Which smartwatch actually tracks punches and kicks? Which dies after one round? Honest takes on Galaxy Watch, Pixel Watch, Apple Watch, Garmin, and the budget options.
| Use case | Best pick |
|---|---|
| Striking sports + Android phone | Galaxy Watch 7 / Watch Ultra (with KickFlow) |
| Striking sports + iPhone | Apple Watch Ultra 2 |
| Endurance + multisport | Garmin Forerunner 965 / Fenix 8 |
| Battery life priority | Garmin (10–14 days) or Pixel Watch 3 with battery saver |
| Budget | Galaxy Watch FE or refurbished Galaxy Watch 5 |
Price: $300–650. OS: Wear OS 5+. Phone: Android only.
The pick for Android users training combat sports. Wear OS gives full sensor access to apps like KickFlow. Health Services API exposes high-rate accelerometer (200Hz+), gyroscope, heart rate, barometer, and SpO2. Battery: ~30 hours general use, ~6-8 hours during intense workout tracking. Watch Ultra adds a physical button for emergency end-workout — useful when sweaty.
Pros: Best app ecosystem on Android, accurate strike detection, AMOLED display readable in gym light. Cons: Battery requires nightly charging.
Price: $300–400. OS: Wear OS 5. Phone: Android only.
Cleaner Wear OS experience than Galaxy. Same KickFlow compatibility. Slightly less battery than Galaxy Watch. Smaller form factor — better for thin wrists.
Price: $400–800. OS: watchOS. Phone: iPhone only.
Best smartwatch on the planet for general fitness. KickFlow does NOT run on Apple Watch (iOS version planned). For striking sports on iPhone today, your options are FightCamp's iOS app or general fitness apps without strike detection.
Pros: Best HR sensor in industry, best app polish. Cons: No native strike detection app yet on iOS that matches KickFlow's quality.
Price: $600–1000. OS: Garmin OS. Phone: iOS or Android.
Endurance king. 10–14 day battery. Excellent GPS and recovery metrics (Body Battery, training load). But — Garmin's app store is tiny vs Wear OS / watchOS. No strike detection app exists for Garmin.
Pros: Battery life, durability, multisport features. Cons: No combat-sport-specific apps. Detection limited to "boxing" auto-activity which just measures HR.
Price: $300–400. OS: Wear OS. Phone: Android.
Dual-display tech (low-power FSTN + AMOLED) gives 2-3 day battery. Wear OS = KickFlow compatible. Good budget Galaxy Watch alternative.
Skip for combat sports. Fitbit OS is closed and doesn't allow third-party strike detection apps. Heart rate is fine. That's it.
Skip for combat sports. Closed firmware, no third-party app SDK, accelerometer access blocked. Use as cheap step counters only.
The watch reads its accelerometer and gyroscope at high frequency (typically 200–400Hz on modern wear). When the magnitude of acceleration spikes past a threshold (around 1.8g for a punch, 2.5g+ for confirmed strike), the algorithm starts a window. Within that window:
This is the algorithm KickFlow uses — accel-dominant with gyro assist, version 11 of the detection model after 6 months of refinement against false positives like typing, driving, and head scratching.
This is the most overlooked smartwatch issue. Optical HR sensors lose accuracy when the wrist is moving violently — punches, hooks, and especially uppercuts cause optical sensor "blanking." Best-case watches (Apple Watch, Garmin Fenix) recover within 5-10 seconds. Worst case (older Wear OS, fitness bands), HR shows zero for full rounds.
Workaround: chest-strap HR via ANT+ or Bluetooth (Polar H10 is the gold standard, $90). The watch becomes a display, the chest strap reads accurate HR.
| Watch | Workout battery | Daily battery |
|---|---|---|
| Galaxy Watch 7 | ~6h | ~30h |
| Pixel Watch 3 | ~4h | ~24h |
| Apple Watch Ultra 2 | ~12h | ~36h |
| Garmin Forerunner 965 | ~25h GPS | ~14d |
| Ticwatch Pro 6 | ~6h | ~3d |
Apple Watch tracks "boxing" as an activity but only measures HR and movement, not individual punches. KickFlow on Wear OS detects and classifies individual punches and kicks via accelerometer/gyro. Garmin's "boxing" mode is HR-only.
Galaxy Watch 7 with KickFlow. MMA's mix of striking and clinch work needs flexible detection that KickFlow handles, plus the Wear OS sensor access required for that detection. Apple Watch is great for cardio metrics but no app currently does MMA-grade strike detection on iOS.
Yes, with hand wraps over it (so the case doesn't strike your partner). Some fighters use ankle strap configurations to keep watches accessible without protecting through gloves.
Mid-tier and above (Galaxy Watch 7+, Apple Watch Ultra, Garmin Fenix) survive years of bag work. Cheap watches and fitness bands often crack within 6 months.
The only free app with full strike detection on Wear OS. April 26, 2026.
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