Garmin Fenix 6

The Garmin Fenix 6 is the latest series of top-end fitness trackers from the iconic sports watch and GPS brand. It aims to offer serious athletes a nigh indestructible multisport tracker that’ll survive everything from aquatic adventures to a Tough Mudder challenge.

It’s not a huge upgrade on the Garmin Fenix 5, which won our hearts last year. But the subtle changes made by Garmin have resulted in a stellar fitness tracker that’s ideal for any serious athlete.

The only downside is that with pricing starting at £529.99, it’s pretty darned expensive, even by Apple Watch 5 standards. Its strong focus on durability and functionality also means it won’t appeal to less serious athletes or fashion-conscious buyers.

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Garmin Fenix 6 design – It’s not going to win over the fashion press

Garmin’s always made solid, reliable, but slightly dull-looking fitness trackers that unashamedly prioritise function over form. Because of this, it’s made some of the highest scoring, most accurate trackers we’ve ever tested at Trusted Towers. The Fenix line is the epitome of this and that trend continues with the Fenix 6.

The Fenix 6 is available in a variety of configurations and finishes. You can choose from 42mm, 47mm (tested) and 51mm options, as well as additional features such as local storage and Wi-Fi connectivity. You can also opt for sapphire glass (tested) and solar charging, which lets you extend the battery life using a nifty solar charger.

The design looks pretty much identical to the older Fenix 5 family at first. You get the same rugged, bare-bones, circular watch face with industrial screws around the bezel, and an identical control system, which lets you navigate menus, start and stop workouts, and adjust the Fenix 6’s settings using five physical buttons located on the sides. Once again there’s no touch functionality. It also carries the same 10 ATM water resistance that’ll let you take it to depths of up to 100 meters.

Garmin Fenix 6 flat

But up close you’ll notice a few changes. For starters, Garmin’s loaded it with a larger 1.3-inch, 260 x 260 resolution, MIP screen. This is a marked step up from the Fenix 5’s 1.2-inch, 240 x 240 resolution display. It’s also managed to shed 7g from the watch’s weight.

Both these changes sound small but they make a huge difference. The Fenix 5 Plus was great, but it was slightly heavy and the minor drop in weight makes the watch feel a lot less of a hindrance during key workouts where minor wrist movements are super-important, such as climbing and swimming.

The larger screen also made it way easier to take advantage of the Fenix 6’s nifty new widgets system. Widgets aren’t a new thing in tech, but the reworked software on the Fenix 6 makes great use of them. The screen now lets you pick and order a variety of different widgets for everything from step count to your recovery time and incoming notifications. The system is far more elegant than the Fenix 5’s, which only lets you see one metric per menu screen, and makes it much easier to get a quick view of all the info you want in one easy-to-digest bite.

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Garmin Fenix 6 tracking – The best in the business

This is doubly good as Garmin’s also managed to improve the Fenix 6’s multisport and general fitness tracking features – a serious achievement considering the Fenix 5 was already best in class.

The biggest updates relate to its heart rate and location/distance tracking. Garmin’s tweaked the Fenix 6’s heart rate sensor to work under water. This is a key change that will be a boon for swimmers, sailors and divers, as you would previously have had to invest in a separate HRM strap to get the data on the older Fenix 5 family.

Testing the feature in a local pool after a quick 5km I found the heart rate monitoring worked well, with it offering no serious discrepancies between workouts. Though, as ever, a decent HRM strap will offer more accurate heart rate monitoring than any wrist-based solution.

Fenix watches’ location tracking has always been excellent, offering GPS, Glonass and Galileo support, and the Fenix 6’s is the best I’ve seen on a wearable. Most of the time it took seconds for the GPS Connected alert to pop up when I clicked to start an activity. The distance tracking and ability to store maps locally on the watch, which has 32GB of memory, is another key selling point that made the Fenix 6 great for countryside hikes.

Activity tracking options are also as diverse as ever and offer wonderful after-care metrics and all the data most athletes will need. You can track everything from outdoor runs to kayaking trips and snowboarding sessions on the Fenix 6. Testing the watch on a park run I know is roughly 5.3km, I didn’t notice any issues with distance or location tracking. The figures I detected on the Fenix 6 and Fenix 5 I tested it against were always uniform.

Training to break the 20-minute 5km barrier, I also found its PacePro feature super-useful. PacePro is a training service that analyses your run route, checking things like elevation changes, to offer a recommended pace, and alerts you when you start to deviate from it.
The watch also presents great data on your performance, detailing things like your average pace, intensity minutes, oxygen saturation and estimated VO2 max. It also gives you a recommended rest period, which I found super-useful and helped me avoid overstraining myself.

Tracking isn’t the only area to get a minor upgrade. The Garmin Fenix 6’s application and smartwatch functionality is still very limited. But Garmin’s managed to finally get Spotify support onto it, which is great if, like me, you like to run with a soundtrack but don’t fancy lugging your phone along for the ride.

The only minor annoyance is that its NFC Garmin Pay service still doesn’t work in the UK.

Garmin Fenix 6 battery – It’ll last forever and a day

Battery life is another key selling point for the Fenix 6 that cements its place as one of the best fitness trackers money can buy at the moment – possibly the best.

Garmin states the watch offers an average of 14 days battery life from one charge. Tracking obviously puts a bigger drain on the battery, with Garmin quoting it as offering 36hrs with GPS on and 10 days with music and GPS.

Using the Garmin Fenix 6 as my main sports watch I found the quoted battery life generally rang true, easily lasting 10-12 days with average use. This entailed tracking my morning 30-minute workout, two 5km runs and general use as my primary timepiece/smartwatch throughout the day.

This means it can easily last throughout even the most extreme marathon from a single charge and is a marked step up on many competing tracker watches, like the Apple Watch 5. If you need some more juice, Garmin’s also added a few nifty software features to help you extend the Fenix 6’s life. These include a battery-saver mode that shuts down all power draining features like GPS, notifications, music and heart rate monitoring, to extend the battery to up to 48 days. Expedition mode also makes a return. This is a custom mode that keeps the GPS functionality working but turns off all other non-vital features. It extends the battery to a quoted 28 days.

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Garmin Fenix 6 worn

Should I buy the Garmin Fenix 6?

If you’re a hardcore athlete looking for the best of the best, the Fenix 6 is one of the best fitness trackers on the market – possibly the best. It features a near indestructible design with all the sensors and location tracking features you’ll need to take your workout to the next level.

But, if you’re a casual gym goer or runner looking at the Garmin Fenix 6 as an Apple Watch 5 rival, you’re definitely barking up the wrong tree. Though it has some smartwatch functionality it is firmly a hardcore fitness tracker first.

If you just plan on doing the occasional 5km or want to track your steps and heart rate there are also cheaper options available from Fitbit and Garmin, which has a cheaper Vivo line of trackers.

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