Across reviews, auto-detection was quick and effective for common activities like walks, though one reviewer still framed the watch as better for basic fitness starts than deeper training.
Reviews mention a relatively large software marketplace and Connect IQ access for apps, widgets, and personalization.
Wear OS gives the FE a strong app ecosystem, with reviewers highlighting broad access to popular Android wearable apps and a deeper app library than many cheaper rivals.
Band impressions are mixed: the included silicone strap is described as high quality, but one reviewer said the white band gets dirty easily.
The bundled band drew positive comments for its soft feel and visual detailing, though band comfort and finish were discussed more favorably than outright premium materials.
Battery life is a clear strength, with reviewers reporting long real-world endurance from multi-day always-on use to weeks between charges depending on settings and size.
Battery life is the watch’s clearest compromise. Most reviewers landed around a day to roughly a day and a half, with lighter use stretching farther but daily charging remaining common.
The watch includes wrist-based pulse-ox tracking for blood oxygen saturation, with reviews noting altitude and wellness uses.
Blood oxygen support is a genuine strength for the FE, with multiple reviews calling out SpO2 monitoring as part of a health feature set that feels unusually complete for the price.
Bluetooth support is well covered, including sensor pairing and accessory connectivity alongside Garmin’s broader smartwatch radios.
Screen brightness is consistently praised, with reviewers calling it easy to see indoors, outdoors, and even on sunny days.
The display gets bright enough for outdoor use, helping the FE stay readable in strong light even if the screen itself is not class-leading.
Build quality is described as rugged and tank-like, with premium-feeling construction for a high-end sports watch.
Build impressions were solid overall, with reviewers describing a watch that looks and feels put together well enough for everyday use despite its budget positioning.
The physical controls are a strong point, with dedicated buttons, useful shortcuts, and a more satisfying click than some newer Garmin alternatives.
The physical buttons add useful control shortcuts and navigation, though one reviewer noted occasional missed presses that keep them from feeling flawless.
Phone integration is limited for calls on some setups, with one review noting you cannot respond to texts or calls in that configuration.
Call handling is a real smartwatch strength here: reviewers noted on-watch calling support with a microphone and speaker, plus easy answering and declining from the wrist.
Garmin Connect gives clear daily calorie totals, including base and active calories, making calorie data easy to review.
Charging is less convenient than open USB-C freedom because the watch still relies on Garmin’s proprietary charger.
Charging is straightforward thanks to the included magnetic cable, but the lack of a power brick makes the overall setup feel more basic than convenient.
Charging speed is improved and widely praised, with reviews citing fast top-ups and roughly an hour to reach full charge.
Charging speed is slow by current standards. Multiple reviews put a full charge around one and a half to two hours, which is noticeable on a watch meant for round-the-clock tracking.
Training guidance is a strong area, with suggested workouts, customizable plans, race support, and coaching-oriented tools called out positively.
Coaching features are useful rather than advanced, with heart-rate prompts, running coaching, sleep coaching, and guided pace or intensity feedback called out most often.
Comfort is better than the size suggests for at least some users, with one reviewer saying the watch is comfortable enough to mostly disappear on wrist.
Comfort is mixed. Some reviewers found the FE easy to wear all day and through sleep, while others said the strap or case edges became noticeable over longer sessions.
Garmin Connect is useful and feature-rich, but reviews also say some finer watch settings are still awkward to manage from the phone side.
The phone-side software feels fragmented. Reviewers repeatedly mentioned needing multiple Samsung apps, and one also ran into a frustrating setup and account-linking process.
Garmin Pay is treated as genuinely useful for runs and outdoor use, with reviewers saying it works in normal tap-to-pay situations.
Contactless payments are well covered through NFC and wallet support, though one reviewer disliked Samsung’s hardwired shortcut behavior compared with Google Wallet preferences.
The watch works with both iOS and Android, but reviews note feature differences and a generally better experience on Android.
