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Home Cycling

Best triathlon watches: One-stop recording of your race

admin by admin
13.06.2025
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Best triathlon watches: One-stop recording of your race
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The best triathlon watches offer multisport tracking and easy transitions so that you can follow each leg of your races and monitor your training in the water, on the bike and on the run, as well as any cross-training you’re doing.

There’s more and more tech built into triathlon watches and multisport athletes, with accurate GPS tracking augmented with heart rate and pulse oximetry and even ECG measurement.

You’ll often get heart rate variability, sleep quality and other data too, to track your fitness and fatigue levels, with tri-watches and their companion apps advising you when to train and when to rest up.

For triathletes in training, these are fantastic features. The best triathlon watches also track all three legs accurately and you can get seamless transitions, as well as great battery life, even when using GPS.

In this article, we’re going to tell you everything you need to know about the best triathlon watches. We also have guides to the best cycling watches, as well as the best bike computers, if you’re looking for a different device to log your activity.

We reckon the Garmin Forerunner 970 is the best overall, with a huge array of functions in a lightweight, rugged package that’s cheaper than the Garmin Fenix 8, but still has a bright AMOLED display that can be set to be always on.

Read on for our pick of the best watches for triathletes, or head to the bottom of the page for our guide to how to choose the best triathlon watch for your needs.

Quick list: Best triathlon watches

Best for runners

Designed for runners, the Forerunner 970 has much of the functionality of the Fenix 8, but in a lighter-weight package with an AMOLED touchscreen. It still has an impressive battery life of 21 hours with full GPS tracking and all the same health monitoring and coaching as the Fenix 8.

Read more below

Suunto Vertical Titanium on a white backgroundBest for ruggedness

2. Suunto Vertical Titanium

The Suunto Vertical is as robust as it comes, with a sapphire glass screen and rugged case. You can manage the GPS sensitivity to prolong battery life, with up to 280 hours in the lowest power mode and a solar charging option available.

Read more below

Garmin Forerunner 165Best entry-level Garmin

The Garmin Forerunner 165 has a bright AMOLED display and covers many of the functions of Garmin’s higher-spec watches at a more affordable price. With two sizes, the option of music onboard and up to 19 hours of GPS tracking, it’s a great option for triathletes.

Read more below

Coros Apex 2 Pro on a white backgroundBest for affordability

The Coros Apex 2 provides the rich functionality of its premium competitors but at a more affordable price. It will capture up to 60 hours of activity with increased durability and more accurate GPS than the predecessor model.

Read more below

Garmin Fenix 8 on a white backgroundBest for high end features

The Garmin Fenix 8 does it all. Not only will it track all your tri legs, but it will monitor your health 24/7 and provide coaching for your training towards your next event, while Garmin Connect provides loads of analysis. It does all this while offering great battery life.

Read more below

Polar Ignite 3 on a white backgroundBest GPS battery life

Polar’s top-spec smartwatch has a steel bezel and plastic case, offering low weight and durability. It includes a bright AMOLED touchscreen but still offers up to 30 hours of GPS tracking. There’s a titanium version as well, which saves weight over steel.

Read more below

Last updated 13th of June 2025

Checked and updated the products to ensure all the watches recommended in this guide are the best options on the market, up to date and available. New Buy If/Don’t Buy If advice was added to streamline buying advice. Further general updates to formats and images were made to improve the overall feel of the guide.

Best triathlon watches

Best overall

Garmin Forerunner 970

(Image credit: Future)

1. Garmin Forerunner 970

Best triathlon watch overall

Specifications

Battery Life: Up to 26 hours (12 hours with music)

Weight: 56g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Yes

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

AMOLED screen

+

Speaker and microphone on board

+

Includes pulse oximeter (PulseOx)

+

Full wireless connectivity

Buy it if

✅ You want all Garmin’s top-spec features: The Forerunner 970 covers all the tri bases.

✅ You want low weight: The Forerunner watches are lighter than the Fenix series.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want solar charging: It’s one of the few features Garmin doesn’t include.

❌ You want a lower price: The Forerunner 970 is top of Garmin’s Forerunner range with a price to match.

The Forerunner 970 is at the top of Garmin’s Forerunner range and includes an AMOLED screen for a bright display and touchscreen interactivity that makes transitions really easy, with one touch switching between sports. Despite this, it still manages up to 26 hours of all-constellation GPS tracking.

