After Samsung announced the $649.99 Galaxy Watch Ultra on July 10th, I saw a few posts floating around on Threads. The gist was the same. Each post had two images: on the one side, there was the Apple Watch Ultra, and on the other, the Galaxy Watch Ultra. Hmm, users wondered. Where have we seen this before?
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Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra review: if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em
The $649.99 Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra is a great Android smartwatch, but in copying Apple, it loses some of its Samsung charm.
Itâs harsh, but it was my exact first thought as well. While there are stylistic differences, itâs painfully obvious that Samsung made a list of everything the Apple Watch Ultra had that the Galaxy Watch 5 Pro â Samsungâs first attempt at a more rugged smartwatch â didnât. It then went down the list, ticking off each feature one by one. By and large, that was a successful strategy. This is a great Android smartwatch. Arguably, itâs the best Android smartwatch.
It just doesnât feel good.
More specifically, the Ultraâs successes donât always feel earned. Samsung smartwatches have always had their own unique flair (usually in the form of a physical rotating bezel, which is sadly missing here). Yes, there were some Samsung-y quirks, but it gave the watches character.Â
Some of that quintessential Samsung-ness is still there. But itâs also undeniable that Samsung overhauled its wearable strategy to be the Apple of Android. My nerdy lilâ heart isnât broken over it. But it does sting.
In Appleâs shadow
After wearing the Apple Watch Ultra 2 on one arm and the Galaxy Watch Ultra on the other for the last two weeks, itâs easier to say what they donât have in common. Unlike Appleâs watch, the Galaxy Watch Ultra has a circular face (though itâs set in a squarish case). Thereâs no digital crown. It has FDA-cleared sleep apnea detection, a 3nm processor, and an upgraded 3-in-1 BioActive Sensor, which measures EKGs, body composition analysis, and other heart rate data. (Apple has EKGs and heart rate, but itâs still on a 5nm chip, and Masimoâs lawsuit has thrown a wrench in its sleep apnea efforts.) Naturally, the Galaxy Watch Ultra runs One UI 6 Watch and Wear OS 5 instead of watchOS.Â
Compare that to what they do have in common:
I could go on because there are even more similar features â like backtracking for hikes, racing past routes for runners, and functional threshold power for cyclists â but these are the major ones.Â
Itâs understandable why Samsung has followed this route. The Apple Watch Ultra has been successful in a way that the Galaxy Watch 5 Pro has not. And as much as I hate to say it, I canât say it was a bad idea. All of these additions and upgrades add up to a powerful and capable Android smartwatch. Overall performance is snappy, battery life is good once you finish calibrating (more on that later), and thereâs great synergy if you use it with the new Galaxy Ring. I could end the review right now with âthis is the Apple Watch Ultra for Android,â and youâd probably have a decent understanding of the Galaxy Watch Ultraâs strengths and weaknesses.Â
Itâs just that when Apple does it better, it takes some of the shine from Samsungâs version. For instance, itâs easier to sync a custom hiking route onto Appleâs Ultra via the Maps app than it is to download a .GPX file from a separate app into the Samsung Health app on your phone. Appleâs Ultra has a native depth app and can be used as a dive computer. You can safely take Samsungâs Ultra for a plunge, but there are no equivalent scuba diving capabilities. Programming and using the Action Button is a bit more intuitive than the Quick Button. If I step into a dark closet, the Apple Watch Ultraâs night mode kicks on automatically. Auto night mode on the Galaxy Watch Ultra seems to be based on the actual time.Â
But comparison is the thief of joy. Instead, allow me to gripe about one of the Galaxy Watch Ultraâs more distinct features: its polarizing squircle design.Â
Squaring the circle
In recent years, Samsung watches have been overwhelmingly circular. The official line is that the Ultraâs new squarish case adds durability, though Iâd argue the Pro was plenty durable without it. My working theory is that it allows for a better strap swapping mechanism â just like Appleâs â and that Samsung was purposefully going for visual similarity.Â
But after a few weeks of wear, I wish Samsung had just picked a rectangular display or a circular one instead of splitting the difference. Retaining the circular design wouldâve kept it more visually distinct from Apple and, letâs face it, less ugly. (Though, there is an element of color preference here. I find the white titanium version to be much more fetching than the silver or my Halloween-y review unit. The black case is fine, but the strap is so orange.)
Aside from aesthetic sensibilities, Samsungâs 47mm Ultra is chunkier on the wrist than Appleâs 49mm Ultra. Thatâs because Samsungâs square case looks more squat on the wrist, even if the dimensions are quite similar. It also wasnât quite as comfy for my petite wrists. The gap between the strap and my wrist was so wide, I could stuff exactly three pens or chopsticks into that space. The added chunkiness also made it difficult to find a good fit. Either I strapped the watch on way too tight, leaving marks on my arm, or it was too loose and would slide up and down my wrist.
Battery life and double pinch
The Galaxy Watch Ultra does offer some notable improvements over the Watch 5 Pro. For me, the two most impactful ones were longer battery life and the double pinch gesture.
