Garmin’s app ecosystem is decent rather than expansive, with app downloads and Connect IQ support present, but not framed as a major reason to buy the watch.
One review describes Garmin’s wellness ecosystem as comprehensive, especially for turning health data into useful summaries.
The included nylon band is widely liked for comfort and security, but not universally loved because some reviewers prefer silicone or dislike how the fabric stays damp.
The silicone band is described positively for comfort and feel.
Battery life is the headline feature and consistently lives up to the hype, with standout real-world endurance and major upside from improved solar charging.
Battery life is widely praised, with most reviews citing around nine days and some testers stretching well beyond a week.
Blood-oxygen tracking is included as part of the health stack, but reviews mostly mention availability rather than deeply testing its precision.
Pulse Ox is present and generally viewed positively, with one reviewer calling the SpO2 readings spot-on.
Bluetooth connectivity gets limited direct discussion, but support for ANT+ and Bluetooth Smart sensors suggests strong accessory compatibility for training use.
Bluetooth support is consistently mentioned for sensor links, heart-rate broadcasting, and phone connectivity.
Brightness is improved and backlight quality is better than before, yet the screen still trails bright AMOLED competitors in darker settings.
One reviewer said the screen can be hard to read in very bright conditions, even at maximum brightness.
Build quality is reassuring overall, blending a light case with a premium feel that reviewers still trust for hard outdoor use.
The move from a plastic case to a metal case is presented as a quality upgrade.
Button controls are a strong point, with reviewers praising the hybrid control scheme and even preferring the Enduro 3’s click feel to some rivals.
The new physical buttons are one of the most praised upgrades, especially for workouts and easier navigation.
Call handling is limited: reviewers repeatedly note missing mic and speaker hardware, and some mention that call support is mostly limited to rejects or phone-dependent behavior.
Calorie data is available, but one review said calories burned ran slightly off compared with another watch.
Charging convenience is mixed: infrequent charging helps a lot, but the proprietary four-pin cable remains an annoyance.
Charging is improved by the standard Garmin cable or simple magnetic setup, and reviewers call the new approach more convenient.
Charging speed is not a strength; one long-term review notes that topping the watch back to full takes a while.
Charging speed is good, with reviewers reporting roughly a full charge in about an hour.
Coaching tools are robust, with structured strength plans, performance condition, recovery guidance, and training-plan support making the watch feel more actionable than passive.
Garmin Coach and structured workouts are widely praised for offering guided plans and flexible goal-based training.
Comfort is a major plus for such a large watch, with many reviewers surprised by how wearable and forget-on-wrist the Enduro 3 feels.
Comfort is a standout strength, with reviewers repeatedly saying the watch is light, easy to sleep in, and easy to forget on the wrist.
The companion app is viewed positively for surfacing trends, plans, and training data, though the reviews focus more on utility than delight.
Garmin Connect gets mixed marks: reviewers praised setup and data usefulness, but one found the app less clear than it could be.
Contactless payments are a consistent plus, with NFC and Garmin Pay repeatedly noted as convenient everyday features that remain intact despite Enduro’s stripped-back smart focus.
Garmin Pay is repeatedly noted as convenient and easy for on-the-go payments.
Cross-platform support is good but uneven: the watch works with Android and iPhone, yet message replies are more capable on Android than on iOS.
One review explicitly says the watch works with both iOS and Android phones.
Customization is a strength, with hotkeys, pinned activities, editable layouts, and data-field flexibility giving power users lots of control.
Reviews note good customization for watch faces, widgets, data pages, training plans, and notifications, even if flexibility is not unlimited everywhere.
Display quality is improved versus prior solar MIP Garmins, with better clarity and readability, but reviewers still stop short of calling it an AMOLED rival.
The hidden monochrome display earns praise for clarity and contrast, though it remains intentionally simple rather than rich or colorful.
Durability scores well thanks to rugged construction, scratch resistance, and repeated confidence that the watch is built for years of hard use.
Durability impressions are mixed, with Gorilla Glass noted positively but aluminum scratch resistance called out as a weakness.
ECG support is a meaningful add, but several reviews note it is region-limited, making the feature useful yet not equally available to every buyer.
Reviews explicitly note that the Lily 2 Active does not include ECG support.
Fit is secure and confidence-inspiring, helped by low weight and a strap design that keeps the watch planted during activity.
The compact size and lightweight build earn strong praise for smaller wrists and all-day wear.
When judged as a training watch, the Enduro 3 delivers an excellent sports-tracking experience and can even substitute for a bike computer in some use cases.
General fitness tracking is reviewed very positively, with performance described as accurate and comparable to pricier Garmin models.
GPS performance is one of the watch’s standout strengths, with repeated praise for accurate distance, strong multiband performance, and dependable routing in harder environments.
GPS is a standout strength, with multiple reviews calling it accurate, fast to connect, and very close to higher-end Garmin devices.
Reviews describe the Enduro 3 as a strong general wellness watch, with improved sensors and dependable everyday health tracking rather than breakthrough new health precision.
Heart-rate tracking is widely rated good to very good, often close to chest straps in steady efforts, but several reviewers note misses or lag during high-intensity or gym work.
Multiple reviews say heart-rate tracking was very solid or spot-on, with only minor lag during quick changes in effort.
LTE is absent, and at least one reviewer explicitly frames that as a missing convenience for buyers who want stronger untethered communication.