Garmin includes loads of health stats as well, from training readiness scores and suggested workouts to reach your goals, to how well you’ve slept, with built-in HRM and PulseOx providing 24/7 monitoring and HRV analysis.

Also on board are a microphone and speaker for on-the-go comms and a flashlight if you are out at night. You get colour maps with turn-by-turn directions, round-trip routing and PacePro race strategies as well as on-the-fly ClimbPro ascent profiles. You can play tracks from the watch as you train and use Garmin Pay to speed up payments, leaving your cards or cash at home. Garmin Pay is supported by a good number of US banks, although there are a limited number of UK banks signed up.

Best for durability

Suunto Vertical Titanium on a white background

(Image credit: Suunto)

2. Suunto Vertical Titanium

Best triathlon watch for durability

Specifications

Battery Life: 60 hours minimum (steel bezel option), 85 hours (titanium)

Weight: 74g titanium, 86g steel bezel

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Controls for phone playlists

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

Long battery life (280 hours in Ultra setting)

+

Solar charging with titanium bezel model

+

Sapphire crystal glass screen

+

Carbon neutral manufacture

Reasons to avoid

–

Heavy

–

Laggy response times

Buy it if

✅ You want battery life options: Suunto provides lots of ways to extend battery life.

✅ You want a tough screen: Sapphire glass makes the Suunto watch tough.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want less weight and bulk: The Vertical feels weighty compared to alternatives.

❌ You want a fast response: We found the touchscreen a little laggy.

The Suunto Vertical builds on Suunto’s robust, military-grade smartwatch functionality, adding dual-band GNSS tracking and solar charging for the titanium model, which allows it to offer a claimed 85 hours of battery life with full GPS tracking and 280 hours with single-band GPS. The lowest power Tour mode will track your activities for 500 hours between charges, with up to a year of basic functions when supplemented with solar charging.

There’s WiFi, full offline mapping, HRM, weather, a flashlight and all the fitness and health monitoring you’d expect from a premium smartwatch.

The colour touchscreen has increased in size to 1.4 inches and the resolution has increased to 280×280, although the response time isn’t as quick as some competitors. The watch feels quite large as well. Suunto says that its manufacture is 100 percent carbon compensated.

Best entry level Garmin

garmin forerunner 165

(Image credit: Future)

3. Garmin Forerunner 165

Best entry level Garmin device for triathletes

Specifications

Battery Life: 7 hours – 19 hours

Weight: 39g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Optional

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

More affordable than most Garmin watches

+

Available with or without music

+

Touchless payments

Buy it if

✅ You want Garmin features without the price tag: The Forerunner 165 is an affordable option.

✅ You want the option of music: Garmin offers the 165 with or without music.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want lots of storage: Garmin offers just 4GB of memory.

❌ You want all the functionality: Garmin cuts back on features a little to hit the price.

The Forerunner 165 does pretty much everything a triathlete needs, without the bells and whistles, although it does support Garmin Pay and you can choose onboard music.

The display is a colour AMOLED touchscreen with 390 x 390 pixels. You can select which GPS networks to use, which results in tracking for a claimed duration of between 17 hours with all constellations and multi-band GPS for the highest accuracy and 19 hours if you just use single-band GPS GNSS.

The 4GB onboard memory isn’t the largest (the Forerunner 970 boasts 32GB), but it’s adequate to store 500 songs. There are also optical HRM and PulseOx sensors and you get the full suite of Garmin fitness and activity tracking and Garmin Coach functionality.

Best for value

Coros Apex 2 Pro on a white background

(Image credit: Coros)

4. Coros Apex 2 Pro

A great value triathlon watch

Specifications

Battery Life: 66 hours

Weight: 66g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Yes

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

Sapphire glass screen

+

Eight different colours to choose from

+

Long battery life

Buy it if

✅ You want good value: Coros offers a lot of watch for the price tag.

✅ You want colour choice: Eight different colour options to choose from.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want a lower price: The non-Pro version is significantly cheaper.

❌ You want high durability: We didn’t reckon the Coros was the most robust option.

