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Pretty much everyone has a smartwatch nowadays. Some wear them for fitness, some for health and wellness tracking, some for notifications, and most for all of the above. When it comes to students, having a wearable can help in so many ways. Older kids can keep on top of class schedules, use it as a wake-up alarm, record walking to and from school or on campus, keep track of sleep patterns and stress, leverage safety features, and more.

Even younger kids can benefit from a smartwatch for keeping in touch with parents (or for parents to be able to see their location), managing chores, enjoying motivation to get active, and engaging in friendly competitions with friends and family members.

Whether you're shopping for an elementary school student or approaching your PhD, these are the best smartwatches for students of all ages.

You'll find that many of these picks overlap with the best Android smartwatches, so choose carefully and think about the features you need, such as performance, battery life, and good old-fashioned bang for the buck.


Photo of Michael Hicks, Senior Editor of Android Central
Michael Hicks

Michael Hicks is Android Central's resident smartwatch geek, having reviewed or tested dozens of wearables from Samsung, Google, Apple, Garmin, Fitbit, Coros, Polar, Withings, Amazfit, and others. He spends his free time running or hiking while wearing several watches at once, testing which is most accurate.

At a glance

Best overall

The Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.

(Image credit: Brady Snyder / Android Central)
Best overall

Specifications

Cases: 40mm, 44mm
Displays: 1.34-inch (438x438) or 1.47-inch (480x480) AMOLED, 3,000 nits
Protection: IP68 + 5ATM, MIL-STD-810H, sapphire glass
Processor: Exynos W1000
Memory: 2GB + 16GB
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, dual-band GPS, WiFi 2.4/5GHz, LTE (optional)
Sensors: Optical HR + ECG + BIA, Temperature, Accelerometer, Barometer, Gyro, Geomagnetic, Light
Battery: 40 hours (325mAh or 435mAh)
Weight: 30g, 34g

Reasons to buy

+
Thin, lightweight design
+
Will get updates through four years of HS/ college
+
Two size options, both with ultra-bright display
+
Useful Wear OS 6 tricks
+
Can be converted into kids' watch

Reasons to avoid

-
Requires daily charging
-
Complicated UI
-
Android only

The Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 is the best Android smartwatch available across brands. It runs the latest Wear OS 6, packed with Gemini AI for quick on-wrist answers to any study questions, along with health data to check if a student is getting enough sleep (Energy Score), feeling unwell (skin temp data), or eating healthily at the dorm (antioxidant index).

For younger students, Samsung and Google developed a unique software called "Galaxy Watch for Kids" for students who are too young for their own cell phone. Parents can buy the Galaxy Watch 8 LTE and pair it to their phone. They'll then be able to track their kid's activity, health stats, and GPS location using Google Family Link. Your kid will be able to call or message trusted contacts or play kid-friendly apps, but you can enable DnD mode during class time to prevent distractions.

For high schoolers and college students, the Watch 8 will be a full-fledged device, offering on-wrist messaging and a full suite of apps. It'll get updated software through 2029, so a freshman with this watch can keep using it through graduation. It won't work for iPhone owners, but it's square-ish design will definitely stand out from the usual Apple Watch squircle crowd.

Alternative pick: The Galaxy Watch 7 LTE is the only other model with the "for Kids" option, if you can find it for cheaper; the Watch 8 vs. 7 gap isn't as wide as you might expect, with the same performance, software, and (most of) the same health sensors.

Best budget

A photo close-up of the Amazfit Bip 6 held in hand, showing a custom watch face with flowers and artsy text.

