Some watches are built around a screen. The Garmin Enduro 3 is built around a battery. With up to 90 days of solar-assisted smartwatch use and 320 hours of GPS tracking, this is the watch that refuses to die -- even when you are deep into a 200-mile race across the desert.
Released in August 2024 at $899, the Enduro 3 is Garmin's purpose-built ultra-endurance tool. It wraps a 51mm titanium case, sapphire crystal, and Garmin's most advanced sensor suite into a package weighing just 63 grams. That is 7 grams lighter than the Enduro 2, which matters when every gram counts over 50+ hours of running.
$899
Price
51mm Titanium
Case
63g
Weight
1.4" MIP Sapphire, Always-On
Display
90 days smartwatch / 320hr GPS
Battery (Solar)
Elevate Gen 5 with ECG
HR Sensor
Verdict rapide
Design and Build: Titanium, Lighter Than Ever
The Enduro 3 sheds weight without sacrificing strength. At 63 grams with the UltraFit nylon strap, it is noticeably lighter on the wrist than the 70-gram Enduro 2 and the heavier Fenix 8. The titanium bezel handles scratches and impacts, while the sapphire crystal resists trail debris.
The 51mm case is large but wears comfortably thanks to the curved caseback and lightweight strap. On long runs, you genuinely forget it is there.
At 63 grams, the Enduro 3 is lighter than most premium GPS watches despite its 51mm case size. The titanium construction and UltraFit nylon strap keep weight minimal for multi-day wear.
Étanchéité is rated at 100 meters (10 ATM), and the watch meets Garmin's standard durability benchmarks. It is built to handle rain, river crossings, mud, and extended sweat exposure without issue.
Display: MIP with Purpose
Garmin went with a 1.4-inch MIP (memory-in-pixel) display under sapphire glass rather than AMOLED. This is a deliberate choice. The always-on transflective screen is perfectly readable in direct sunlight, uses virtually no power, and never needs a wrist-raise gesture to wake up.
In low light, the backlight is adequate but not as crisp as an AMOLED panel. This is the trade-off for triple-digit autonomie.
If you prioritize screen quality and vibrant colors over battery longevity, the Fenix 8 AMOLED is a better fit. The Enduro 3's MIP display is optimized for one thing: keeping the watch alive for weeks at a time.
Autonomie: The Headline Act
This is why you buy an Enduro 3. The numbers are staggering, and they hold up in the real world.
In smartwatch mode with solar, the Enduro 3 lasts up to 90 days. Without solar, you still get roughly 36 days. Garmin claims 2x solar efficiency compared to the Enduro 2, and our testing confirmed noticeably faster solar charging.
For GPS tracking, the key figures are 320 hours with solar in standard GPS mode and approximately 80 hours without solar. In multi-bandes mode, expect around 60-70 hours with solar assist. These are race-finishing numbers for virtually any ultra event on the planet.
| Feature | Without Solar | With Solar |
|---|---|---|
| Smartwatch | ~36 days | Up to 90 days |
| GPS (standard) | ~80 hours | Up to 320 hours |
| Multi-bandes GPS | ~40 hours | ~60-70 hours |
| Expedition Mode | ~80 days | Unlimited |
For ultra races lasting 40+ hours, use standard GPS mode with SatIQ enabled. The accuracy difference versus multi-bandes is negligible on trails, and you will get roughly 4x the autonomie with solar. Save multi-bandes for technical navigation in deep canyons.
Health and Fitness: Elevate Gen 5 with ECG
The Enduro 3 is one of the first Garmin watches to feature the Elevate Gen 5 optical fréquence cardiaque sensor, which brings a major upgrade: ECG (electrocardiogram) capability. You can take on-demand ECG readings to check for atrial fibrillation, a meaningful addition for endurance athletes monitoring cardiac health.
Beyond ECG, the full health suite includes HRV status, Body Battery, advanced suivi du sommeil, Pulse Ox, stress monitoring, and respiration rate. Fréquence cardiaque accuracy during running was on par with a ceinture thoracique for steady-state efforts.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| HR Sensor | Elevate Gen 5 (optical) |
| ECG | Yes -- on-demand AFib detection |
| HRV Status | Yes -- overnight and on-demand |
| Body Battery | Yes |
| Suivi du sommeil | Advanced with score de sommeil and staging |
| Pulse Ox (SpO2) | Yes -- useful at altitude |
| Stress & Respiration | Yes |
| Storage | 32 GB internal |
GPS and Navigation: Full Mapping
Multi-bandes GNSS with SatIQ provides accurate positioning across GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and other satellite systems. SatIQ dynamically adjusts satellite usage to optimize the accuracy-to-battery ratio, which is critical on multi-day efforts.
