday in November, post-holiday clearance in January). These are industry-wide patterns, not device-specific history. Solid windows are based on each watch's own documented deal patterns.
No. Deal windows are based on historical patterns. Actual discounts vary by retailer, region, and year. Use them as a guide when planning your purchase, not as a guarantee.
Some "Check price" links to retailers may be affiliate links. This does not affect our editorial advice — we never recommend a watch based on commission.
Wear Radar is an independent buying-advice site for smartwatches and wearables. We track release cycles, upcoming models, and seasonal deal windows so you always know whether to buy now or wait. We cover devices from Apple, Samsung, Google, Garmin, COROS, Polar, Suunto, Fitbit, Amazfit, and Xiaomi.
Cycle Advice is based on the historical gap between major model releases for each series and how far into the current cycle we are. The further through the cycle, the more we lean toward "wait". Deals Advice is based on documented seasonal promotions and post-launch pricing patterns specific to each watch.
"Announced" predictions are confirmed by the manufacturer. "Rumoured" predictions are based on credible press leaks. "Cycle-based" estimates use historical release intervals — they can be off by several months in either direction.
We update immediately when a new model is officially announced or released, and at the start of major sale seasons. All advice is editorially independent — we are not affiliated with any manufacturer or retailer.
You may email [email protected] with any questions, corrections, or suggestions.