
To pair Bluetooth earbuds with a smartwatch, put the earbuds into pairing mode (usually by holding the case button until an LED blinks), open the Bluetooth or audio settings on your watch, and select the earbuds from the list of nearby devices. On most watches—Apple Watch, Samsung Galaxy Watch, and Garmin—this lives inside Settings > Bluetooth, and the whole process takes under a minute once the earbuds are discoverable.
- Pair earbuds directly to the watch—not the phone—so audio plays without your phone nearby
- Earbuds must be in pairing mode (blinking LED) before the watch can find them
- If pairing fails, forget the device on both the watch and phone, then retry
Before you start
Pairing earbuds to a smartwatch is different from pairing them to a phone. A watch is a separate Bluetooth host, so even if your earbuds already connect to your phone, you have to pair them to the watch as its own connection. This is what lets you leave the phone behind—on a run, for example—and still stream music or take calls from the watch.
- Charge both devices. Low battery on either the watch or the earbuds can cause pairing to drop mid-process.
- Keep them close. Hold the earbuds (in their case) within a few inches of the watch during pairing.
- Disconnect from the phone if needed. Some earbuds only accept one connection at a time and won’t enter pairing mode while actively connected to a phone.
Step-by-step: pairing on any smartwatch
- Put the earbuds in pairing mode. With the earbuds in the case, hold the button on the case (or long-press the earbud touch controls) until the status LED blinks white, blue, or alternating colors. Check your earbuds’ manual for the exact pattern—blinking usually means “discoverable.”
- Open Bluetooth settings on the watch. Navigate to Settings > Bluetooth. The watch will begin scanning for nearby devices.
- Select your earbuds. When the earbuds’ name appears in the list, tap it. Pairing may take a few seconds.
- Confirm the connection. A checkmark, “Connected,” or the battery level of the earbuds usually appears when it works.
- Test the audio. Play a track or start an activity from the watch and confirm sound routes to the earbuds, not the watch speaker.
Apple Watch
Open Settings > Bluetooth on the watch, put the earbuds in pairing mode, and tap them when listed under “Devices.” AirPods and other Apple or Beats earbuds already linked to your iCloud account often connect automatically—just open Control Center on the watch, tap the AirPlay icon, and choose them. If you’re still getting familiar with the interface, our walkthrough on how to set up an Apple Watch for the first time covers the basics.
Samsung Galaxy Watch
Go to Settings > Connections > Bluetooth (or Settings > Bluetooth on newer Wear OS models), enable scanning, and select the earbuds. Galaxy Buds owners can also manage the connection through the watch’s audio output menu.
Garmin watches
On most Garmin models with music, open Menu > Settings > Music > Bluetooth Devices > Add Device, then choose your earbuds once they’re in pairing mode. Garmin’s music-capable watches are built around this workflow, so the menu is easy to find.
Watch families at a glance
| Watch | Bluetooth audio menu path | Auto-connect for same-brand earbuds |
|---|---|---|
| Apple Watch | Settings > Bluetooth | Yes (AirPods/Beats via iCloud) |
| Samsung Galaxy Watch | Settings > Connections > Bluetooth | Yes (Galaxy Buds) |
| Garmin (music models) | Settings > Music > Bluetooth Devices | No—manual pairing |
| Wear OS (Pixel, etc.) | Settings > Connectivity > Bluetooth | Varies by brand |
Troubleshooting: when pairing fails
Most pairing problems come from the earbuds not being discoverable or from a conflicting connection. Work through these in order:
- Re-enter pairing mode. If the LED stopped blinking, the window closed. Hold the case button again until it blinks.
- Disconnect the earbuds from your phone. Earbuds actively connected to a phone often won’t advertise to the watch. Turn off Bluetooth on the phone temporarily, or “forget” the earbuds there.
- Forget and re-pair on the watch. In the watch’s Bluetooth list, remove the earbuds, restart the watch, and start fresh.
- Reset the earbuds. Most earbuds reset by holding the case button for 10–15 seconds. This clears old pairings that can block new ones.
- Move away from interference. Other active Bluetooth devices, Wi-Fi routers, and crowded areas can disrupt pairing. Try again in a quieter environment.
If the watch still can’t hold any Bluetooth connection, the issue may be broader than the earbuds. Our guide on what to do when a smartwatch won’t connect to Bluetooth walks through nine deeper fixes.
Because Bluetooth audio taxes the battery, it’s worth reading up on how long different smartwatches last and how to improve smartwatch battery life if you plan to listen often. Phone-free listening also depends on your watch storing music or having a data connection—see our explainer on whether you need a data plan for a smartwatch.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use any Bluetooth earbuds with my smartwatch?
In most cases, yes. Standard Bluetooth earbuds—regardless of brand—work with any smartwatch that supports Bluetooth audio output. Same-brand pairs (AirPods with Apple Watch, Galaxy Buds with Galaxy Watch) add conveniences like auto-connect, but they aren’t required.
Do I need my phone nearby to use earbuds with a watch?
No—that’s the main benefit. Once earbuds are paired directly to the watch, they connect to the watch itself. You can leave the phone at home and still play stored music or take calls if your watch has cellular or Wi-Fi.
Why does my audio keep cutting out?
Bluetooth range on a watch is shorter than on a phone, and your body can block the signal. Wearing the watch and earbuds on opposite sides of your body during a workout is a common cause. Keeping them on the same side, or reducing nearby interference, usually helps.
Can I pair earbuds to both my phone and watch at once?
Some earbuds support multipoint (two connections simultaneously), but many do not. If yours don’t, you’ll need to disconnect from one device before connecting to the other. Check the earbuds’ specifications for “multipoint” support.