Compatibility is limited: the FE is built for Android, does not work with iPhone, and some higher-value features are reserved for Samsung phones specifically.
Customization is extensive, with adjustable settings, customizable data pages, widgets, bands, and downloadable extras.
Customization is a plus, with support for different straps and configurable replies, widgets, or interface shortcuts helping the watch feel flexible day to day.
The AMOLED display is one of the product’s standout strengths, repeatedly described as beautiful, vivid, and high resolution.
Display quality is decent but compromised. Reviewers liked the AMOLED panel and sharpness, yet several also called out the small screen area and chunky bezels.
Durability is strong overall, with reports of the watch holding up well in long-term use and the sapphire crystal resisting visible damage.
Durability is one of the FE’s better traits, with reviewers noting IP68 protection, strong water resistance, and scratch-focused glass protection that make it feel tougher than the price suggests.
ECG support is part of the Pro story, with reviews noting the feature arrived via firmware on supported models.
ECG support helps the FE stand out on paper, but its usefulness is reduced by Samsung-phone requirements in some setups.
Fit varies by wrist size, but the expanded case range helps; some reviewers found good fit on smaller wrists while others still found larger versions bulky.
The single 40mm case was described as fitting a broad range of wrists, even if that same one-size approach also limits buyer choice.
Overall fitness tracking accuracy is a major selling point, especially for GPS-based workouts and consistent distance tracking.
General fitness tracking is consistently good for the basics. Reviewers found workout tracking dependable for heart rate, distance, and everyday exercise, even if the watch is not aimed at serious athletes.
GPS performance is repeatedly described as excellent, with reviews highlighting reliable positioning, accurate routes, and class-leading results.
GPS accuracy is generally solid, with route tracking that stayed close to reality and avoided major path errors, though minor deviations still showed up at times.
Health tracking is generally viewed positively, with reviewers trusting the data more than before even if not every metric is treated as perfect.
Health tracking is broadly strong for the class. Reviewers praised the range of metrics and said the core readings were useful, even if certain values can skew slightly or newer premium extras are absent.
Heart-rate accuracy is broadly praised, especially against chest straps, though some reviews still note occasional limits in harder efforts.
Heart-rate tracking performs well overall. Several reviewers found readings close to reference devices, usually with only a slight high bias rather than major errors.
Material choices look functional and durable, but one review notes the polymer-heavy build is more tool-like than luxurious.
Material choices feel better than entry-level, with sapphire crystal glass and an aluminum case helping the watch avoid a cheap feel.
Menu navigation can be demanding, with one reviewer saying deeper customization still involves too much fiddling.
Navigation is easy to learn, with quick tile scrolling and bezel-based movement helping users move around the watch efficiently.
Music controls are available and useful, with support for controlling apps like Spotify and integrated music control features.
Onboard storage is generous enough for music, with reviews pointing to 32GB capacity and local audio support.
Onboard music support is useful enough for workouts, with one reviewer noting that music can be downloaded directly to the watch for offline listening.
The Garmin software experience is described as robust and feature-rich, though it still expects users to invest time learning it.
The operating system experience is capable but dated. Reviewers liked Wear OS access and familiar Galaxy watch behavior, yet several also noted that the FE is not on Samsung’s freshest software stack.
Outdoor visibility is excellent, with reviewers calling the screen easy to read in strong sun and varied light.
Outdoor visibility is strong thanks to a bright display and clear text, making the FE easier to read outside than its chunky bezels might suggest.
Pairing can be a pain outside the Samsung comfort zone. One review described account linking and setup as fussier than it should be.
Recovery tools such as Recovery Time, Acute Load, and related guidance are repeatedly described as useful for planning training.
Recovery-style insights are present through sleep and running analysis, with reviewers calling out physical and mental recovery data plus deeper running-form metrics.
Long-term reliability is a clear positive, with reviewers describing the watch as dependable in day-to-day use.