Coros says that it’s upped durability with its second-generation Apex 2 and Apex 2 Pro GPS watches, as well as updating the GPS antenna to dual-band and increasing battery life to a claimed 66 hours of GPS tracking for the Pro model and 40 hours for the standard Apex 2.

Coros says that it’s also improved the accuracy of the optical heart rate sensor. There’s on-board training load and recovery tracking and HRV as well as structured workout building and example training plans to follow. Other useful features include a nutrition alert.

You can save yourself around a third of the price of the Pro by going for the standard version, which has a slightly lower res, smaller touchscreen. Both Apex 2 models sync over WiFi with the Coros app for more analysis.

Best premium option

Garmin Fenix 8 on a white background

(Image credit: Garmin)

5. Garmin Fenix 8

High-end, premium triathlon watch

Specifications

Battery Life: Up to 81 hours (283 hours with solar)

Weight: 73g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Yes

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

Comprehensive fitness and exercise tracking

+

AMOLED or solar charging options

+

Offers three different screen sizes (30.4mm, 33.0mm, and 35.6mm)

Reasons to avoid

–

High price

–

Solar charging doesn’t add a lot of battery life

Buy it if

✅ You want all the bells and whistles: The Fenix 8 is Garmin’s premium smartwatch.

✅ You want a choice of case size: With three size options, you can choose the best size for your wrist.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You live somewhere dull: Solar charging is only efficient in bright sunshine.

❌ You want affordable: At around $1,200 / £1,000, the Fenix 8 is pricey.

This watch has got to be our favourite, and it will be yours too if you can afford it. Tipping the scales at close to $1,100 / £1,000, the Garmin Fenix 8 is the most capable watch on this list, with literally two pages of features to explore. It includes a touchscreen, making it easier to interact with, although this is switched off during exercise, so you won’t change anything unintentionally.

There are AMOLED or solar charging options, while the Fenix E provides a lower-priced option with a stainless steel rather than a titanium bezel and 16GB instead of 32GB memory. The Fenix 8/E range is also available in three face sizes, a range of bezel colours and multiple different strap options, including titanium.

Where the Fenix 8 scores is if you choose one of the lower power consumption GPS modes when Garmin claims that solar charging more than doubles the battery life to as much as 81 hours for AMOLED or 283 hours for the solar version. There’s also an expedition GPS mode that will extend that up to 58 days if you are outdoors for three hours a day somewhere sunny.

Topo maps are included in the Fenix 8, which are maps specifically created for outdoor activities using OpenStreetMap. Of course, this watch comes with excellent GPS and navigation capabilities, as well as onboard music. There is also the PacePro feature, which can give you pace guidance based on your exact terrain.

For long-course triathletes who spend many hours on long training sessions, the Fenix 8 is a great fit. You can easily go all day while using many of the watch’s features – you can’t find that in any competitors. There’s even a flashlight function.

The watch includes all the usual wireless connectivity capabilities, as well as optical heart rate measurement and pulse oximetry. Designed for triathletes looking to take their long rides to the next level, look no further than the Garmin Fenix 8.

Best for battery life

Polar Ignite 3 on a white background

(Image credit: Polar)

6. Polar Ignite 3 Titanium

Great battery life in a premium multisport watch

Specifications

Battery Life: 30 hours (100 hours in power-saving modes)

Weight: 36g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: No (but can control playlist on phone)

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

30-hours GPS battery life

+

Titanium bezel and plastic case save weight 

+

Great UX

Reasons to avoid

–

Gorilla glass lens is only par for this price point

–

Not everyone will love the circular style

Buy it if

✅ You want great battery life: There’s up to 30 hours of GPS tracking on offer.

✅ You want low weight: At 36g, the Ignite 3 is featherweight.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want a more rugged style: The round case looks more dress watch than a sports watch.

❌ You want music onboard: There’s no onboard music storage, although you can control a smartphone playlist.

Designed for experienced and long-course triathletes, the Polar Ignite 3 includes training, nutrition and exercise planning as well as lifestyle metrics and sleep tracking.

The Ignite 3 has a 416 x 416-pixel AMOLED touchscreen and alongside the titanium version, there’s a standard steel bezel option, which will save you some cash.

One feature that you can also find on the Polar Grit X2 and Vantage M3 is the power management feature designed for long-course triathletes and adventurers. Within these settings, users can optimize GPS recording, heart rate sensor readings, and screensaver settings to get the most out of their watch while also saving the battery.

