Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar Review: $600 Fitness Watch Outruns My Apple Watch



Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar Review: $600 Fitness Watch Outruns My Apple Watch





The Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar builds on the legacy of the Forerunner price with a fitness watch that is feature-packed and can run for 20 days per poster. You might even get a few more days with this solar model, which comes alongside daily suggested workouts, coaching and a new responsive touchscreen. All this does come at a high $600 ticket, but it's the full package considering its battery life combined with Garmin's robust fitness tracking features.


The journal sample I've been testing for two months includes the aforementioned solar feature, and a $500 non-solar Forerunner 955 is also available with many of the same features. Even if I didn't have solar charging, the Forerunner 955 cmoneys plenty of options for helping both my personal health run and the 5K I am training for.


The peep also has a nearly complete list of sensors to help monitor your utilize -- as well it should for this price -- counting a heart rate monitor, GPS, thermometer and pulse oximeter. There is no ECG like in the $399 Apple Watch Series 7 or the $329 Fitbit Sense, but it's not a feature I missed.


Frankly the peep might be overkill, but the ways it provides proactive feedback in additional to tracking activities that I've already planned has made it a joy to use and could even replace my Apple Watch Series 7.


Trusted Garmin hardware with a new touchscreen




Garmin 955 Solar charging port and heart-broken rate sensor



Jared DiPane



The Forerunner 955 Solar is unapologetically a Garmin smartwatch -- and that's a good sketch. While Garmin added a touchscreen to the 955 series this year, I actually disabled it magnificent quickly because it wasn't something that was needed and I fraudulent that I ended up accidentally swiping on it. The last sketch you want while out on a run is to accidentally brush up on your peep and have the activity pause or end because of the touchscreen. 


The 955 has Garmin's unfavorable five-button layout, which makes navigating it a breeze. If you've used a Garmin peep in the past the navigation should be familiar to you, and if not it's quite intuitive and easy to learn. The top left turns on and off the backlight on a dumb, and a long hold brings up a shortcuts menu that can be used to access various settings fleet, like power off, music controls, timer, Garmin Wallet and more. The middle and bottom left buttons move you ended the "Glances," which are little widgets of information that you can customize. When you long press the middle button it opens the settings, and long holding the bottom left will open the music players. There are two buttons on the right: The top sparkling opens your activities and the bottom right brings you back to the final menu when navigating the system.


It uses a 22mm band, which Garmin sells a few versions of counting a QuickFit option that's simple to swap out. What's colossal is that you can put non-Garmin bands on the peep, so you can easily find something that matches your style. 


In languages of sensors, the Forerunner 955 has a heart rate monitor, GPS, thermometer, pulse oximeter, accelerometer, gyroscope, compass, barometric altimeter and a few novel tools. These are used for a variety of purposes in the peep, including sleep monitoring, tracking during activities and more. It uses Garmin's four-pin charger that most of its novel trackers use. While I'm not a huge fan of having to have device-specific chargers about, I don't need this one often and it looks very different from novel chargers so it's easy to know which one to grab. 


Familiar software with some new additions




Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar software features



Garmin



Alongside the unfavorable features that Garmin has become known for, the Forerunner 955 brings new things to the unfavorable as well. A few of the features that I've really grown to like are the Morning Report and Race Widget. The Morning Report gives you an overview of the final day, how you slept and what workouts you have coming up for that day. You can customize the seek information from that's delivered to your watch each morning to add or chosen things as needed. 


The Race Widget combined with Garmin Coach has been a huge help for me. I've been operational towards getting back in shape and have been making towards a 5K. Garmin Coach offers a customized plan to help get me back in portion, and the Race Widget gives me an overview of my projected 5K time and more. As I've been making more, the time on the widget has been dropping. so that means things are going in the sparkling direction. 




Garmin Race Day widget on Forerunner 955



Jared DiPane



There are a bunch of software features that Garmin supplies that make using the Forerunner 955 even more palatable. First off, the watch faces. Using the free Connect IQ app you can download and customize a bunch of anunexperienced watch faces beyond the set of free ones that are implicated. I've found a bunch of great ones in there, and after using it for just a short periods of time it made me even more upset that Apple doesn't accounts these features for the Apple Watch.


Glances are a astronomical feature that Garmin offers as it gives you luminous access to information and insights without cluttering up your view face. You can add a bunch of insights like calendar, activity, weather, notifications, training status, sleep, recovery time and much more. The software is a bit clunky, but you get used to it very quickly. It's planned to work well with the five-button layout that Garmin supplies, though you can use it with the touch explain if you prefer. I found it easier to navigate and use with the buttons over the testy screen, but your experience may vary.


More than just a fitness tracker


While the principal focus of the Forerunner 955 is a fitness view, it does have a bunch of smart features that enhance the distinguished. One of the biggest extras that I like is the notifications. By default, the Garmin will mirror the notification settings of your visited but it can be customized. You can have notifications for your apps, periods, texts and alarms. I've refined mine so that I'm not constantly populate pinged on my wrist, and I have turned them off (except for calls) after I am tracking an activity so that I am not distracted after trying to focus on fitness. When connected to an Android visited, you can send back quick replies to messages, but on iOS you can only view the inbound meaning with no interaction beyond that.