Materials balance premium and practical choices: sapphire and titanium are praised, while the plastic back is mostly accepted as a comfort and weight-saving tradeoff.
Materials get mixed feedback: Gorilla Glass and aluminum are appreciated, but one reviewer still viewed the aluminum as easier to scratch than pricier materials.
Menu navigation is improved, with settings and activity functions reorganized to be easier to find and use in the field.
Menus and widget navigation are generally viewed as straightforward, with swipes and buttons making the watch easier to move around.
Music controls are present but not a highlight; reviewers note accessible music widgets and phone control, though one review calls control on the phone clunky.
Phone-based music controls work well for basic playback tasks like volume and track skipping.
Onboard music storage is a real advantage, with offline music support and generous local storage repeatedly cited alongside maps and payments.
Multiple reviews explicitly say there is no onboard music storage, so you still need your phone for music.
The overall OS experience is strong but not frictionless, with reviewers liking the new organization while also noting some learning curve or lifestyle rough edges.
Outdoor visibility is excellent in bright conditions, one of the MIP display’s biggest advantages, though a few reviewers still needed the backlight in dim terrain.
One review specifically said the screen stayed readable outdoors, even in direct sunlight.
Pairing is described as easy and dependable for phones and supported external sensors.
Recovery tools are a clear strength, with readiness, recovery time, and training-state guidance repeatedly highlighted as helpful for pacing hard and easy days.
HRV, Body Battery, Training Readiness, and related guidance give useful signals about recovery and when to push or rest.
Reliability is a strong suit, with reviewers trusting the Enduro 3 for long adventures, low-maintenance use, and day-to-day dependability.
One reviewer explicitly described the watch as very reliable during GPS use.
Safety-minded touches like the flashlight, off-course alerts, sunset info, and satellite-communication pairing support add practical reassurance outdoors.
Incident detection, fall alerts, and emergency contact sharing are repeatedly mentioned as reassuring safety features.
Size choice is a clear weakness because the Enduro 3 comes only in a large 51mm case that several reviews call a dealbreaker for some wrists.
Sleep tracking is positively described, with reviewers calling it solid and useful when paired with Garmin’s overnight recovery and readiness features.
Reviewers consistently said the watch nailed sleep and wake timing and caught wake-ups well, though one review still wanted deeper sleep-stage detail.
Notifications are handled well overall, with a revamped notification center and support for calls, texts, and app alerts, though functionality still depends on phone platform.
The watch reliably mirrors smartphone notifications, with support for calls, texts, and app alerts.
Smartwatch features cover the essentials well enough—music, payments, notifications, flashlight, and watch customization—but the experience is clearly secondary to sport and battery priorities.
Core smartwatch basics are here, including notifications, music control, and Garmin Pay, but the feature set stays focused rather than expansive.
Software smoothness is acceptable rather than flawless, with praise for the redesign but repeated mentions of lag, loading delays, or a need for more polish.
One review says day-to-day swiping and opening apps feels smooth.
One reviewer found step counts close in casual testing, though arm-free walking can still miss steps.
Stress tracking is treated as part of Garmin’s broader wellness suite and is mainly valued for feeding readiness and daily body-status insights.
Stress tracking is included across reviews and is described as useful for understanding energy and daily load.
Style is somewhat divisive: many like the cleaner solar ring and understated rugged look, but several reviews still note the big case or polarized aesthetics.
Style is one of the biggest selling points, with reviewers consistently praising the fashionable, minimalist look.
Third-party app support exists but gets mixed enthusiasm, with some reviewers appreciating downloads while others say the wider smartwatch app experience is still limited.
Reviews confirm syncing and compatibility with third-party services such as Strava, TrainingPeaks, and similar fitness platforms.
Touch response is a plus, especially for maps and quick interactions, and Garmin’s touch-unlock approach earns specific praise.
Touch input is the clearest weakness in the reviews, with repeated complaints about touches not registering cleanly.
The updated interface is generally well received for feeling more modern and organized, though not everyone thinks Garmin has fully finished the polish yet.
One reviewer describes the interface as very simple to swipe through and interact with.
Value is judged unusually well for a high-end Garmin because Enduro 3 undercuts pricier siblings while keeping most of the training and navigation substance.
Value is mixed but mostly positive: several reviews say the added GPS and upgrades justify the price, while others think rivals offer more for similar money.
Voice assistant support is a weakness because the Enduro 3 lacks the Fenix 8’s speaker and microphone setup that powers voice-driven features.
Watch-face support is mixed: there are new watch-face tools and customization options, but some reviewers still find Garmin’s faces less appealing than rivals’.
Watch face options get mixed feedback: the designs suit the look of the watch, but several reviewers wanted more variety or more color.
Water resistance is solid for swimming and surface sports, but reviewers consistently remind buyers that this is not the dive-ready Garmin option.
One review states the watch is water resistant to 5 ATM.
Wellness insights are deep and useful, with Body Battery, HRV, sleep coaching, illness-readiness signals, and training status frequently called out as valuable daily context.
Body Battery, sleep scores, hormone guidance, and other wellness summaries are a major strength and frequently described as useful.
Workout coverage is extensive, spanning major endurance sports, gym profiles, and multisport use, with reviewers repeatedly emphasizing just how broad the activity list is.
Reviews repeatedly highlight the wide range of sport profiles and workout modes, with the Active adding many more than earlier Lily models.