The plastic case and titanium bezel save weight and also improve GPS accuracy, which is excellent overall in the Polar Ignite 3. New watch face interfaces have been added, as well as the ability to control the music being played from an external device. There’s a lot of extra planning and analysis functionality in the Polar Flow app as well.

Best low priced option

Fitbit Charge 6 on a white background

(Image credit: Fitbit)

7. Fitbit Charge 6

Best Fitbit tracker for triathlon

Specifications

Battery Life: 5 hours GPS tracking

Weight: 30g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: No

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

Affordable

+

Sleek and lightweight

+

All-day activity tracking

Reasons to avoid

–

Shortish battery life when using GPS

–

GPS accuracy can be poor

Buy it if

✅ You want a low-priced tracker: The Fitbit does the basics at a low price.

✅ You want a small format: The Fitbit won’t get in your way.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want longer battery life: GPS tracking is only around 5 hours.

❌ You want better GPS accuracy: Fitbit’s isn’t as accurate as the alternatives.

The Fitbit Charge 6 is a lightweight, compact, affordable option to track your activity and, as with other Fitbit devices, it can also follow your fitness 24/7 and monitor your sleep. There’s a bright AMOLED touchscreen that’s easy to read, despite the device’s size. There’s in-built GPS, HRM and PulseOx as well as skin temperature monitoring, Google Maps, Google Wallet, NFC and BLE connectivity.

The Charge 6 is waterproof to 50 metres, so it’s good for the swim, although it’s 5-hour claimed runtime when tracking activities might be a little low for longer events and training.

The design of the GPS antenna does mean that the Fitbit Charge 6 can’t accurately monitor both your position and heart rate at the same time though.

Best for accuracy

Polar Grit X Pro on a white background

(Image credit: Polar)

8. Polar Grit X2 Pro

Most accurate triathlon watch

Specifications

Battery Life: 43 hours

Weight: 79g

Touchscreen: Yes

Music: Yes (controls for phone playlist)

Open-water swimming: Yes

Reasons to buy

+

Fantastic data capabilities

+

Built-in running with power

Reasons to avoid

–

Poor everyday battery life

–

Touchscreen doesn’t respond instantly

Buy it if

✅ You want accurate heart rate tracking: Polar excels if you don’t want to wear a strap all the time.

✅ You want a robust smartwatch: The Grit X2 is as tough as they come.

Don’t buy it if

❌ You want a faster user interface: Polar’s isn’t as good as the alternatives.

❌ You want better non-GPS battery life: At around 10 days, it’s not as good as some alternatives.

Where the Polar Grit X2 Pro shines is in the data. This watch is among the best, with tons of wireless capabilities and super-accurate heart rate tracking. The Grit X2 Pro is built as the name suggests: strong and durable. It’s hard to find a non-titanium watch that can be beaten around as much as this, especially at this price point.

There are loads of data features not limited to just heart rate and GPS. You can also track your recovery and sleep, as well as read into your workout difficulty, all through the Polar Grit X2 Pro. Having both touchscreen and button navigation, you’d expect that this watch is easy to use – but not quite.

The Polar Grit X2 Pro’s UX isn’t the best, especially for a touchscreen smartwatch at this price point. The touchscreen can be slow to respond, which is especially frustrating when you are mid-activity and in need of some quick data or a GPS reroute. The other small downside is the watch’s battery life, which isn’t all bad. The GPS life is actually quite good, listed at 43 hours. But the everyday battery life is only ten days, which is quite low relative to comparable smartwatches. However, it only takes an hour to fully recharge – so once again, it’s not all bad.

Best triathlon watches compared

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Row 0 – Cell 0

Battery life with GPS

Weight

Touchscreen

Onboard music

Garmin Forerunner 970

Up to 26 hours

56g

Yes

Yes

Suunto Vertical Titanium

Up to 85 hours

72g

Yes

No

Garmin Forerunner 165

Up to 19 hours

39g

Yes

Optional

Coros Apex 2 Pro

Up to 60 hours

66g

Yes

Yes

Garmin Fenix 8

Up to 283 hours (Solar)

73g

Yes

Yes

Polar Ignite 3 Titanium

Up to 30 hours

36g

Yes

No

Fitbit Charge 6

Up to 5 hours

30g

Yes

No

Polar Grit X2 Pro

Up to 43 hours

79g

Yes

No

How to choose the best triathlon watch for you

Best watch for triathlon

(Image credit: Garmin)

When it comes to choosing a watch for a triathlon, all you need to know is this: choose a watch that provides everything you are looking for.

