Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. News

Apple Watch Ultra 3 lands with new life-saving features

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple Watch Ultra 3 off angle
Apple

The expected Apple Watch Ultra 3 has launched at 2025’s iPhone 17 launch event, bringing with it a few upgrades – but it depends on the adventures you want to take.

What’s happened?

Apple has unveiled the new watch that has a similar design to 2023’s Ultra Watch 2, but with a few key upgrades:

  • Larger, brighter display: the Watch Ultra 3 has smaller bezels, allowing the display to creep up to 422 by 514 pixels in a 1245sq mm display area. The screen is up to 3000 nits, making it brighter in sunlight and better off-angle viewing
  • Satellite connectivity finally lands: send emergency messages and location without having any data connectivity
  • Hypertension support added: based on machine learning, the Watch Ultra 3 will check for signs of high blood pressure over 30 days, using optical sensors
  • Battery life boost: Apple says the Watch Ultra 3 will last 42 hours in smartwatch mode, compared to 36 hours with the Watch Ultra 2. It also has faster charging, getting to 12 hours’ life in 15 minutes

This is important because…

…these are features that can help save lives.

  • The health features baked into smartwatches these days – checking for signs of atrial fibrillation, sleep apnea and more – have been life-saving on hundreds of occasions around the world.
  • The addition of hypertension monitoring, while still needing to be approved by the FDA for use in the Watch Ultra 3, could help catch the silent killer in more people.
  • Satellite connectivity makes perfect sense for a watch that’s designed for hiking off-grid trails, giving those that head out to see or into the mountains greater peace of mind.
  • The upgrade to the battery life will be welcome for those that want to go for longer between needing to put the Watch Ultra on charge, but it’s still under the two-day window that would make it closer to rival devices from Garmin.

OK, what if I want to buy it?

  • You’ll have to wait a little while, as the Watch goes live for pre-order on Friday September 12, and you’ll be able to buy it on September 19
  • The Watch Ultra 3 is the same price as its predecessor, coming in at $799
  • It only comes in one size, 49mm, as previously seen
  • Finishes available are titanium and black, and new bands such as the green Ocean Band.
Gareth Beavis
Former Editorial Director
Gareth is former Editor in Chief of TechRadar, writing over 4,000 articles on the world of tech over two decades.
Oura reveals the two activities that its smart ring misreads as getting dirty in the sheets
The Oura Ring CEO just answered every awkward question you were too afraid to ask.
oura ring on a rock

Oura CEO Tom Hale recently sat down with the Wall Street Journal to answer questions about the Oura Ring, and it was exactly as fascinating as you would expect. There are serious bits about health tracking and the future of AI doctors, but let's address the elephant in the room first.

https://twitter.com/WSJ/status/2062700896425848838

Read more
Meta accused of preparing facial recognition features for AI smart glasses
Meta’s wearable AI ambitions spark privacy concerns after facial recognition report
Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 Smart Glasses

Meta is facing renewed scrutiny after a report revealed that the company quietly embedded face-recognition technology into software linked to its smart glasses ecosystem, potentially laying the groundwork for a controversial surveillance feature years after publicly stepping back from facial recognition on Facebook.

According to a WIRED investigation, code updates to Meta’s AI companion app included an unreleased internal system called “NameTag,” designed to identify people captured by the cameras on Meta’s Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses. The report claims the software can convert faces into biometric signatures, compare them against stored databases on a user’s phone, and alert wearers when someone is recognised.

Read more
Open-ear earbuds are finally acting like real daily drivers
Shokz OpenDots 2 targets commuters, workouts, calls, and all-day wear with upgrades that go beyond niche use.
Cosmetics, Adult, Female

Open-ear earbuds have always made sense on paper. They let music in while leaving room for traffic, office chatter, and the rest of the world. The harder sell has been whether that awareness is worth giving up bass, isolation, or a fit that feels locked in.

Shokz OpenDots 2 is built around that problem. The company’s new clip-on earbuds bring bigger audio claims, lighter hardware, stronger battery numbers, and controls designed for the sweaty, awkward moments where touch panels often fail.

Read more