Pros: Still does everything I want it to. Has great battery life still. Pretty accurate for a wrist measure, when measuring heart rate. Also has built in GPS, and even Garmin Pay although I never got it to work. Screen is perfectly visible in sunlight
Cons: Proprietary charger. I’ve had to switch the watch band 2 times.
I am about fan of Garmin and its products, I only wished that they had a program to replace batteries.
I bought a used fenix 5 for 60€ and replaced the battery (14€) myself. 35-40 days per recharge now with bluetooth and heart-rate logging. IMHO extreme value.
This is probably why I won’t go back to them. The fact that, from what I’ve seen, you just get an offer on a discounted refurb in lieu of a battery change. Either that or told to purchase a new one if the battery fails just outside of warranty, which didn’t seem rare for my watch. Given how many iterations there have been of these watches seems by design.
Switching the wristband twice in ten years is normal wear if you don’t have a metallic band.
Even then, the pins need changing every now and then if you use them in salt water.
I have a forerunner 255 for a couple of years and it has been great.
I wish they had wireless charging, but I also appreciate that it is slimmer because they don’t have it.
I would have gotten a nicer one, but holy cow they get expensive.
It does everything I need and even stores music for my runs. (Who am I lying to, it stores music for my walks.)
I have a Garmin BP cuff and I like that I can track my health stats, including sleeping
I’ve had my vivoactive 3 for 6 years and the only problem is the battery. When new it would last a week as a normal watch a solid 12 hours when GPS tracking.
Now its at best 36hrs between charges. About 1hr if i tried to GPS track with it.
When I look up replacement batteries not a single one has a good review.
I wish Garmin would stop advertising their paid services and products several places in the GarminConnect app.



