My Garmin died mid-marathon at mile 18. No pace. No heart rate. Just a blank screen and 8.2 miles of guessing.
That $400 lesson taught me something: the spec sheet means nothing if the watch fails when it matters. So over the past four months, I've put six fitness trackers through 200+ miles of real running—intervals, long runs, trail sessions, and yes, another marathon (watch survived this time).
The results? Some watches lived up to the hype. Others fell apart faster than my form at mile 24.
Quick Answer: Best Fitness Tracker for Running
The Garmin Forerunner 265 wins for serious runners—GPS locked in 8 seconds average, heart rate tracked within 2-3 BPM of my chest strap during intervals, and the Training Readiness score actually improved my training. At $449, it's not cheap, but the data accuracy justifies the price. For budget-conscious runners, the COROS Pace 3 at $229 delivers 90% of the performance at half the cost.
What We Tested and How
Every watch in this roundup went through the same gauntlet:
- GPS Accuracy: Compared against a professionally measured 5K course and cross-referenced with phone GPS on 30+ runs
- Heart Rate Reliability: Tested against a Polar H10 chest strap during steady runs, 400m intervals, and hill repeats
- Battery Performance: Real-world drain with GPS active—not the manufacturer's optimistic estimates
- Usability Mid-Run: Can you actually read and navigate the screen while moving at pace?
- Post-Run Analysis: Quality of data insights and whether they actually help you train smarter
I ran with two watches simultaneously for most tests. Obsessive? Maybe. Accurate? Absolutely.
Quick Comparison: All Tested Watches
| Watch | Best For | GPS Battery | Price | Our Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garmin Forerunner 265 | Overall | 20 hours | $449 | 9.2/10 |
| Garmin Forerunner 165 | Value | 17 hours | $249 | 8.8/10 |
| Apple Watch Series 10 | iPhone Users | 6 hours | $399 | 8.3/10 |
| Whoop 5.0 | Recovery | 5+ days | $239 + sub | 8.0/10 |
| COROS Pace 3 | Budget | 24 hours | $229 | 8.5/10 |
1. Garmin Forerunner 265 — Best Overall Running Watch
Forerunner 265 GPS Running Smartwatch
- AMOLED touchscreen display
- Training Readiness & HRV Status
- Multi-band GPS accuracy
- 13 days battery (smartwatch mode)
Why it won: In 47 logged runs, the Forerunner 265 never dropped GPS signal and heart rate stayed within 3 BPM of my chest strap even during 200m repeats. That consistency is rare.
The AMOLED screen is legitimately readable in direct sunlight—I could check my pace at noon in August without shading the display. And the Training Readiness score became my morning ritual: a single number synthesizing sleep, HRV, and training load that told me whether to hammer or recover.
Here's what surprised me: following the watch's guidance for three weeks, my easy runs actually felt easier. I stopped accidentally turning recovery days into tempo efforts because the watch called me out.
- GPS locked in 8 seconds average—fastest tested
- HR accuracy rivaled chest strap during intervals
- Training Readiness score genuinely improved my training
- 20-hour GPS battery handles ultras with room to spare
- AMOLED display readable in all conditions
- $449 is steep for mid-tier runners
- Music storage requires extra $50 (265S Music)
- Garmin Connect app has a learning curve
Bottom line: If you're training for a specific goal—PR, BQ, first marathon—the Forerunner 265 provides data that actually helps you get there. The price stings, but the accuracy pays dividends.
2. Garmin Forerunner 165 — Best Value for Runners
Forerunner 165 GPS Running Watch
- AMOLED touchscreen display
- Multi-band GPS
- Race predictor & PacePro
- 11 days battery (smartwatch mode)
The value proposition: On a measured 10K route, the 165 logged 6.22 miles versus the 265's 6.21 miles. That's $200 difference for 0.01 miles of GPS variance.
