⌚ Elevate your health game with style and stamina!
The Garmin Vívoactive 5 is a sleek, black hybrid GPS smartwatch featuring a vibrant 1.2-inch AMOLED display and up to 11 days of battery life. It offers advanced health monitoring including sleep coaching, stress tracking, and Body Battery energy insights. With over 30 built-in sports apps, wheelchair mode, and adaptive training plans, it supports diverse fitness journeys. Connectivity options include Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and USB, while music storage and phone-free playback enhance your active lifestyle. Water-resistant up to 50 meters, it’s designed for professionals who demand both performance and style.
Color | Black |
Band Color | black |
Style Name | Hybrid |
Item Shape | Round |
Memory Storage Capacity | 4 GB |
Communication Feature | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, USB |
Wireless Compability | Bluetooth |
Wireless Provider | du |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, USB |
Human-Interface Input | Touchscreen, Buttons |
Supported Application | GPS |
Water Resistance Depth | 50 Meters |
Language | Multiple Languages |
Supported Satellite Navigation System | GLONASS, GPS, Galileo |
Metrics Measured | Sleep Duration, Heart Rate, Calories Burned, Step Count, Blood Oxygen, Distance |
Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
Sport Type | Training, Cardio, Exercise & Fitness, Running, Yoga |
Operating System | Android & iOS |
Additional Features | Touchscreen, Bluetooth |
GPS Geotagging Functionality | Built-in GPS |
Item Dimensions | 1.7 x 1.7 x 0.43 inches |
Item Weight | 1.3 Ounces |
Band Width | 20 Millimeters |
Waterproof Rating | IP67 |
Warranty Type | Limited |
Compatible Devices | Smartphone |
Resolution | 390 x 390 |
Display Type | AMOLED |
Screen Size | 1.2 Inches |
Battery Average Life | 11 days |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Polymer |
S**Y
Great watch
I really like that you can turn the heart rate on or off, gps, on or off etc basically turning all emfs so you can wear it without those harmful effects and only turn them on when working out. The battery life works well and long. My husband and I have the same watch and wear it together. Occasionally his will say he ran a little further (for example mine will say I ran 1 mi while his will say .9 or 1.1) I have noticed the longer distances make the accuracy closer to the same. I love that you can customize the brightness and colors. We’ve set our face clock to more warm lighting so that even at night it isn’t too awful bright and yet it’s still visible in the sun. I got the white and love the aesthetic. I also haven’t noticed it yellow or easily discolor. Feels great on and doesn’t rub while running. Doesn’t feel too heavy either. For what you get the price was right. I got mine on sale for about $200.
D**A
Very nice smart watch.
I like it a lot. I'm not sure how accurate the sensors are but it's very useful for notifications and keeping a general track of your fitness. The sleep and rest measurements are often extremely wrong. I got the Google pixel watch 2 also. Neither are accurate enough to take seriously but they give u a general idea of how much physical activity and sleep you get. The notifications and just having a nice looking watch is nice. The battery life of this watch is 4-5x better than the Google pixel watch 2 and that is not an exaggeration. This watch lasts all week with one charge. I'm lucky to get a whole day out of the Google watch. I may have gotten a Google watch with a defective battery too. I'm not sure. I paired this watch with a Google pixel 8 pro.