One reviewer explicitly framed the FE as a tried-and-true entry point, suggesting dependable day-to-day behavior even if the overall package is not especially exciting.
Safety-oriented tools get positive mentions, including flashlight visibility, strobe options, and location-sharing style features such as LiveTrack.
Safety coverage includes emergency access and heart-related alerts, giving the FE more protective utility than a bare-bones budget smartwatch.
The three-size lineup is one of the headline upgrades, with multiple reviews praising the better fit options for smaller and larger wrists.
Size choice is a weakness. Reviewers repeatedly pointed out that the FE comes in only one 40mm size, which narrows its appeal for shoppers wanting a larger watch.
Sleep tracking is seen as improved but not perfect, with some reviewers praising better results while others still question exact precision.
Sleep tracking is one of the FE’s more convincing health features. Reviews found its sleep timing and stage data generally accurate, though total sleep can read a bit low.
Phone notifications are handled well, with reviews highlighting readable alerts and even good emoji support.
Phone notifications are a strong everyday feature, with reviewers saying alerts reach the wrist promptly and feel easy to manage from the watch.
Smartwatch basics are solid rather than dominant, covering notifications, music, payments, weather, and other everyday tools.
The FE feels surprisingly complete for a budget smartwatch, delivering a broad mix of health, fitness, and smart features that covers most mainstream needs.
General performance is good, but the watch is not universally seen as ultra-smooth; some reviewers praise stability while others note less polished animation or feel.
Software smoothness is adequate at best. Some reviewers found the interface responsive enough in daily use, but sluggish app loads, hiccups, and an aging chip came up often.
One hands-on review found step counting close to spot-on in simple manual checks, suggesting good enough accuracy for everyday activity tracking.
Stress tracking is part of the broader recovery picture and is used in Garmin’s readiness and Body Battery style insights.
Stress tracking is present as part of the FE’s broader wellness toolkit, though reviewers spent more time noting availability than validating its precision.
Design is widely praised for balancing rugged outdoor character with an attractive everyday look.
Design is broadly appealing. Reviewers liked the classic round shape and felt the watch looked good, even if the thick bezel makes it feel less modern.
Third-party support exists through Connect IQ and related downloads, giving users access to extra apps and add-ons.
Third-party app support is a standout advantage, with reviewers repeatedly highlighting access to mainstream apps through Google Play.
Touch response is strong, with reviewers saying the screen works well even in wet conditions and avoids over-sensitivity.
Touch input is easy enough to use, with taps and swipes generally feeling responsive and not overly finicky on the small display.
The interface is powerful but mixed in usability: some reviewers find it intuitive enough, while others still call it confusing or busy.
The user interface is easy to understand, using familiar tiles, swipe directions, and straightforward navigation once setup hurdles are out of the way.
Value is mixed: reviewers respect the hardware and long-term usefulness, but many still call the price high and note cheaper Garmin alternatives.
Value is highly context-dependent. Some reviewers saw real budget appeal, but others argued the FE makes less sense when discounted Galaxy Watch 6 or rival models are priced similarly.
Voice assistant use is serviceable, and one review specifically found Google Assistant faster and easier to understand than the default alternative.
Water resistance is a strength, with repeated mentions of 100-meter or 10 ATM capability for swimming and even diving scenarios.
Water resistance is a strength, with multiple reviews describing the FE as suitable for rain, swims, and general wet-condition use.
Wellness features such as HRV, Body Battery, Training Readiness, and similar guidance are frequently highlighted as useful.
Wellness insights go beyond raw numbers with sleep scoring, recovery-related context, and coaching-style interpretation, though the FE misses Samsung’s newer AI-driven Energy Score layer.
Wi-Fi support is present for tasks like syncing and map downloads, adding convenience beyond Bluetooth-only workflows.
Workout and sport coverage is broad, with reviewers repeatedly pointing to a very large activity list and many sport profiles.
Workout coverage is broad, with support for more than 100 exercise types and enough variety to satisfy most general fitness users.