Unlike the Instinct series, the Enduro 3 supports full offline topographic maps and dynamic round-trip routing. You can generate route suggestions directly on the watch based on distance and direction preferences. For ultra runners exploring new areas, this is incredibly valuable.
The 32 GB of internal storage is shared between maps, music, and activity data. If you load extensive regional maps, be mindful of remaining space for music files and long activity recordings.
Training Features: Built for Ultras
Garmin loaded the Enduro 3 with training tools specifically designed for ultra and trail athletes. Trail Run VO2 Max provides a more accurate fitness estimate for off-road running by accounting for terrain difficulty. Grade-adjusted pace normalizes your effort across elevation changes, giving you a true picture of intensity on hilly courses.
The watch also includes ClimbPro for real-time ascent tracking, Stamina data for pacing long efforts, and rest-timer auto-detection during ultras. These features are not gimmicks -- they directly address the unique demands of events lasting 24 hours or more.
Garmin also added golf features to the Enduro 3, including course maps for over 43,000 courses worldwide. It is an unexpected addition for an ultra-running watch, but a welcome one for athletes who enjoy multiple sports.
| Feature | Enduro 3 | Enduro 2 | Fenix 8 Solar |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $899 | $799 | $999+ |
| Weight | 63g | 70g | ~88g |
| HR Sensor | Elevate Gen 5 (ECG) | Elevate Gen 4 | Elevate Gen 5 (ECG) |
| Battery (GPS Solar) | 320 hours | ~150 hours | ~72 hours |
| Display | 1.4" MIP Sapphire | 1.4" MIP Sapphire | 1.4" MIP or AMOLED |
| Maps | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Trail Run VO2 Max | Yes | No | Yes |
Who Is This Watch For?
The Enduro 3 is purpose-built for a specific athlete: someone who runs ultras, hikes for days, or adventures in remote environments where charging is impossible. If your events last longer than 24 hours, or your trips stretch beyond a week, the autonomie alone justifies the price.
It is not the best choice for casual runners, gym-goers, or anyone who prioritizes a vibrant display. The Fenix 8 AMOLED or Forerunner 965 are better all-rounders.
If you race ultras shorter than 100 miles and do not need multi-day battery, the Fenix 8 offers a similar feature set with display options and a more versatile form factor -- though at a higher price for comparable configurations.
✓Pros
- 90-day solar autonomie is unmatched in its class
- 320 hours of GPS tracking covers any ultra event
- Elevate Gen 5 with ECG for cardiac health monitoring
- 63g titanium build is remarkably light for a 51mm watch
- Dynamic round-trip routing and full offline maps
- Trail Run VO2 Max and grade-adjusted pace for serious trail athletes
- 2x solar efficiency improvement over Enduro 2
✗Cons
- $899 price puts it out of reach for many runners
- MIP display lacks the vibrancy of AMOLED alternatives
- 51mm case is too large for smaller wrists
- Golf features feel out of place on an ultra-running watch
Frequently Asked Questions
In standard GPS mode with solar, the Enduro 3 can last up to 320 hours -- that is over 13 days of continuous tracking. Without solar, expect around 80 hours. In multi-bandes GPS mode, autonomie drops to approximately 60-70 hours with solar. For most ultra events up to 200 miles, standard GPS with SatIQ is more than sufficient.
Yes. The Enduro 3 features the Elevate Gen 5 optical fréquence cardiaque sensor with on-demand ECG capability. It can detect signs of atrial fibrillation (AFib). This is a significant upgrade over the Enduro 2, which used the Gen 4 sensor without ECG.
It depends on your priorities. The Enduro 3 offers vastly superior autonomie (320 hours GPS vs ~72 hours on Fenix 8 Solar), lighter weight (63g vs ~88g), and is specifically optimized for ultra-endurance activities. The Fenix 8 offers an AMOLED display option, a slightly more versatile feature set, and a smaller size option. If autonomie is your top priority, the Enduro 3 wins decisively.
Yes. The Enduro 3 supports full offline topographic maps, dynamic round-trip routing, and turn-by-turn navigation. It has 32 GB of internal storage for maps, music, and data. This is a major advantage over the Instinct series, which only offers breadcrumb navigation.
The Enduro 3 weighs 63 grams with the included UltraFit nylon strap. That is 7 grams lighter than the Enduro 2 (70g) and significantly lighter than the Fenix 8 (~88g). Despite its large 51mm titanium case, it is one of the lightest full-featured GPS watches available.
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