The Ultra sports a 590mAh battery, which is the same as the Pro. However, software updates between 2022 and 2024 â and a new exercise power-saving mode â help extend the Ultraâs battery life. Battery life depends heavily on individual usage, but in testing, I got roughly 70 hours on a single charge with heavy GPS usage and power-guzzling features like the always-on display enabled. If I enabled power-saving mode once I hit 15 percent battery, I could stretch it to about 76 hours. (Note: Samsung watches take a few charge cycles to calibrate and learn your usage patterns. The first few days, I got a dismal 36â48 hours on a single charge.) I never quite hit Samsungâs 100-hour estimate, but itâs still a marked improvement over the 50â60 hours I got with the Pro.Â
This is true multiday battery life, though it still falls short of other multisport watches for real outdoorsy types. When I tracked a 3.5-hour hike in a remote area with no cell reception, the Galaxy Watch Ultra lost 22 percent battery, whereas my year-old Ultra 2 lost about 34 percent. While you might get away with leaving the charger at home for a one- or two-day trip, but youâre rolling the dice for anything longer.
Double pinch isnât a new feature for Samsung watches â itâs been around for a while. Itâs just more front and center now. Unlike Appleâs version, itâs not contextual, meaning itâs limited to mostly dismissing alerts, accepting calls, and controlling your phoneâs camera. But putting those limitations in place ironically makes it more clear-cut for daily use. There are a few other gestures you can use, which expands your hands-free options. For instance, I programmed the knock knock gesture to open the Camera Controller app and then used double pinch to snap selfies. Thatâs just neat.
Mixed health tracking
Samsung made a big hullabaloo about adding Galaxy AI health features this year in the form of a new Energy Score and Wellness Tips. Thereâs also an upgraded 3-in-1 BioActive Sensor, which brings with it an experimental advanced glycation end products (AGEs) metric to gauge metabolic health. Unfortunately, AI doesnât always know whatâs best for you.
I wrote more about the Energy Score metric in my Galaxy Ring review, but the gist is that itâs broadly accurate with some hit-or-miss AI-generated advice. The same is true for the AI-generated Wellness Tips. For example, the other morning, I got two tips that told me that I both was and wasnât sticking to my sleep schedule.Â
Meanwhile, the AGEs index metric is baffling. While you sleep, the watch measures for bodily compounds that accumulate when âprotein and fat molecules are oxidized by sugar molecules.â Supposedly, that tells you how well youâre metabolically aging, but Samsung has been vague about how this actually works, the value of even having this data, and what youâre supposed to do with it. Youâre graded on a spectrum from low to high â it told me Iâm in the middle. To improve my score, the app advises me to eat healthy, exercise, and prioritize sleep to improve my AGEs index â which Iâm already doing â while other parts of the app tell me to stop working out so hard. Is this a real thing? Maybe in the research field, but in a consumer smartwatch, this is little more than a gimmick.
The new FDA-cleared sleep apnea detection feature is relatively straightforward, but unfortunately, I found it difficult to use. The feature requires you to wear the watch for two nights while you sleep to detect disturbances based on blood oxygen levels. I had a hard time getting valid readings, partly because the Ultraâs size made it hard to get a snug fit. Eventually, I was correctly told I donât have sleep apnea. The caveat is this feature is not a medical diagnostic tool and may not catch every instance of obstructed breathing â so take from that what you will. Like the EKG feature, it also requires you to have a Galaxy phone.
Honestly, the best fitness update was the addition of dual-frequency GPS. Compared to the Galaxy Watch 7, the Ultra was much more accurate at recording the distance of my runs. I hiked a 4.99-mile route with heavy tree cover, and the Ultra recorded a spot-on 4.99 miles, while my Apple Watch Ultra 2 logged a negligible difference of 5.03 miles.Â
If you canât beat âemâ¦
I genuinely like the Galaxy Watch Ultra. This is the most full-featured Android smartwatch you can buy right now. I would wholeheartedly recommend it to Android users who want a longer-lasting smartwatch with a robust selection of third-party apps.Â
However, I fear that in copying Apple so closely, Samsung will eventually stop marching to its own quirky beat. Because itâs not just this watch â the whole Galaxy Watch lineup now mirrors Apple. Thereâs a budget Galaxy Watch FE to match the Apple Watch SE, a Galaxy Watch 7 sits where the Apple Watch Series 9 does, and at the top, thereâs the Galaxy Watch Ultra. Samsungâs signature physical rotating bezel is now limited to last yearâs Galaxy Watch 6 Classic â which wasnât updated this year. Itâs unclear if itâll get a refresh down the road.
This truly was a bittersweet review to write. I canât deny the Galaxy Watch Ultra fills a void for Android users who want a smarter Garmin alternative. (For a reasonable price, too.) I canât fault Samsung for trying something different now that it has a rival in the Pixel Watch. After coasting with last yearâs watches, it had to do something to regain momentum. I just never thought it would do it by making an Apple Watch.Â
Photography by Victoria Song / The Verge