
If you want the short version: Amazfit wins on price and battery longevity, while Garmin wins on sports depth, GPS accuracy, and a mature training ecosystem. Amazfit packs AMOLED screens, GPS, and broad health sensors into watches that often cost a fraction of comparable Garmin models. Garmin, built on decades of fitness and aviation navigation experience, offers more reliable multi-band GPS, deeper training analytics, and a vast accessory and app ecosystem. The right pick depends on whether you’re a casual tracker watching your budget or a dedicated athlete who wants data you can train against.
[[AFFDISCLOSURE]]- Amazfit typically costs far less for similar-looking specs
- Garmin offers more accurate multi-band GPS and richer training analytics
- Both brands deliver strong battery life compared with Apple or Samsung
- Garmin's app and accessory ecosystem is larger and more athlete-focused
The core difference: value engineering vs sports heritage
Amazfit, a brand from Chinese company Zepp Health, built its reputation on delivering eye-catching specifications — large AMOLED displays, built-in GPS, SpO2 and heart-rate sensors — at aggressive prices. The strategy is value engineering: give buyers most of the headline features without the premium markup.
Garmin comes from the opposite direction. It spent decades building GPS navigation for aviation, marine, and automotive use before applying that expertise to wrist wearables. That heritage shows up in positioning accuracy, sport-specific modes, and analytics like training load, recovery time, and VO2 max estimates. You pay more, but you’re buying refinement built on years of athlete feedback.
- Lower price for comparable headline specs
- Bright AMOLED displays even on budget models
- More accurate multi-band/dual-frequency GPS
- Deeper training metrics and recovery analytics
Spec comparison at a glance
The table below generalizes across each brand’s popular ranges rather than two single models, since both companies sell wide lineups. Always confirm specs on the exact model you’re considering.
| Category | Amazfit (e.g. Active, Balance, T-Rex, Cheetah) | Garmin (e.g. Forerunner, Venu, Instinct, Fenix) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical price range | ~$50–$300 | ~$150–$1,000+ |
| Display | Mostly AMOLED across the range | AMOLED or transflective MIP, depending on model |
| GPS | Built-in; dual-band on higher models | Built-in; multi-band on many mid/high models |
| Battery life | Roughly 1–2+ weeks typical use | Days to weeks; longest on solar/MIP models |
| Health sensors | Heart rate, SpO2, sleep, stress | Heart rate, SpO2, sleep, stress; ECG on select models |
| Training analytics | Zepp Coach, readiness, basic load | Extensive: training load, recovery, VO2 max, race predictor |
| Ecosystem | Zepp app; smaller accessory range | Garmin Connect; large app, sensor, and Connect IQ ecosystem |
| Maps | Limited / offline on select models | Full topographic and street maps on higher models |
GPS and sports tracking
This is where the brands separate most clearly. Garmin’s multi-band (dual-frequency) GNSS on mid- and high-tier models is widely praised in published expert reviews for holding accurate tracks in tough conditions — dense tree cover, urban canyons, and trails. For runners and cyclists who care about pace accuracy and distance, that reliability matters.
Amazfit has closed much of the gap on paper, with dual-band GPS appearing on models like the Cheetah and Balance, and independent reviewers generally report solid results. Still, Garmin’s longer track record and broader sport-specific features — structured workouts, advanced cycling dynamics, multisport and triathlon modes, and a deep activity profile library — give it the edge for committed athletes. If you want a refresher on getting the most from either, see our guide on how to track a workout on a smartwatch.
Battery life
Both brands run circles around Apple Watch and most Samsung Galaxy Watch models on endurance. Amazfit frequently advertises one to two weeks or more, helped by efficient chips and lighter operating systems. Garmin matches or exceeds this on its transflective memory-in-pixel (MIP) and solar models, which can run for weeks; its AMOLED models (like Venu and some Forerunners) last fewer days but still outpace most mainstream smartwatches. Real-world numbers depend heavily on GPS use, always-on display, and SpO2 tracking. For a deeper look, see our battery life comparison and our 12 tips to improve battery life.
Health and wellness features
Both brands cover the modern basics: continuous heart rate, sleep tracking, stress, and blood-oxygen (SpO2) readings. Garmin extends further on select models with ECG and more granular recovery and readiness scoring. Amazfit offers readiness and Zepp Coach guidance that’s improved considerably, though its analytics are generally less detailed than Garmin’s.
As with all wrist wearables, treat these readings as wellness indicators, not medical measurements. Optical sensors have known limits — read our explainers on SpO2 accuracy and sleep-stage accuracy for context.
Ecosystem, apps, and everyday smart features
Garmin Connect is one of the most mature fitness platforms available, with a large third-party app store (Connect IQ), broad sensor compatibility (chest straps, bike power meters, foot pods), and strong data export options. Amazfit’s Zepp app is cleaner and simpler but has a smaller accessory and developer ecosystem.
For everyday smartwatch conveniences — notifications, music storage, and contactless payments — both brands have improved, though support varies by model and region. Neither matches the deep phone integration of Apple Watch on iPhone. If you mainly want connectivity basics, note that most of these features work over Bluetooth and Wi-Fi rather than cellular; see do you need a data plan for a smartwatch.
Who should buy which
Use this quick decision guide:
- Buy Amazfit if: you want maximum features per dollar, long battery life, a bright AMOLED screen, and solid everyday fitness tracking without paying a premium. Great for casual exercisers, students, and first-time smartwatch buyers.
- Buy Garmin if: you’re a runner, cyclist, hiker, triathlete, or data-driven athlete who values GPS accuracy, structured training, recovery analytics, maps, and a deep accessory ecosystem — and you’re willing to pay for it.
- Either works if: you simply want step counting, heart rate, sleep tracking, and notifications with strong battery life. In that case, budget and looks should drive your choice.
Frequently asked questions
Is Amazfit GPS as accurate as Garmin?
On higher-end Amazfit models with dual-band GPS, accuracy is generally good and independent reviewers report respectable tracks. Garmin’s multi-band GNSS, however, has a longer proven record in difficult environments like forests and cities, making it the safer pick for athletes who need precise pace and distance.
Which brand has better battery life?
It’s close, and both far exceed Apple and Samsung. Amazfit commonly advertises one to two weeks. Garmin’s MIP and solar models can last weeks, while its AMOLED models last several days. Actual results depend on GPS use, always-on display, and continuous SpO2.
Can Amazfit or Garmin take an ECG?
Select Garmin models offer an ECG app; most Amazfit models do not. ECG availability varies by region and model. Learn what these readings mean in our guide to what a smartwatch ECG measures and whether a watch can detect AFib.
Are these watches waterproof for swimming?
Many models from both brands carry water-resistance ratings suitable for swimming, but the rating differs by model. Always check the specific watch’s rating before swimming with it; our water-resistance guide explains what the numbers mean.
Sources
- Garmin — Wearables & Smartwatches
- Amazfit — Official Site
- U.S. FDA — Medical Devices
- American Heart Association — Health Topics
