Price: $399.99 - $309.99
(as of Apr 24, 2025 05:14:32 UTC – Details)
Whatever you do, own it with Instinct® 2S Solar. This rugged GPS smartwatch is tough enough to keep up with you, unique enough to fit your style and small enough to fit your wrist. Plus, solar charging gives you unlimited battery life in smartwatch mode (assuming all-day wear with 3 hours per day outside in 50,000 lux conditions) so you can take on life’s unlimited possibilities. Do more of what you love with preloaded activity profiles for running, biking, swimming, strength training and more. When paired with a compatible smartphone, you even can stay connected to what matters to you with smart notifications, Garmin Pay™ and Connect IQ™ compatibility. Understand your body better with all-day health monitoring for energy levels, stress, sleep, Pulse Ox and much more (Pulse Ox not available in all countries. This device is intended to give an estimation of your activity and metrics; it is not a medical device).
Go longer than ever with solar charging that gives you unlimited battery life in smartwatch mode (assuming all-day wear with 3 hours per day outside in 50,000 lux conditions)
Battery life: in smartwatch mode, up to 51 days with solar charging in 3 hours of direct sunlight (50,000 lux) per day; in GPS mode, up to 28 hours with solar charging continuously in direct sunlight (50,000 lux)
Built-in sports apps to take on running, biking, swimming, strength training and more; plus, VO2 Max and other training features
Live the ultimate connected life with smart notifications and Connect IQ compatibility when paired with your compatible smartphone.
Track your adventures with the built-in 3-axis compass and barometric altimeter, plus multiple global navigation satellite systems (GPS, GLONASS and Galileo)
Understand your body better with all-day health monitoring features that track your heart rate, sleep, Pulse Ox, respiration and more (Pulse Ox not available in all countries. This device is intended to give an estimation of your activity and metrics; it is not a medical device)
Extend your battery life and your time doing what you love using the power manager to see how settings and sensors impact your watch’s battery life and make changes on the fly
Rugged GPS smartwatch is water-rated to 100 meters and thermal- and shock resistant with fiber-reinforced polymer case and scratch-resistant Corning Gorilla glass
Customers say
Customers find this watch to be an excellent timepiece with outstanding battery life and effective fitness tracking features, particularly noting its heart rate monitoring capabilities. The device is intuitive to set up and use, and customers appreciate its numerous functions and solid build quality. The size receives mixed feedback – while some find it fits perfectly, others mention it’s too small for their wrists.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
TACPness! –
BADASS WATCH!
Iâve had smart watches I was issued through the military before so thatâs nothing new to me. This is therefore a more I formed review. When I got this watch I was pleasantly surprised by ease of use with respect to swapping through the menus and selecting what you need. Does take some time perhaps to memorize where to go for each item but that is to be expected. I mostly wanted this for the GPS with outdoor activity and the heart rate and fitness features. (Fitbit only ever broke after 3 months, that is to say stopped working out of the blue). The compass is on point and the heart rate monitor is spot on as well. One of the coolest things about this is that it connects to an app and you can look for even better watch faces that have exactly what you want to see on them instead of just the default, thatâs the kind of support GARMIN gives with this. I got the watch face that displays heart rate, so I donât have to swap through menus or use the app to see it in real time. The fit is great and the battery life is as well. You should be aware that some features use up more battery than others, such as active GPS etc, so if you use that you can expect the battery to drain a little bit more quickly. The only adjustment I needed to make was the charging cable, I needed to pinch the lip of the plug with needle nose pliers ever so GENTLY just to adjust them the tiniest amount so it seated properly in the watch which is one of the pictures. I am very happy with this purchase!
K S –
Best Exercise watch I’ve had so far. If this one wears out, I’ll get another Garmin.
I’ve had Fitbit, amazefit, and samsung. This watch is better. It has a bit of a learning curve coming from a Fitbit but it is so worth it. Tracks very accurately. Step counts are very accurate. The software is great and has way more features than I use but can easily be adapted to bring what one uses to the front screens. Many watch faces to customize and view the data that is important to me. So far has been very durable and the battery last many days.
