Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Apple
  4. Health & Fitness
  5. Mobile
  6. Photo Galleries
  7. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple drops the price of the Apple Watch to $299, rolls out new bands

Add as a preferred source on Google

A new iPhone may have been the headliner at today’s Apple event in Cupertino, but the behemoth company’s unflagging wearable didn’t completely escape mention. Specifically, the Apple Watch — the “best-selling smartwatch in the world,” CEO Tim Cook said — is getting new wristbands and a substantial price reduction.

The new bands, Cook said, are largely in response to an apparently insatiable market appetite for Watch accessories. “People […] love changing the [Watch] bands,” Cook said. “About a third of our Apple Watch wearers regularly change the bands.”

New woven nylon wristbands in yellow, pink, blue, and black have a “four layer construction” that preserves the material’s flexibility without sacrificing durability. The existing sport and leather band lines are also gaining a new color. And there’s now a new black option for the ever-popular Milanese loop band. The new collection of bands, which Cook called a “Spring lineup,” will debut in the next few weeks.

Apple-Watch-Bands-Mar-2016_006
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Perhaps more significant than the new wristbands, though, is the Apple’s Watch’s major price cut. Effective immediately, the Apple Watch now starts at $299. That’s a steep cut, but not unprecedented — this past holiday season saw retailers advertise $100 off almost every model of Apple Watch, and Apple itself in November offered $50 discount on the Apple Watch to customers who purchased a new iPhone.

Related Offer: Choose the Apple Watch that’s right for you

While a price cut may spur speculation that the Apple Watch is falling short of sales targets, Apple hasn’t got much to worry about. Apple’s 10-Q filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last September implied that the Apple Watch generated at least $1.688 billion in its first five months of availability, and a recent survey by market analytics firm IDC pegged sales at 11 million.

Absent from today’s announcements was any news of an Apple Watch sequel — rumors suggested a new and improved Watch model would make a debut at today’s event, but those proved inaccurate.

Kyle Wiggers
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Google’s next wearable could be the screen-less Fitbit Air and it’s coming for Whoop’s crown
The Fitbit Air could be Google's most important wearable since the Pixel Watch
stepehen-curry-wearing-google-fitbit-air

Google has been teasing a screen-less fitness band since late March, and now we finally know what it is called. According to 9to5Google, the upcoming device will be marketed as the "Google Fitbit Air." NBA star Stephen Curry has already been spotted wearing it since the start of 2026, giving the world its first real look at Google's answer to Whoop.

What is the Fitbit Air and how it plans to take on Whoop

Read more
This AI tech can understand words that are not even spoken out loud
This new tech lets you speak without making a sound
Artificial Intelligence

Researchers at Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) have developed a breakthrough wearable technology that can convert silent speech into audible voice by reading subtle neck muscle movements. The study, led by Professor Sung-Min Park and Dr. Sunguk Hong, was published in Cyborg and Bionic Systems, marking a significant step forward in human-machine communication.

From Muscle Movements To Spoken Words

Read more
AirPods Pro 3 may let you talk to Siri without actually saying a word
The future of human-device interaction might not be spoken, and Apple's already bought the technology to prove it.
A close up of AirPods Pro 3 in a case

Rumors have long suggested that Apple is developing a version of the AirPods Pro equipped with infrared (IR) cameras (via MacRumors). The purpose behind the cameras, however, has remained quite vague until now. 

Why did Apple spend $2 billion on a company earlier this year? 

Read more