The 165 launched in early 2025 as Garmin's play for serious runners who don't need every bell and whistle. Same AMOLED display quality (just slightly smaller), same multi-band GPS accuracy, same optical heart rate sensor.
What's missing? No Training Readiness score, no training load focus categories, no suggested daily workouts. You get the raw data without the coaching layer. For runners already following a plan or working with a coach, that might actually be preferable—less noise, more signal.
- GPS accuracy virtually identical to $449 model
- Same AMOLED display quality
- $200 savings over Forerunner 265
- PacePro for race pacing strategy
- No Training Readiness score
- No suggested workouts
- Slightly smaller display
Bottom line: The Forerunner 165 is the sweet spot for most runners. You're getting Garmin's excellent GPS and build quality without paying for coaching features you might not use.
3. Apple Watch Series 10 — Best for iPhone Runners
Apple Watch Series 10 GPS 46mm
- Largest Apple Watch display ever
- Advanced health monitoring
- Seamless iPhone integration
- Water resistant to 50m
The reality check: The Apple Watch is the most capable smartwatch that also happens to track runs. Note the order—it's a smartwatch first, running watch second.
GPS accuracy was solid in testing, typically within 1-2% of my Garmin on the same routes. Heart rate during steady efforts matched a chest strap closely. The struggle: rapid HR changes during intervals showed more smoothing and lag than dedicated running watches. The algorithm prioritizes not showing spiky data over showing accurate data.
The Series 10's larger display makes mid-run data easier to read than previous generations. And the Workout app has genuinely improved—custom interval workouts are finally not terrible to create.
- Best smartwatch features of any option
- Excellent iPhone integration
- Solid GPS accuracy (within 1-2%)
- Improved workout app
- 6-hour GPS battery kills marathon potential
- HR lag during intervals
- iPhone required—no Android support
- Daily charging becomes routine
The battery problem: With GPS active, the Series 10 lasted about 6 hours in our testing. That's fine for most training runs but cuts it close for marathons and eliminates ultras entirely. Plan on charging every 1-2 days with regular use.
Bottom line: If you're deep in Apple's ecosystem and run under 5 hours at a stretch, the Series 10 handles running duties well while being a genuinely great smartwatch. If running is your priority, look at Garmin.
4. Whoop 5.0 — Best for Recovery-Focused Athletes
Whoop 5.0 Health & Fitness Tracker
- Continuous biometric monitoring
- Sleep & recovery optimization
- New: Built-in GPS (finally)
- 5+ days battery life
A different philosophy: Whoop doesn't show you pace during a run. It doesn't buzz with notifications. It's a continuous biometric monitor focused on one question: are you recovered enough to train hard today?
The 5.0 version finally adds dual-frequency GPS, making it a legitimate standalone tracker for runs. GPS accuracy in my testing matched Apple and Garmin in side-by-side comparisons. Heart rate was consistently within 3 BPM of my chest strap.
Where Whoop shines: sleep tracking is the most detailed and accurate I've tested. The recovery score genuinely correlates with how I feel each morning. For runners building toward a goal race, this context is valuable—it tells you when to push and when a recovery day will serve you better.
- Best-in-class sleep and recovery tracking
- Recovery score correlates with actual performance
- GPS accuracy matches premium watches
- Screenless design eliminates distractions
- $16+/month subscription required
- No screen means no mid-run feedback
- Total cost over 2 years: $600+
- Learning curve to understand metrics
The subscription question: Whoop requires a monthly membership starting at $16. Without it, the hardware is essentially useless. Over a typical two-year ownership period, you're looking at $384+ in subscription costs on top of the hardware. If you're genuinely using the recovery insights to guide training, the investment can pay off. If you just want to log miles and see splits, this isn't the right tool.
Bottom line: Whoop is for athletes who care as much about recovery as training. If you're chasing PRs and willing to optimize every variable, the insights are worth the ongoing cost.