Ryan Whitehouse –
Everything you need, nothing you don’t.
The Instict series sites essentially at the bottom of Garmin’s smartwatch lineup. It’s a monochrome screen, controls are via buttons rather than touch, and it’s not a mini-phone for your wrist. That said, I’m really not sure any of those are a bad thing, and in some cases, for the better.
The monochrome LCD screen is easy to read in bright sunlight, something that can’t always be said for color TFT touchscreens (or the brightness has to be maxed, zapping the battery in a hurry). It also has battery life measured in weeks, not hours. It’s also “always on”, so you don’t need to waggle your wrist or tap it to wake the screen up to check the time.
I’ve never been a fan of touch interfaces on a watch. Some brands handle it better than others, but given the form factor, you’re trying to either poke miniscule icons, or are just going rough swipe gestures- which can too easily be done accidentally. A few dedicated buttons are clear, easy to use, and accidental inputs are quite rare. The Instinct has five- one functions generally as as “OK”, one is “Back”, two are up/down for menus, and the third generally functions as a menu/options for whatever screen or activity you’re on. It’s surprisingly intuitive to figure out.
GPS accuracy I’ve found is excellent, and only take a tiny hit when in “max battery GPS” mode, which uses only 1 of the 2 possible antennas and takes location data less frequently. Heart rate data also is quite accurate, and seems minimally affected by moisture/sweat. You also don’t have to have the watch strapped on uncomfortably tight to get consistent readings, as I’ve found with some other devices. As long as it’s not totally flopping around, you’ll get good readings. It can take Pulse Ox readings as well, although this feature is disabled (on “manual test only”) by default as it gives a bit hit to battery life.
The companion app I found is easy to use and gives robust data about recorded workouts or activities. It also allows you to configure (most) watch settings, but for some reason a few can only be adjusted on the watch directly. This isn’t a big deal, and after initial setup, you won’t be needing to touch these much, if ever. That said, unlike a lot of smartwatches, the app or a phone link isn’t totally essential. The watch can function entirely on it’s own as it has GPS built in (some other watches rely on the GPS in your phone, so away from your phone, they can’t do much beside count steps and tell you the time). You can choose to get notifications from your phone on the watch, and being it lacks a speaker or mic can’t dictate responses, but you can choose to send a few canned responses like yes/no/can’t talk now/I’ll get back to you soon, ect without having to stop what you’re doing or fish your phone out.
There is a separate app- the main one is Garmin Connect, but there is an “app store” called Garmin IQ where you can download extras like mini-apps for different sports or activities not built in, different watch faces, and even some basic games. I didn’t find much of interest there, it seems more aimed for their higher-tier watches with more capabilities, but you can sort by what watch you have and it will only show content that’s compatible with yours, a nice touch. The watch face has 12 pre-sets to choose from, 6 each in both “dark on light” and reverse “light on dark” patterns. Each preset then be further customized to change what each data field displays from dozens of options.
The Instinct 2 does support Garmin Pay for contactless payments, though this does require a link to the phone- and Garmin Pay only supports a couple of the major CC’s. I don’t use this feature (I very rarely use it on my phone either), to me it’s just as fast/easy to pull a wallet out and tap the card, than pull my phone out or tap through a few menus on my watch to pull up a payment. But, it’s there if you want it.
Also nice is the Instinct line comes in 3 sizes- the “S” 40mm, the standard 45mm, and the “X” 50mm. The S and standard are functionally identical, aside from the standard having a bit larger battery and thus longer life. The X adds a mini flashlight feature, but I carry a EDC light anyway- which is far brighter- and 50mm watches I find a little too chonky for my taste. Some reviews complained about the default band not being hinged, although I think this would only be a concern if your wrists are substantially slimmer or thicker than normal. For the vast majority of people, it will be fine. I find it perfectly comfortable to wear 24/7 and the very fine “notches” give a lot of adjustability to get the fit just right. There are other bands you can get from both Garmin and third parties, including one with hinged pivots.
