Three watches, three philosophies, three very different UK buyers. The Apple Watch Ultra 3 is a smartwatch that happens to be tough. The Garmin Fenix 8 is an outdoor instrument that also does smart notifications. The Polar Grit X2 is a training-focused tool that prioritises science over ecosystem. Picking the wrong one for the wrong buyer is the single most expensive mistake in the category.
- Apple Watch Ultra 3 launched 19 September 2025 with built-in satellite messaging, 5G, the largest Apple Watch display ever and 42-hour battery life; UK RRP GBP 749.
- Garmin Fenix 8 launched 27 August 2024 in 47mm and 51mm cases with up to 48 days battery (solar) and a rugged titanium build; UK RRP from around GBP 899.
- Polar Grit X2 (2024) sits between the two on price, with a stainless-steel bezel, dual-band GPS and Polars own ECG-style heart rate measurements.
- Why it matters: the three watches now have meaningfully different posture – Apple wins on day-to-day smartwatch UX, Garmin on multi-day outdoor battery, Polar on training load science.
This comparison is written for the UK buyer who has narrowed their list to these three and wants a straight answer rather than a feature-by-feature shootout. It names winners at each use case, and it calls out the compromises.

Display and wearability
The Ultra 3 has the best display on a wrist right now. Full-stop. Retina LTPO, 3,000 nits, and the touch responsiveness Apple has refined since the Series 5. The Fenix 8 has a very good AMOLED with a critical advantage — the always-on watchface is genuinely always on, not dimmed. The Grit X2 has a smaller, dimmer display that is the least impressive of the three but also the most battery-friendly.

Battery life in real UK use
Fenix 8 wins this outright. Three weeks of mixed use is routine, a multi-day hiking trip with GPS on drains maybe 40 per cent. The Grit X2 is a comfortable second at roughly two weeks of smartwatch use. The Ultra 3 is the last place, which is not a surprise. Three to four days with GPS-heavy use, two days for serious hikers who run the watch face lit. If battery is the deciding factor, Garmin wins and it is not close.
Training and sports science
Polar wins this. The Grit X2’s FitSpark programme, recovery tracking and training load metrics are the most actionable and the most scientifically grounded. Garmin comes second with strong running dynamics and better cycling integration. Apple is a credible third — Workout is better than it was — but the HealthKit ecosystem still treats athletic training as a second-class use case compared with general wellness.

Ecosystem and daily smartwatch
Apple wins this by a margin that will surprise nobody. If you live in an iPhone household, the Ultra 3 is friction-free. The Fenix 8 has Garmin Pay, Garmin Connect IQ apps, and a perfectly respectable notification system. The Grit X2 is the least smartwatch-y, with notifications that feel bolted-on. UK banking app support is best on Apple, acceptable on Garmin, and mostly absent on Polar.

| Watch | Best for | UK price | Key strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Watch Ultra 3 | iPhone users, mixed use | £799 | Display, ecosystem |
| Garmin Fenix 8 | Serious outdoor, long trips | £849 | Battery, navigation |
| Polar Grit X2 | Training-focused athletes | £649 | Training science |
Who buys which
Buy the Apple Watch Ultra 3 if you already have an iPhone and treat your outdoor watch as your daily smartwatch with extra ruggedness. Buy the Garmin Fenix 8 if your weekends regularly involve multi-day hikes, navigation in areas without mobile signal, or endurance events. Buy the Polar Grit X2 if you have a structured training plan and care more about accurate load and recovery than ecosystem polish.
Verdict
The Fenix 8 is the technically best outdoor watch in this list. The Ultra 3 is the best daily smartwatch that can also survive outdoor use. The Grit X2 is the cheapest and the most useful for the athlete who already knows their training load targets. There is no single winner. There are three clear winners for three clear buyers, and the mistake is pretending one watch fits all three.
Final verdict
Three serious outdoor watches, three very different philosophies. Here is the honest UK comparison for hikers, cyclists and weekend adventurers in 2026.
How we compare
Buyer action
Where to buy or check next
Use this as the final check before ordering a phone, changing network or trusting a headline monthly price.













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