
The Best Running Watches of 2025
For new runners and seasoned veterans alike, GPS watches are some of the most valuable tools in our toolboxes. While running watches all track basic things like distances, paces, and heart rates, their tech and features have evolved by leaps and bounds over the years, tracking progressively more and more advanced metrics through inclusions like barometric altimeters, training assistance, or even seamless triathlon activity tracking. It's at the point where things have gotten SO advanced that maybe it’s hard to filter through what each watch offers or doesn’t offer. Or what you need, or don’t need, for your own runs personally.
So, at Running Warehouse, we’re here to help. We’ve been in the industry for over 20 years and have taken in, worn, assessed, and sold more than our fair share of watches. Regardless of your skill level, we’re confident that there is a GPS watch that can enhance your training, your recovery, and your race day experiences. Check out our hand-selected (wrist-selected?) best GPS watches below, targeted for each type of runner’s needs, then keep reading to learn how to find the best running GPS watch for you.
Category | Watch |
Best Entry Level GPS Watch | COROS Pace 3 |
Best Mid-Level GPS Watch | COROS Pace Pro |
Best Advanced GPS Watch | Garmin fenix 8 AMOLED |
Best GPS Watch for Multiple Sports | Garmin Forerunner 970 |
Best GPS Watch for Battery Life | Garmin Enduro 3 |
Best Entry Level GPS Watch
COROS Pace 3
The COROS Pace 3 packs a lot of features into an entry-level price point. It has an extended battery life that’s designed for continuous wear, both day and night.
It has sensors upon sensors, starting with the Dual Frequency GPS you need for accurately measuring your runs, but also including an optical heart rate sensor, a blood oxygen measurement sensor, and a barometric altimeter. You can dip into COROS’ available training plans and downloadable workouts, to support everything from your 5k goals to your next Ultra attempt, and the Pace 3 even supports music playback to enhance your workout experience.
It’s got a little bit of everything stuffed into one budget-conscious package, and could serve as a good proving ground for determining which features you use, and want the premier versions of, versus which features you can disregard when/if you eventually begin your ascent to higher price points and the next tiers of GPS watch models.
Best Mid-Level GPS Watch
COROS Pace Pro
With processing speeds up to twice as fast as the standard COROS models, and auto-adjusting brightness, you’ll be able to chart your course to a new PR with fastest-in-its-class levels of confidence. With an extra powerful 345 mAh battery that can last up to 20 days’ worth of daily use, the Pace Pro can work just as long and as hard as you do on the trails.
Speaking of the trails, the COROS Pace Pro is ready to download COROS’ stash of global maps, and can provide turn by turn navigation to ensure that you never get lost again. It’s your race-ready, adventure run-ready, recovery day ready, full-training-routine companion, and when paired with COROS’ simple, smart, personal app, you’ll have all the advice and training tools needed to feel your fastest all the way to the finish line.
Best Advanced GPS Watch
Garmin fenix 8 AMOLED
Want for nothing with the Garmin fenix 8 AMOLED GPS Watch.
This high-powered watch is absolutely stuffed with the features needed to go anywhere and do anything alongside you. Built for resiliency, with thermal and shock resistance, a 40-meter dive rating, leakproof metal buttons, and even a built-in LED light for nighttime visibility—wherever you go, the fenix 8 goes.
It includes navigation tools like a 3-axis compass and altimeter, and health/fitness tracking features like a pulse oximeter, sleep monitoring, and more. With its 32 GB of storage, you can download training plans, TopoActive maps, music, and everything else you need to run, recover, and repeat through your most demanding adventures.
Communication and daily features include a built in speaker and microphone, to enhance your smartphone experience, and voice commands which can be used off-grid. “Start my run.” “Check the weather.” “Pause timer.” Slapping your wrist will be a thing of the past. You can even leave your wallet at home, because the Fenix 8 has Garmin Pay built in for added convenience.
All-in-all, the fenix 8 is our favorite ‘do everything’ option for your wrist, with all the features you could want to enhance, not just your runs, but your everyday life.
Best GPS Watch For Multiple Sports
Garmin Forerunner 970
With a large, clear AMOLED display, adaptive training plans which personalize workouts based on your performance, recovery, and health metrics, and the ability to plan and program multi-sport workouts through Garmin Connect, the Forerunner 970 is ready to push you (or calm you down) every day. It’s a watch that’s chock full of features to help you measure and react to all your most complicated workout regiments.
Hilly course? The 970 has the ability to provide a “Hill Score” that compares your elevation gains, VO2 max, and training history, to see if you took that challenge too hard or just hard enough. It’ll pair with CLIMBPRO to show you the gradients for each section of the climb and, when paired with real world mapping data, can give you live, predictive recommendations to get up that next ascent.
Trying to see how your swim fitness compares to your run fitness before a triathlon? The 970 has you covered, with Triathlon and Multisport profiles automatically created, and transitions recognition to give you all the nuanced feedback you need to fine tune your training.
There’s so much more we could mention here, but the short version is- the Forerunner 970 is the gold standard by which all other multi-sport/triathlon capable watches are judged. If you want the most detailed, most thorough breakdowns of how your body reacts to different intervals, speeds, activities, or anything else, then stop looking. You’ve struck the gold.
