An all-around fantastic GPS watch

Publish date: 2022-03-24

Garmin Vivoactive 4

The Garmin Vivoactive 4 is a solid upgrade to the Vivoactive 3 and 3 Music, and will certainly please those in need of a midrange multisport watch. It's not as flashy as the new Garmin Venu, but that might be a good thing: It has a more readable display and longer battery life. If you're interested, you won't be disappointed... just be prepared to pay up.

Garmin’s bread and butter is its extensive line of GPS fitness watches. They’re often unrivaled by the competition — at least in terms of fitness features — and that might be the case for the new Vivoactive 4. But if you’re in the market for a new GPS fitness watch, should you buy the Vivoactive 4 or the new OLED-touting Garmin Venu? Read our Garmin Vivoactive 4 review to find out.

Garmin has not yet announced a Vivoactive 5, but an OLED-touting successor is now available if you're looking for something with even more features. Check out our Garmin Venu 2 review for more details.Garmin Vivoactive 4 review notes: I used the Garmin Vivoactive 4 for four days, running software version 3.40. The Garmin Vivoactive 4 review unit was paired with my Google Pixel 2 XL for the duration of this review.

Since we have already reviewed the Garmin Venu (which is essentially the same fitness watch plus an AMOLED display), we're going to keep this review short. For many of the fitness functions, I will point you towards our full Venu review.

What is the Garmin Vivoactive 4?

The Vivoactive 4 is actually the basis from which all of Garmin’s other 2019 multisport watches are built, including the Garmin Venu, Legacy Saga series, and Legacy Hero series. The main differences between the four product lines are that the Venu has an AMOLED display, the Legacy Saga series are Star Wars-themed watches, and the Legacy Hero series is based on Marvel’s Captain America and Captain Marvel. Aside from that, all the core functions are the same for each product line.

The Garmin Vivoactive 4 is built for hikers, runners, swimmers, and general outdoor enthusiasts who don’t want to spend nearly $1,000 on a specialized outdoor watch. It’s Garmin’s more affordable everything-but-the-kitchen-sink device. If you find yourself spending a lot of time outdoors on various activities, this is the device for you.

What’s new compared to its predecessors?

This time around, Garmin released two sizes of its Vivoactive fitness watches. The 45mm Vivoactive 4 (our review unit) has a 1.3-inch transflective memory-in-pixel (MIP) display, while the 40mm Vivoactive 4S comes with a 1.1-inch display. The displays are essentially unchanged from the Vivoactive 3 and 3 Music, aside from the sizes.

New to the Vivoactive 4 and 4S are on-device, animated workouts for strength training, cardio, yoga, and Pilates. New coherence, relax and focus (long and short versions), and tranquility breathwork activities have been added to the watches, too.

Both new watches also have respiration tracking, hydration tracking, estimated sweat loss post-workout metrics, and all-day SpO2 recordings. Previous Garmin watches had pulse ox sensors, but they only recorded sporadically throughout the night. Now, you can set the pulse ox sensor to record all day, at night, or never. Neither of the Vivoactive 4’s predecessors had pulse ox sensors.

There are a few aesthetic changes, too. Both devices now have a new two-button design. The top button acts as your exercise and shortcuts menu, while the bottom button is the back key and settings button.

Since there are two watch sizes this year, there are also two different battery capacities. The Vivoactive 4 can last eight days in smartwatch mode (six hours with GPS+music), while the 4S can last up to seven days in smartwatch mode (five hours with GPS+music). More details on battery stats can be found below.

These are the successors to already advanced fitness watches, so there are plenty of other legacy features making their return, too:

Over the past few months, Garmin has issued many bug-fixing and performance-improving updates to the Vivoactive 4. You can read all about them at this link.

Is it good at all the new stuff?

Garmin Vivoactive 4

This is where I point you to the Garmin Venu review for most of these items. You can check out that article for in-depth details on fitness and activity tracking, GPS and heart rate performance, sleep tracking, and basically everything else.

Speaking specifically to the new features on the Vivoactive 4, I’ve found the on-device, animated workouts to be quite useful, as well as the respiration tracking, the new estimated sweat loss metrics, and the breathwork activities. Again, more details can be found in our other review.

So far, my 45mm Garmin Vivoactive 4 is on track to last as long as Garmin’s claims. I’ve had the watch on my wrist for four full days, and it’s at about 45% battery capacity. I used it for exercising, yoga, sleep tracking, and listening to music during workouts, too. I can’t speak to the battery life on the 40mm Vivoactive 4S, but I presume it would last about as long as Garmin projects.

Are there any downsides?

Garmin’s fitness watches may be good at fitness tracking, but they have a long way to go smartwatch-wise. The Vivoactive 4 can display smartphone notifications for Android and iOS, but only Android users can respond to messages via canned responses. You can also archive and delete emails from your wrist, but I’ve found this to only work part of the time.

There’s no voice assistant baked into the Vivoactive 4, and it doesn’t have a speaker like many other watches. Third-party app support is also limited but nowhere near as limited as Fitbit’s app ecosystem.

You buy a Garmin watch for its fitness tracking prowess, not for its smart features.

Garmin Vivoactive 4 vs. Garmin Venu: Which is the better buy?

Left to right: Garmin Vivoactive 4, Garmin Venu

You should only buy the Garmin Venu if you’re interested in owning a Garmin watch with an AMOLED display. Don’t get me wrong — AMOLED displays are great and certainly welcome on the Venu — but it doesn’t really change the core experience. In fact, I’d wager to say it makes the overall experience worse than the Vivoactive 4.

The Vivoactive 4 is normally $50 cheaper at $349, has a longer-lasting battery (albeit with a worse display), and it has all the same fitness- and health-tracking features. Plus, it comes in two sizes. I don’t think it’s as attractive as the Venu largely because of the non-OLED display, so you may be better off with the Venu if you want something a little more stylish. Functionally, though, the Vivoactive 4 is the better buy if you don’t need the better screen.

Garmin Vivoactive 4 review: Is it a good value?

The Garmin Vivoactive 4 and 4S are available on Garmin.com and Amazon for $349.99 in Light Gold, Rose Gold, Slate, and Silver color options.

Garmin Vivoactive 4

Last-gen tech at a reduced price

The Vivoactive 4 is Garmin's middle-of-the-road multisport watch. It's a great option for outdoor enthusiasts, especially if you don't need the Venu's OLED display.

As stated, the Vivoactive 4 doesn’t really intend to compete in the smartwatch space. It’s technically a smartwatch and can provide basic smartwatch functions, but it’s limited in third-party app support and doesn’t have a voice assistant. However, that’s not why you buy a device in the Vivoactive line. You buy it for the fitness features first, and the smartwatch features second. In that sense, the Garmin Vivoactive 4 is a fantastic fitness watch and will certainly impress Garmin’s core fanbase.

We hope you liked our Garmin Vivoactive 4 review. Let me know in the comments if you’re planning on picking one up.

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