Smartwatches under $200 are wrist-worn computers that show phone notifications, track fitness, monitor heart rate, and tell time. The sub-$200 category covers a wide range. From budget Amazfit and Fitbit to discounted Apple Watches and full-featured Garmins. The right pick depends on your phone, your activities, and what you actually want from a watch on your wrist all day.
I’ve tested most of these over the past year. Used them through workouts, daily wear, sleep tracking, swimming. The differences are real. None is the best at everything. Here’s what actually delivers.
Apple Watch SE 2nd Generation
The best smartwatch under $200 for iPhone users. Strong combination of features, price, and ecosystem fit. Crash detection, fall detection, daily activity rings, notifications, Apple Pay. The S8 chip is fast enough that the watch never feels sluggish.
Battery is the obvious limit. About 18 hours of real use. So you charge daily. For most people that’s fine because the charge happens overnight. Heavy users who track sleep need a different charging window.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Price | $249 retail, $179 on sale |
| Chip | S8 SiP |
| Battery | 18 hours normal use |
| Health features | Heart rate, fall detection, crash detection |
| Phone required | iPhone only |
| Best for | iPhone users who want a real smartwatch |
Samsung Galaxy Watch FE
Samsung’s most affordable Galaxy Watch. Best fit for Samsung Galaxy phone users because some features (ECG, body composition) only work fully with a Samsung phone. The Wear OS apps mean Google Maps, YouTube Music, and other Google services work natively.
Battery is similar to Apple Watch SE at about a day. Same daily charging routine. Build quality is solid. Plastic body but doesn’t feel cheap.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Price | $199 retail, often $149 on sale |
| OS | Wear OS (Google ecosystem) |
| Battery | About 1 day |
| Health features | ECG and body composition with Samsung phone |
| Best for | Samsung phone owners on a budget |
Garmin Forerunner 55
Garmin is the fitness-watch king. The Forerunner 55 is their entry-level running watch. Strong GPS, accurate heart rate, 2-week battery life. Not flashy. Built for fitness people who care about training data more than notifications.
Smart features are basic. Notifications, weather, music controls. No apps. No third-party watch faces beyond what Garmin ships. If you want a smartwatch first and fitness watch second, this isn’t it. If you run, cycle, or hike and want serious training metrics, it’s great.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Price | $199 retail, $149 on sale |
| Battery | 2 weeks normal use |
| GPS | Built in, accurate |
| Training features | Recovery time, training plans, race predictor |
| Smart features | Basic notifications only |
| Best for | Runners and cyclists serious about fitness data |
Amazfit Active
Amazfit (Zepp Health) makes feature-packed budget watches. The Active model is the standout. 10-day battery life, GPS, AMOLED display, 100+ workout modes. All for under $150.
The Zepp app is functional but not as polished as Apple Health or Samsung Health. Heart rate accuracy is good but not Garmin or Apple level. Build quality is fine for the price.
Fitbit Versa 4
Fitbit Versa 4 is the fitness brand’s mid-tier smartwatch. The big strength is sleep tracking. Fitbit has long been the gold standard for sleep data. ECG, 6-day battery, GPS, and now Google Maps and Wallet integration since Google bought Fitbit.
The catch is Fitbit Premium. Some features require the $9.99/month subscription. Sleep score detail, guided programs, advanced metrics. The watch is fine without it, but feels limited.
What to Look For Under $200
Some features matter more than others depending on how you use a smartwatch. Be honest about what you actually want before spending. Most people use 20% of a smartwatch’s features and ignore the rest.
- Built-in GPS for accurate workout tracking without your phone in your pocket.
- Heart rate accuracy. Garmin and Apple lead this. Cheaper watches have decent but not great accuracy.
- Battery life. 1 day (Apple, Samsung) versus 5 to 14 days (Amazfit, Garmin). Big lifestyle difference.
- Water resistance. 5 ATM is the minimum for swimming. Most modern watches have it.
- Music storage for phone-free workouts. Apple Watch, Garmin Forerunner 245+, and Samsung have it.
- Display type. AMOLED is sharpest. LCD is fine for budget watches.
- App ecosystem. Apple and Samsung lead. Garmin and Fitbit have functional but smaller stores.
Best Pick by Phone
The phone you carry determines your best smartwatch more than anything else. Mixed pairings work but limit features. Same-brand pairings unlock everything.
iPhone users should buy Apple Watch SE. The integration is so tight that no Android watch matches it on iPhone. Samsung Galaxy users get the most out of Galaxy Watch FE. Google Pixel owners benefit from Pixel Watch or Fitbit Versa 4. Any Android user with fitness focus should consider Garmin Forerunner 55 or Amazfit Active.
Things to Avoid
The sub-$200 smartwatch market has plenty of bad options. These categories specifically should be skipped:
- No-name brands on Amazon. Heart rate sensors are often inaccurate and Bluetooth drops frequently.
- Watches requiring monthly subscription for basic features beyond the initial purchase.
- Watches without water resistance if you swim or even shower with it on.
- Old models being phased out. Software support and updates end faster than the hardware lasts.
- Counterfeit Apple Watches on third-party sites. They look real but lack the chip, sensors, and updates.
Final Thoughts
The best smartwatches under $200 are Apple Watch SE for iPhone, Galaxy Watch FE for Samsung, Garmin Forerunner 55 for runners, and Amazfit Active for budget plus long battery. The category has gotten so good that paying more rarely makes sense unless you need cellular or a larger display.
Which smartwatch are you wearing right now? Tell me in the comments what made you pick it over the others.