Best GPS Watch For Battery Life
Garmin Enduro 3
And finally, if you’re seeking the ultimate endurance gear, and a watch that will just keep ticking and ticking and ticking right alongside you, then we recommend the Garmin Enduro 3. Its endurance focus is in the name and everything. This watch was built specifically with long-lasting performances in mind.
With a battery life of 320 hours in GPS mode with solar charging, you’re encouraged to leave your chargers behind and not think twice about it. Go climb that mountain. Go set out for that ultra. The Enduro 3 promises it will be fine.
It has a lightweight design, to make sure it doesn’t weigh you down, and comes with all the fancy features you’d expect from a Garmin—downloadable topographic maps, Garmin coach, the dynamic round trip routing that you might need to get you back home on time, and multi-band GPS to provide superior positioning and accuracy.
The watch is cutting edge, tech-wise, but most importantly (for this category at least) it’s an long-lasting, efficient beast just like you.
How We Made Our Picks
At Running Warehouse, we’re fortunate to have a stockpile of the best running gear, apparel, and shoes at our fingertips every day. We can get hands-on (or wrists-on) with these products daily, and we make a habit of checking the specs, features, and overall wearability of some of the best watches on the market. With Garmin, COROS, and Suunto as our favorite brands, drawing comparisons is as easy as looking up a bin number.
So, with this much accessibility to the products, we’ve tried to condense our favorite points of comparison down to a few common (and uncommon) things for YOU to look for when deciding which GPS watch is best for you?
How to Choose Your Next Watch
Okay. At this point, we’ve seen the best-of list. We’ve seen the features. Now it’s decision time. So, which running watch is right for you? Step one is to decide what, exactly, you’re looking for a GPS watch.
Entry Level Watches:
Entry level or basic GPS watches start at $200 and are ideal for beginning runners or runners simply looking to record distance and pace without many extra features. These watches typically include:
Feature | Description |
Measure Speed and Distance | Clearly displays how fast and far you are running during your workout |
Clock | "Real World" daily watch display of the time and date |
Workout History | Stores previous workouts so you can access the information after your run. The amount of memory will vary depending on how advanced the watch is. |
Minimum Battery Life | Every GPS watch at Running Warehouse features at least 5 hours of battery life while in GPS mode. |
Rechargeable Battery | Can be recharged via USB or an alternate charger. |
Automated Laps | Automatically marks each lap at a preset distance (usually miles or kilometers), so you don't have to manually mark each lap. |
If you just want something to track your runs, measure your mileage accurately, and then zip the proof along to Strava, then our Entry Level GPS watches will reliably do all that and a bit more. These entry level watches are easy to access and use, but you may find it difficult (or impossible) to track multiple activities at once (i.e. repeat workouts) or to personalize the watch’s functionality.
Mid-Level Watches
As you move into the mid-level offerings, the watches do a good job of emphasizing a few specific features which you might be looking for. If you really need to be able to break up your workouts into separate activities, then something like the COROS APEX 2 Multisport will have you covered. But the mid-level tier is full of trade-offs, and that multi-activity tracking will come at the expense of something else, like, say, expanded battery life. But if you can find the right combination of features you care about, with omissions that you don’t care about, then you could find your next favorite watch in this grouping. We recommend looking through our bulleted list of available features above, to see if any of them are dealbreakers for you, and then we recommend scaling up your investment accordingly.
Mid-level watches cost around $400 and are ideal for intermediate runners or runners looking to gather data from their runs to ensure that they are getting the most from their training. Common functions include:
- Basic GPS functionality (as charted above)
- Additional features such as a built-in accelerometers, downloadable maps, and interval training options
- Longer battery lives
Advanced Watches
So if you want EVERYTHING, then let's talk about the advanced watches. If you go for a watch in the advanced category, then you will get the highest ping rates, and thus, the highest accuracy of measurement for each of your runs. You’ll get multi-sport functionality. You’ll get overwhelmingly generous battery lives thanks to solar powered charging. You’ll even get a built-in flashlight sometimes. These watches go all out to make sure that whatever you need is right there on your wrist. They’re big investments, but they can offer similarly big returns.
Advanced Watches cost around $600 or higher and are ideal for runners looking for in-depth training data for multiple sports. Advanced features include:
- Basic and advanced running GPS watch functionality
- Most or all of the advanced features offered by that brand, and advanced training data when paired with an HRM
- Modes for different activities as well as additional training data for non-running activities
- Longest battery lives
- Triathlon-specific settings like transition timing
Final Step: Enjoy
Buying a running watch is a big investment. But it’s the piece of running gear that’s meant to outlast everything else, from your thousand pack of gels to your favorite pair of shoes. These watches will be your constant companions, your coaches, and potentially even your guide back home when you zig instead of zag in the middle of the woods. As such, it’s important to make sure you’ve got the right tech on your wrist for whatever the roads, trails, lakes, or otherwise that nature has to throw at you. Hopefully this guide helps you find the perfect match for the many miles that lie ahead.
Find all these watches and more at RunningWarehouse.com.