(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central)

2. Amazfit Bip 6

Best budget

Specifications

Case: 43mm
Display: 1.97-inch (390x450) AMOLED, 2,000 nits
Protection: 5ATM, tempered glass
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2, BLE, GPS
Sensors: BioTracker PPG (5PD + 2LED), Acceleration, Gyroscope, Ambient, Geomagnetic
Battery: 340mAh; 14 days, 6 days (heavy use)
Weight: 27.9g

Reasons to buy

+
Large, vibrant AMOLED display
+
Two-week battery
+
Incredibly affordable
+
Bluetooth calls and voice commands
+
Built-in GPS and readiness score

Reasons to avoid

-
No third-party apps
-
No advanced health data, wi-fi, music storage

Some students have parents who'll happily buy them the latest Apple Watch, but for those with part-time jobs or paying their way through college, a smartwatch that's functional and affordable may be the better option. Meanwhile, parents may prefer a more frugal choice. Either way, Amazfit is our favorite budget brand that offers great value for less, with the Amazfit Bip 6 as our first recommendation.

The Bip 6 isn't the best Amazfit watch, but at $70, you wouldn't normally expect to get so many perks like a mic and speaker for Bluetooth calling and OpenAI-powered voice commands. Its massive, bright display will make notifications readable at a glance, and you have over 140 sports modes to help you stay in shape and fight off the freshman 15. Best of all, you'll rarely have to charge it, so it won't die on you mid-class.

It'll track your daily HR and stress, warning you if you need a break from the essay grind, and judge your "daily readiness" based on how well you're sleeping. The Amazfit Bip 6 may not be as full-fledged as other expensive smartwatches, but it has all the essentials you could want.

Alternative pick: The Amazfit Active 2 only costs slightly more and gives you a more traditional rounded design with a stylish steel bezel, elevation tracking for hilly campuses, skin temp data to warn you if you may be feeling unwell, and other perks.

Best for younger kids

Customizing the Eejie on a Fitbit Ace LTE

(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)
Best for younger kids

Specifications

Cases: 41mm
Displays: 1.6-inch (333 ppi) OLED
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass 3
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 2.4GHz, 4G LTE (with subscription)
Sensors: GPS, GNSS, HR, accelerometer, altimeter, ambient light, gyroscope
Battery: Up to 1 day
Weight: 28g

Reasons to buy

+
Fitness incentives to keep kids active
+
Fun games, quests, and virtual pets
+
Calling and messaging
+
Supervised tap-to-pay Google Wallet

Reasons to avoid

-
Requires monthly subscription for cellular
-
No sleep data
-
Short battery life

Looking for something suitable for younger students? We have a whole list of the best kids' smartwatches, all designed as supervised watch-only experiences for kids too young for phones. Of this list, the Fitbit Ace LTE is one of the best high-quality options, with fast performance and enjoyable games that'll make your kid feel enthusiastic to actually wear it.

Like most kids' watches, the Fitbit Ace LTE lets your kid call, text, or voice message you from their wrist, while you can track their real-time location at any time. It uses a Wear OS-like UI pulled from the Pixel Watch series that's more speedy and seamless than you typically get on a watch like this. And if you trust your kid to use it responsibly, you can set up a Google Wallet with a Greenlight or Acorns Early debit account and let them use their allowance with a tap.

The Fitbit Ace LTE encourages kids to stay active throughout the day, with points going towards playing fun games like kaiju golfing, gnome heists, chicken space races, jelly dance competitions, and other silly fun. Kids also have a Tamagotchi-like virtual pet called an Eejie that they can customize with their earned points.

Alternative pick: The Garmin Bounce LTE is chunkier than the svelte Ace, but it lasts two days instead of one and has geofencing, so a parent is auto-notified if the kid leaves a certain area like home or school.

Best fitness tracker

A workout animation on the Garmin Vivoactive 6

(Image credit: Derrek Lee / Android Central)
Best fitness tracker

Specifications

Cases: 42mm
Displays: 1.2-inch (390x390) AMOLED
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass 3
Storage: 8GB
Connectivity: Bluetooth, ANT+, Wi-Fi, NFC
Sensors: GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, QZSS, Beidou, optical HRM, SpO2, accelerometer, compass, gyroscope, ambient light
Battery: 11 days
Weight: 36g with band

Reasons to buy

+
Long-lived battery
+
Accurate GPS, HR data for workouts
+
Running, strength, and cycling coaching
+
Smart wake alarm
+
No fitness subscription

Reasons to avoid

-
No mic, speaker
-
No altimeter
-
Lacks the smarts and apps of other watches

Garmin watches are a great choice for students because of their straightforwardness. They only require a recharge every 1–2 weeks, show notifications, but won't distract you with apps during class, have activity types for most sports clubs, last for years, and emphasize staying healthy as you become a proper adult.