J**G
The best fitness tracker I've used
I'm coming from an Apple Watch Series 5. I had gotten frustrated with the battery life and sleep tracking and wanted to see if a more fitness-focused watch would be a better fit. I'm not a big runner or someone who does a lot of intense exercise, but I do like to track my exercise and sleep and get nudges to move when I've been sitting down for too long. I also like to get notifications on my wrist without needing to pull out my phone.Compared to the Apple Watch, the first major thing I noticed was this is nowhere close in terms of smarts. I had gotten used to Apple's smooth interface, built in microphone and speaker for voice commands, and often useful apps that can be used without needing to get my phone out. That being said, after a few days I can confidently say that I don't need them. I would argue that Garmin knows what this is and what it is not - it's a fitness device first and foremost, and everything else comes second. And on that basis they nailed it - the fitness tracking has been excellent and noticeably better than the Apple Watch especially in sleep tracking. I also much prefer their approach to goals, which tracks exercise over the course of a week rather than focusing specifically on individual days. Whenever I was sick or had a down day I would feel guilty if I didn't close all of my rings on my Apple Watch, but I don't feel that same pressure with the Garmin. I do miss being able to use voice commands with my watch, but I could have gotten a more expensive Garmin if I really wanted that, and I don't think it's worth it for me.The second thing I noticed: not having to charge your watch every day is a game changer. This was easily my biggest frustration with the Apple Watch since it's marketed as a device you wear 24x7 and yet needs to be charged every day. And considering how long it took to charge my Series 5, this was a major annoyance. I couldn't charge it overnight, because I wanted sleep tracking. I couldn't charge it in the morning, because I like to start off my day with exercise and it doesn't charge fast enough to do it after a workout and before work. And if I charged it in the evening, I would often forget to put it on before bed and miss out on the sleep tracking. The Garmin is a breath of fresh air by comparison - I charge it about once a week, and with my relatively light usage it can probably go close to two. I took a multi day trip recently and I didn't once have to worry about charging my watch, which was a pleasant change.Overall I think this watch is a great fit for a more casual user who isn't running marathons but wants to track fitness and sleep and get some extras like smartphone notifications and see the weather at a glance. If you want something with more smart features and better build quality (i.e. more metal and less plastic), then the Venu might be a better fit. Or they have the Forerunner if you do run marathons. Or a bunch of other models for more specific use cases. But I would highly recommend giving this watch a try if you're looking for the same things that I am.
O**N
I love this thing. Not the least expensive, but probably the best bang for the buck.
I’m someone who really really did not want a watch of any sort, especially not an Apple Watch or anything else that is bloated with unnecessary hardware that needs to be charged every single day. Charging a phone every day is enough of a pain without needing to add any other junk, so no thanks to the useless gimmick-loaded “smart” watches.But I really needed to do fitness tracking because without some sort of gadget I just have zero idea how lazy or not lazy I’ve been lately and whether or not I need to get at least some minimal exercise.And my #1 must have feature is week-long battery charge life. This watch is good enough, even though the battery life might be more like 5 days in some cases if you’re using it for activities a lot where the gps is turned on. But for those not running with the gps every day or constantly tinkering with it a full battery charge seems to last a week. That is, charge it for an hour on Sunday and no need to charge it again until the same time next Sunday. You could get the battery to last longer if you’re willing to shut off absolutely everything that might use more power.I started out with a Garmin vivosmart 5 because I didn’t think I needed anything beyond that, but I have sleep problems and decided I needed better sleep tracking. So I ended up with this one even though I don’t really care about random silly “apps” on a watch.Overall this watch has been excellent. It has a very good UI and the fitness tracking features a quite good. The sleep tracking is decent, but still has its issues that hopefully Garmin will fix with software updates. In particular the “nap tracking” doesn’t seem fully baked yet, and things like laying back in a recliner reading a book or watching TV can get falsely detected as a “nap”. Then there’s no way to delete a false nap on the watch or in the Garmin Connect app.There are still a few minor bugs that some people will run into but they seem to be things that can be fixed with firmware updates and I haven’t run into anything completely feature-breaking.If you feel like messing with it you can also install some “apps” like custom watch face designs or sunset/sunrise times, more detailed weather and such. But even without installing anything the watch does everything needed for health and fitness stuff.Almost all of the apps that come with the device can be uninstalled, so if you don’t need “women’s health tracking” for example then you can just remove that to free up space.Their mobile app is pretty well designed and only awkward in some parts of the configuration.The watch reliably synchronizes as long as you leave the phone app running in the background and I’ve never had any Bluetooth connection failures, lag, or lost pairings.Things that the watch is not good for are things that you’d typically use a phone for like communication, turn by turn navigation, maps, games, and such. But I don’t want a watch to do any of that stuff and I’d rather have it save its battery charge so I don’t have to charge it constantly.So overall, this is “the” watch you want if you want as little nonsense as possible and don’t want to worry about battery charge all the time but still need full health and fitness tracking stuff beyond what the $75-150 models offer. And there are also no subscriptions required.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 days ago
1 month ago