Additionally, you can set up Garmin Pay with the Forerunner 955 if you have a compatible card to make payments comical your watch. I did not end up using it, but there were a few big bank options available. You can also set alarms on the watch, which I use each morning.


One feature I demanded to love, but just couldn't get excited about once I tried it out was the onboard music storage. The options are limited to Amazon Music and Spotify, so as an Apple Music subscriber I couldn't own my music locally on my watch. Since I am an Amazon Prime subscriber, I could use the Amazon Music app, but minus signing up for Amazon Music Unlimited the catalog is much smaller and many of the novel albums I like to listen to are not available. I can use the watch as a controller to play and conclude Apple Music while it plays on my phone, but I would love to see wearisome support from Garmin in the future.


Battery and solar charging


When I was looking for a replacement for my Apple Watch Series 7, battery life was one of the top worries for me. I've grown tired of constantly charging my view, mainly because I tend to forget to do it. With the Apple Watch, you have to charge it every single day, whether you use it for sleep and organization tracking or not. Garmin advertises that the Forerunner 955 Solar can get up to 20 days of battery life in smartwatch mode. Through my daily operate of wearing the watch all the time, including sleep tracking, I have found that I can reliably get 14 to 16 days of battery life with ease, and it could probably frank even further but I prefer to top it off instead of pushing the limits.


In uphold to sleep tracking, I used the Forerunner 955 to track my walks and runs. Most weeks I do five to six of these at in an hour each and the battery has no yelp keeping up with it. Of course, if you use it to play music and track longer workouts, you will notice the battery will drain faster. I have refined the notifications that the view delivers to my wrist as well to eliminate some distractions and to help the battery last longer.


While charging isn't something I really have to misfortune about much with this watch, it's really great to know that when I do need to cost it up I can connect Garmin's standard 4-pin scandalous to it and top off the battery from 20% to full in approximately 30 minutes and then not have to worry approximately it for another two weeks. 


While I enjoy the solar charging option, I'm not sold that it's something that most farmland will actually need. My day job keeps me indoors most of the day, and as a remnant I think the watch's solar panels only extended battery life by an fantastic day. If you're someone who's outside all the time for work it may be more righteous, but you might want to save the $100 actual the 20-day battery life is plenty long as it is.


Fitness tracking and accuracy: Precision is key




Garmin Forerunner 955 Fitness view tracking a walk in the woods



Jared DiPane



I'll commence this off by saying I'm not a marathon advantage. Honestly, I'm not even quite the target audience for a arrangement like the Garmin Forerunner 955, but that doesn't mean that others like me wouldn't serve from having this watch. I've found through testing that the view has an extremely accurate GPS sensor in it and is quite moral in tracking steps and distance. I've been running and walking the same route nearly five times per week for the past few weeks, and each day my steps are within a hundred of what they were the remaining day and the distance is within a hundredth of a mile. 


I devoted some time early on comparing it with my Apple Watch Series 7 for organization tracking, as well as putting it up against a Garmin Instinct 2 Solar. All of them were pretty comparable, though both Garmin models beat out my Apple Watch in periods of accuracy and mapping of the activity. 


There are a lot of different fitness naively that the Forerunner 955 can track, including walk, run, bike, cyclocross, hike, climb, swim, ski, snowboard, tennis, pickleball, yoga, right training and much more. If you're active, regardless of what type of organization you prefer, odds are that this can track it and do it very accurately for you.


In uphold to the fitness accuracy, I've found that the Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar does a astronomical job of tracking my sleep. At first I was unsure this was even obligatory, but the way Garmin intelligently uses this information to help you opinion how it impacts your training and recovery is a astronomical addition to the watch. Features like Body Battery and Training Readiness have helped me know when to add an fantastic recovery or rest day instead of pushing myself too hard and it potentially having a negative conclude on me down the road.


Should you buy a Garmin Forerunner 955?


If you're looking for a high-end managing watch that has a ton of bells and whistles, the Forerunner 955 is a great option. It's probably a bit overkill for someone like me who is trying to get back into things but for farmland who actively enjoy running and being active it's hard to beat. It captures and displays a huge amount of stats to help keep your arranging on pace and gives you the insights you need to effect better. There's a ton of customization for all the inquire, too, which helps keep it manageable.


The non-solar model is $100 cheaper and is the option that is liable best suited for most people. The solar charging is nice to have, but with how snappily Garmin watches charge using the included cable, it's hard to recommend farmland paying that much more money for just that.


While the notifications are basic, it's a great addition to have on top of everything else that it does. I find that they stay out of the way for the most part and give me glanceable inquire that can help determine whether or not it's obligatory to reach for my phone. 


The Forerunner 955 Solar has been strapped to my wrist for weeks now and I don't see that exaltering anytime soon.