1. Battery life

If you are a long-distance triathlete, choose a watch that has a long battery life. If you are a short-course triathlete, choose a watch that has the GPS and wireless capabilities you need, but not necessarily one with a long-lasting battery. Battery life and GPS capabilities are two of the more basic metrics that can help you determine which triathlon watch you need, whereas wireless connectivity is an important feature for most.

2. Training features

If you want a watch to use for training and exploring more than racing, then choose a watch with great GPS capabilities, smart technology, the ability to play music, and emergency alerts. But if you’re a beginner looking to track your training for the very first time, go with a cheaper watch with basic GPS capabilities and without all the extras.

There are a few watches loaded with extra features that – frankly – no one ever uses. If you are one of those select few who love diving into the data weeds, go right ahead. But know that it is going to cost you.

3. Smart watch features

Having a watch that continually measures your heart rate (and maybe some other metrics) throughout the day is a great feature for buyers looking for a watch that covers wellness in addition to athletics. With these features, you can better track your recovery and everyday activities.

4. Price

Overall, there are so many options out there when it comes to triathlon watches. There is also a huge price range that starts at less than $200 and goes to well over a thousand dollars. Think about what you will be using the watch for, and exactly what you need from it. You will be paying a premium for extra features, so make sure you’re going to use them before making your final purchase.

To help you go fast, we’ve also covered the best triathlon shoes for the bike leg and the best triathlon saddles.

Triathlon watches: Frequently asked questions

Which is the best triathlon watch?

The best triathlon watch is the one that fits your needs. For long-distance triathletes, that means a watch with long battery life. Those who like to train with music should choose a triathlon watch that can carry music.

If you want a stylish triathlon watch that you can wear 24/7/365, it’s worth taking a closer look at the pictures to see what you want to be wrapped around your wrist. Some watches for triathlon can be heavy and bulky, particularly for those with thinner wrists, and may feel uncomfortable to sleep in, at least initially, if you want 24/7 fitness metrics.

For the average triathlete, mid-range triathlon watches such as the Garmin Forerunner 165 or Polar Ignite 3 are our favourite options. Those looking for the premium experience can go with a higher-end triathlon watch such as the Garmin Fenix 8, whereas beginners may find that the relatively inexpensive Fitbit Charge 6 fits all their needs.

Are triathlon-specific watches worth it?

For most triathletes, a triathlon-specific watch is almost certainly worth it. What you’ll get is a host of activity and fitness features that cannot be matched by other types of watches.

GPS capability is an area where triathlon-specific watches shine – the accuracy is, again, unmatched. Some watches such as the Garmin Fenix 8 offer super-precise measurements, whereas others like the Fitbit Charge 6 are not as accurate.

Is a touchscreen triathlon watch better than a triathlon watch with buttons?

While touchscreen triathlon watches may seem more intuitive, they are typically not as easy to use as button-operated triathlon watches. There is a learning curve for watches with buttons, but in our experience, it only takes a few days to get used to it.

Button-operated triathlon watches are typically easier to use during training, especially when bouncing around on a run or flying down the road on a bike. A touchscreen may be easier to use on the side of the road, but it requires a bit more precision to hit correctly the first time.

Casual triathletes or fitness fanatics may prefer touchscreen triathlon watches for their ease of use, whereas serious triathletes will prefer a button-operated triathlon watch. You can usually turn off the touchscreen and this may happen automatically when you’re tracking an activity.

How we test the best triathlon watches

Reviewing watches means wearing them 24/7 and testing them out in the wind, rain, heat, and everything in between. Some days we wore the watches in the pool or out on the open water, testing the GPS signal in more settings than one.

In addition to the overall feeling of the watch, we tested as many of its features as we could (without breaking the watch, of course). And when we were all done with our activities, we left the watches turned on until their batteries ran out. Some watches took days and some took weeks.

You can find more details of our approach in our how we test page.

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