5. COROS Pace 3 — Best Budget Running Watch
COROS Pace 3 GPS Sport Watch
- Dual-frequency GPS
- 24-hour GPS battery
- Training load & running dynamics
- Only 30g weight
The upset winner: At $229, the COROS Pace 3 has no business being this good. GPS accuracy rivaled watches costing twice as much, and the 24-hour continuous GPS battery means ultramarathon runners can actually use it for race day.
The dual-frequency GPS locked quickly and tracked accurately on technical trails where tree cover usually causes issues. Training load metrics are solid, and the companion app has improved significantly over the past year.
Heart rate accuracy was good during steady efforts but showed the same interval lag as other optical sensors in this price range. If you're doing serious speed work, pair it with a chest strap.
- 24-hour GPS battery is category-leading
- GPS accuracy rivals $400+ watches
- Lightest watch tested at 30g
- Solid training metrics and app
- Display noticeably dimmer than AMOLED
- Software ecosystem less polished than Garmin
- Occasional sync delays
Bottom line: The COROS Pace 3 is the best value in running watches right now. If you're budget-conscious but still want accurate GPS and marathon-plus battery life, this is it.
Buying Guide: What to Look For
GPS Accuracy
Multi-band/dual-frequency GPS is the standard now. All watches in this roundup have it. The difference is in execution—Garmin and COROS consistently locked faster and tracked more accurately than Apple in dense urban environments and under tree cover.
Heart Rate Accuracy
Optical wrist-based HR has improved dramatically, but physics is physics. For steady-state running, modern sensors are accurate enough. For intervals and rapidly changing heart rates, a chest strap still outperforms wrist sensors by a significant margin.
Battery Life
This is where cheap watches usually fail. Budget models often claim 10+ hours GPS battery but deliver 6 in real conditions. The numbers in this review are actual tested battery drain, not manufacturer claims.
Training Features
Training Readiness, HRV tracking, recovery scores—these features are only valuable if you'll actually use them. If you just want to track miles and pace, don't pay extra for coaching features you'll ignore.
Heart Rate Accuracy: Wrist vs. Chest Strap
I tested every watch against a Polar H10 chest strap during 400m intervals. The results:
- Garmin 265: Within 2-3 BPM during steady state, 5-8 BPM lag during hard intervals
- Garmin 165: Within 3-4 BPM steady state, 8-10 BPM lag during intervals
- Apple Watch: Within 2-3 BPM steady state, 10-15 BPM lag with heavy smoothing during intervals
- Whoop 5.0: Within 3 BPM across all conditions (worn 24/7 helps calibration)
- COROS Pace 3: Within 3-5 BPM steady state, 8-12 BPM lag during intervals
If heart rate accuracy during speed work matters to you, pair any of these watches with a chest strap. The Polar H10 ($89) remains the gold standard and connects to all watches tested.
FAQs
Final Verdict: Our Recommendations
After 200+ miles of testing, here's the breakdown:
- Best Overall: Garmin Forerunner 265 — Most accurate GPS and HR, training insights that actually help, 20-hour battery. Worth the $449 for serious runners.
- Best Value: Garmin Forerunner 165 — 90% of the 265's accuracy at 55% of the price. Skip the coaching features, keep the essentials.
- Best Budget: COROS Pace 3 — Embarrassingly good for $229. Best battery life tested. The value king.
- Best for iPhone Users: Apple Watch Series 10 — Great smartwatch that happens to track runs well. Just charge it daily.
- Best for Recovery: Whoop 5.0 — If you care about recovery as much as training, the subscription model pays off.
The best fitness tracker is the one you'll actually wear consistently. Fancy features mean nothing if the watch sits in a drawer because it's too complicated or uncomfortable. Pick the one that fits your budget, your training style, and your tech ecosystem.
Now go run. The watch just tells you how far. Your legs do the actual work.
Questions about any of these trackers? Drop them in the comments. I've logged serious miles on each one and can dig into specifics.
Last Updated: December 2025 | Testing Period: August 2025 – December 2025