You also get the option of solar, which enables “unlimited” battery life in theory, but in practice, this won’t be the case for most people. Garmin makes this claim assuming the watch gets 3 hours of moderate sun exposure a day, and in “smartwatch mode” only, i.e, not using the GPS. The watch does soak up meaningful charge off solar- a 1 hour bike ride on a very bright day I noticed a 3% increase on the battery- which is about how much it does down each day just in smartwatch mode with 24/7 HR monitoring on. So it recouped a day of battery in only about an hour, cool! It does function, but riding a bike has the watch face directly facing up- other activities like walking/running will net much less exposure (you can check a graph of the last 6 hours), and even on a sunny day, only net a trickle of power. 1 hour of GPS usage also takes about a day’s worth of standby time, so if you plan to track activities routinely, don’t expect a watch you “never” have to charge”. Even if you do so seldom or never, unless you consistently spend several hours outdoor every day, chances are you will still need to occasionally charge it. Still- compared to most smartwatches that need charging every couple days, if not every day, the Instinct offers stellar life. Fresh off the charger, mine reports about 30 days of battery. Using the GPS for a few hours a week to track some jogging, I find realistically, I get between 2-3 weeks before the battery is down to 10% or less and it starts asking for the charger. I’m sure the solar contributes to that, but I don’t imagine it added more than a day or two. If you don’t spend a lot of time outdoors, or live in a location that’s overcast- or you wear a jacket a lot- you can probably skip the solar option and save $100. If you live in a sunny climate and spend a decent amount of time outdoors, the solar can help stretch the battery and net you an extra few days before charges. While I don’t doubt the “unlimited” claim is technically possible, it would require foregoing most of this watch’s main features (GPS) almost entirely, and spending a fair bit of time outdoors on sunny days.
It does use a proprietary USB charger cable, which pulls about 0.6 watts while charging (so even the most basic 5w charging brick from an old iPhone, or a USB port on a computer, will charge this just fine). The charging is relatively brisk. A full charge from ~5% to 100% took only about 90 minutes (it seems to gain about 1% charge per min), so if you need a quick top up, just a 10 minute plug in can net you another couple days of battery.
All in all, this is a fantastic smartwatch/fitness tracker for people who value simplicity and phenomenal battery life. It doesn’t offer the dozens/hundreds of activities to track like some others, and offers only the basics for phone connectivity. It also doesn’t cost a thousand dollars. You get three sizes, several special editions that include some specialty capabilities/apps, several colors in each size, and the option of solar or not.
andre desrochers –
qualité
Amazon Customer –
Keeps track of all important data of slee, exercise like weight lifting, cycling, running, swimming ect.
Garmin’s are the best worth the money.
Edgar Mora –
Un bonito reloj, muy fácil de usar y configurar, el instructivo te da los pasos para usarlo y ya en el momento de encenderlo prácticamente te lleva de la mano.
La gran diferencia entre el instintic 2X: el cristal y la carcasa tiene mayor resistencia a la abrasion, tracción y protección contra caÃdas y arañazos, aplicación de balÃstica, surf, snorkel, y otras actividades que básicamente si no eres de deportes o actividades no te servirá mucho
jose anselmo –
Muy buen reloj , recibe notificaciones , material de muy buena calidad y resistente.
Frank –
Another rugged great offering from Garmin. I’ve owned this watch now for about half a year and I’m very happy with the look and function. The watch works great and feels even better on the wrist. The watch face offers a ton of information that’s completely customizable to your liking. So far, I have today’s date, time, step count, heart rate, weather, and battery percentage all on one screen that is easy to read. The watch’s strap is comfortable and adjusts well. The flashlight is an underrated feature that I did not think I needed until I had it. I no longer need to reach for my phone or carry a flashlight when working. Overall, the watch feels high quality, works incredibly well, and has every function you would need and can think of.