Out of the best Garmin watches, we have several we'd happily recommend to students, but the Vivoactive 6 is our first recommendation that isn't quite as expensive as the rest, while still offering the core Garmin essentials. Are you hitting your weekly intensity minutes? Are you healthy for your age? Have you fully recovered from your last workout or are you overdoing it? The Vivoactive 6 will answer those questions.

Garmin has several "coaches" that take your current fitness level and recommend running, gym/ strength, or cycling workouts, adding weeks of activities to a calendar so you can steadily improve. It's very handy for college students who have left a structured club, or those trying to stay strong and healthy during the offseason.

Students may also appreciate the Smart Wake alarm: You set a window in which you want to wake up for class, like 7–7:30 a.m., and Garmin will wait until you're in a light sleep stage to buzz you awake, helping you avoid a rude awakening.

Alternative pick: The Garmin Venu 3 is a better watch than the Vivoactive 6, with missing perks like Bluetooth calling, elevation data, skin temp data, and three extra days of battery life. It's just more expensive, while the Vivoactive 6 is more accessible to thrifty students or parents.

Best for women

Garmin Lily 2 Active

(Image credit: Garmin)

5. Garmin Lily 2 Active

Best for women

Specifications

Case: 38mm
Displays: 1-inch x 0.84-inch (240x201) grayscale
Protection: 5ATM, Gorilla Glass 3
Connectivity: Bluetooth, ANT+, NFC
Sensors: Accelerometer, Altimeter, Ambient Light, Compass, Gyroscope, Off-body IR, PPG Heart Rate, SpO2
Battery: 9 days
Weight: 29g with strap

Reasons to buy

+
Dependable battery life
+
Stylish hybrid with multiple color options
+
Useful health, sleep, energy, and step data
+
Built-in GPS for workouts

Reasons to avoid

-
Grayscale display with limited smarts
-
Fewer sports tools than other Garmin watches
-
No mic or speaker

Most smartwatches are either fake-looking squircles or bulky circular models that don't really look like traditional watches. And a lot of them look especially ugly and bulky on smaller wrists. But when it comes to the best smartwatches for women, the Lily 2 Active tops our list for a reason, and we think it'll be just as attractive to younger women and teens.

It won't give you the vibrant AMOLED display of other watches, but if you're mainly buying a watch to check notifications, the Lily 2 Active's monocolor text will work just as well, and will blend in if your school frowns on tech during class. The watch comes in Purple Jasmine, Lunar Gold, or Jasper Green, so you can pick the one that fits your style best.

Style aside, this has many of the same perks as our last pick (the Garmin Vivoactive 6), even if it's not quite as specialized. Sports modes like running, cycling, pool swimming, tennis, walking, yoga, and HIIT will cover most of the essentials, and its built-in GPS is surprisingly rare in a hybrid watch.

Alternative pick: The Garmin Vivomove Trend is another gorgeous hybrid that'll blend in even more as a "normal" watch, or you can look at the Lily 2 Classic for alternative styles that look fantastic. However, both only last five days instead of nine, with no built-in GPS.

