The Guardian Australia

Apple Watch Series 7 review: bigger screen, faster charging, still the best

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

The Apple Watch gets a bigger, better screen, faster charging and a small price cut for 2021, which is enough to keep it at the top of the smartwatch market.

The Series 7 version costs from £369 ($399/A$599) and, despite being £10 cheaper than last year’s Series 6, is Apple’s most expensive smartwatch, above the Watch SE costing from £249 ($279/A$429). It requires an iPhone 6S or newer and does not work with Android.

The Series 7 comes in 41 or 45mm case sizes, both 1mm taller than their predecesso­rs and thinner bezels mean the screens are 20% larger.

Every extra pixel on a device as small as a smartwatch counts. Onscreen buttons are bigger and easier to tap. More text fits on the display or fonts can be made larger and easier to read. New watch faces can fit two fullsize informatio­n widgets at once, and there’s a new full qwerty keyboard for typing out messages that is exclusive to the Series 7.

None of these additions are revolution­ary, but they are good refinement­s to the current Apple Watch formula. Specificat­ions

Case size: 41 or 45mm

Case thickness: 10.7mm

Weight: 32/38.8g, 42.3/51.5g or 37/45.1g depending on material and size Processor: S7

RAM: 1GB

Storage: 32GB

Operating system: WatchOS 8

Water resistance: 50 metres (5ATM)

Sensors: gyro, HR, ECG, blood oxygen, microphone, speaker, NFC, GNSS, compass, altimeter

Connectivi­ty: Bluetooth 5, wifi n, NFC, ultra wideband, optional 4G/eSIM

Slick performanc­e, 36-hour battery life

The new S7 chip matches the performanc­e of last year’s S6, making the Series 7 the fastest, smoothest and slickest smartwatch you can buy. Battery life is the same, too, lasting about 36 hours between charges with sleep tracking overnight and the screen on all of the time during the day. Tracking a 35-minute run consumed 7% of the battery, so it should manage a marathon or two.

Sustainabi­lity

Apple does not provide an expected lifespan for the battery in the Series 7. Batteries in similar devices typically last at least 500 full charge cycles while maintainin­g at least 80% of their original capacity. The battery can be replaced for £82.44. Repairs cost between £286.44 and £462.44 depending on the model, while repair specialist­s iFixit awarded the Series 7 a repairabil­ity score of 6 out of 10.

The Series 7 includes 100% recycled aluminium, 99% recycled tungsten and rare earth elements, and 100% recycled tin in the solder of its main chips. Apple offers trade-in and free recycling for devices, and breaks down the watch’s environmen­tal impact in its report. WatchOS 8 and health tracking The Series 7 runs the same watchOS 8 software as every Apple Watch from 2015’s Series 3. It adds a portrait photo watch face, the “focus” notificati­on handlings from iOS 15 and the ability to set more than one timer at once.

It also adds better text entry including the ability to use combinatio­ns of dictation, scribble, emojis and a full qwerty keyboard. There is also a redesigned meditation app that melds breathing coaching with mindfulnes­s.

WatchOS 8 is the best supported and most capable smartwatch operating system available, despite recent advances by Google with WearOS. You can expect at least five years or longer of software support, including feature and security updates, which is far longer than smartwatch rivals.

The Series 7 has the same comprehens­ive health-tracking features as the Series 6, including the ability to take ECG for heart rhythm, blood oxygen level monitoring and fitness tracking across a large range of workout types. Only dedicated multisport watches track more metrics across running, cycling and adventure sports. Observatio­ns

Sleep tracking now includes respiratio­n rate, but not sleep cycles like some competitor­s.

The Apple Watch can be used to unlock an iPhone with Face ID when wearing a mask, which is extremely convenient.

Bands made for older Apple Watch models fit the Series 7.

Price

The Apple Watch Series 7 comes in two sizes, three different materials and models with the option of 4G that requires an eSIM and compatible phone plan add-on.

The aluminium or Nike versions in 41mm size cost £369 ($399/A$599) or £399 ($429/A$649). 4G models cost an extra £100 ($100/A$150). Stainless steel and titanium models cost more.

For comparison, the Apple Watch SE costs £249, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 costs £249, the Fitbit Sense costs £279.99 and the Garmin Venu 2 costs £299.

Verdict

There wasn’t a lot wrong with last year’s Series 6, so a bigger, better screen and faster charging add to an already winning experience.

It is still expensive, even if it is £10 cheaper than last year, and the lack of third-party watch faces means you’re stuck using only those that are built in. Sleep tracking could be better, too, but the rest of the health features are topclass.

It is not worth upgrading from a recent Apple Watch. But for those with worn-out models or looking for their first smartwatch for the iPhone, the Apple Watch Series 7 is the best you can buy.

Other reviews

Apple Watch SE review: an almost great cheaper option

Fitbit Sense review: a good smartwatch that fails on sustainabi­lity

Venu 2 review: can Garmin make a good smartwatch?

Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 review: Google smartwatch raises bar

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The Series 7 Apple Watch squeezes a larger screen into essentiall­y the same size body.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The Series 7 Apple Watch squeezes a larger screen into essentiall­y the same size body.
 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The Series 7 doesn’t reinvent the wheel, it just makes it slightly bigger: the 45mm Series 7 (left) next to the 44mm Series 6 (right).
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The Series 7 doesn’t reinvent the wheel, it just makes it slightly bigger: the 45mm Series 7 (left) next to the 44mm Series 6 (right).

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