Best for iPhone

The Apple Watch SE 2022 with different colors and straps

(Image credit: Apple)

6. Apple Watch SE (2022)

Best for iPhone

Specifications

Cases: 40mm, 44mm
Displays: 1.57-inch (394x324) or 1.78-inch (448x368) OLED, 1,000 nits
Protection: 5ATM, Ion-X glass
Processor: S8 SiP
Memory: 1GB + 32GB storage
Connectivity: Bluetooth, GPS, Wi-Fi 4
Sensors: HR, altimeter, compass, accelerometer, gyroscope
Battery: 18 hours
Weight: 26g, 33g

Reasons to buy

+
Best integration with iMessage, Siri
+
More affordable than normal Apple Watch
+
Faster performance, better apps than typical fitness watch
+
Comfortably light with large displays

Reasons to avoid

-
Older tech (maybe wait for SE 3)
-
Less than one day of battery life
-
iOS only

Even though Android Central typically focuses on Android watches, and we've included several iOS-compatible watches in our picks and alternates, we know Apple Watches are popular with iPhone users for a reason.

The Apple Watch Series 10 is great, but also expensive, and a thrifty student or parent may want to look at the SE series instead. The 2022 2nd-generation Apple Watch SE is frequently available at a big discount, while we may finally see a 3rd-generation model in 2025. Whichever you buy, you're saving a lot from the mainline model, but getting the same core experience, with much better performance than your typical fitness watch can deliver.

You'll have to accept a battery that'll be near-dead by the time you're done with class and clubs, but in exchange, you're getting much better app options and Siri's ability to answer questions (even if we're partial to Gemini). And if you're a parent, you can buy the SE GPS + Cellular version and (like the Galaxy Watch 8) set it up as a standalone device to stay in touch with your kid.

Alternate pick: For obvious reasons, the latest Apple Watch would be the "best" option if you're willing to spend a little more. It'll give you a more premium design with a larger and brighter display, faster performance, extra health sensors, and faster charging.

How to choose

If you're a student (or guardian) and wondering where or how to start looking for the right smartwatch, a few simple questions can help you figure out what kind of product you need.

What is your budget?

The first thing that'll help you identify the right pick is your budget. If you have the money for it, why not get the best overall smartwatch?

How old are you (the student)?

It doesn't make sense to get a Galaxy Watch 6 for a nine-year-old. In fact, that could be potentially dangerous. Even if you do have the money for it, get something age appropriate.

What do you intend to use the smartwatch for?

Students might need smartwatches for various reasons. If you're an athlete, then you're probably going to be using your watch for a lot of fitness tracking. Make sure your pick aligns with your day-to-day use.

Thinking along those lines, parents of younger school children might want to track their location to ensure their safety. As a guardian picking a watch for the young student in your life, don't forget to take the intended use of the wearable into account.

What is your field of study?

Students might not think of this right away, but this could be a very helpful question to ask yourself. Let's say you're a science students and tend to work in the lab a lot. You might need a smartwatch with above-average durability, or perhaps one that runs Wear OS so you can download loads of useful third-party apps such as a scientific calculator.

Based on your field of study, your final choice might differ. Think about the features that you will require the most on your journey as a student, and then make your final selection.

These smartwatches will work for any student, from grown adults to tiny kids

Why you can trust Android Central Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about how we test.

Choosing the best smartwatch for the young student in your life (or yourself) depends on a variety of factors. If you want an uncompromised experience that any adult would enjoy, our favorite smartwatch by far is the Galaxy Watch 8.

Wear OS 6 arguably has the best wearable software experience available today, with the best watch assistant in Gemini. The Galaxy Watch 8 has useful Tiles that collect all the info and tools you'll need to see at a quick glance. It also has accurate health sensors, especially useful if you're comfortable sleeping with a watch.

In general, students like the same features that any adult would, varying from person to person. Jocks will prefer a fitness smartwatch that gives them a way to closely track their progress — especially if they go from structured high school sports to training themselves in college. While the more fashion conscious might prefer a hybrid smartwatch instead.

Michael L Hicks
Senior Editor, Wearables & AR/VR

Michael is Android Central's resident expert on wearables and fitness. Before joining Android Central, he freelanced for years at Techradar, Wareable, Windows Central, and Digital Trends. Channeling his love of running, he established himself as an expert on fitness watches, testing and reviewing models from Garmin, Fitbit, Samsung, Apple, COROS, Polar, Amazfit, Suunto, and more.

With contributions from