Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Google’s Wear smartwatch software update list is short, and the wait is long

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you’re waiting for news on when, or if, your Wear OS smartwatch will receive an update to the new version of the software announced during Google I/O, there’s some good and bad news ahead. Google has listed the smartwatches eligible for an upgrade, and the timeframe expected, but neither are likely to be what smartwatch owners were hoping for.

The new version of Wear OS, which Google refers to as Wear OS 3 but had introduced it as Wear before, will eventually arrive on the Mobvoi TicWatch Pro 3 and its 4G/LTE connected counterpart, and the TicWatch E3, plus unannounced models from Fossil and Mobvoi expected later in 2021. It won’t be arriving very quickly either; as Google states that it “expects our partners to be able to roll out the system update starting in mid to second half of 2022.”

Recommended Videos

When the update does arrive it’s so comprehensive that the smartwatch will be reset to factory settings during the process, and Google states it will make the update an option. If you don’t want to reset your watch, then you don’t have to update to Wear OS 3. Google quietly announced the details regarding the new software on its Wear OS community help page.

The news doesn’t quite fit with the statement released by Qualcomm concerning which smartwatches could receive an update. It said Wear OS 3 is supported by smartwatches with the Snapdragon Wear 3100 and Snapdragon 4100 processors, but Google’s list only features the two Snapdragon 4100 models available now, with no mention of the dozens of current Snapdragon Wear 3100 models.

If you own a Ticwatch Pro 3 or Ticwatch E3, it will be at least a year old by the time the software arrives (at the earliest). Samsung is expected to launch the Galaxy Watch 4 at its August 11 Samsung Galaxy Unpacked event, and it will use the new Wear platform with Samsung’s One UI over the top, making a 12-month wait at the minimum for an update to arrive on a watch you can already buy a disappointment.

While confirmation of an update is good news, the small selection of compatible models and the long wait before it arrives is not. If you’re considering buying a new Android smartwatch, it may be worth waiting to buy a model with the latest software onboard already.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Samsung’s next Ultra watch may be getting a massive battery glow-up
A 35% bigger battery and new chip could give the Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 a massive endurance boost
The Night mode watch face on the Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra.

Samsung’s next Galaxy Watch Ultra could bring the battery upgrade many users have been waiting for. The Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 is expected to launch in the coming weeks, and a new report suggests it may arrive with a much larger battery than the 2024 and 2025 models.

According to SamMobile, the Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 will use a battery with a rated capacity of 784mAh. Samsung could market this as an 800mAh typical capacity, which would make it around 35% larger than the 590mAh battery used in the current Galaxy Watch Ultra models.

Read more
Wear OS 7 looks ready to land on Pixel Watchs soon
Verizon support pages point to an upcoming Wear OS 7 Pixel Watch update
Google Pixel Watch 4 in black in the hand

Google may be preparing to roll out Wear OS 7 to Pixel Watch users sooner than expected. Verizon’s official support pages for the Pixel Watch 2, Pixel Watch 3, and Pixel Watch 4 have been updated with references to the next major Wear OS update, suggesting the release could be close.

The pages, first spotted by Droid-Life, list Wear OS 7 alongside the June 2026 security patch and software version CP2A.260603.001. Verizon’s changelog also mentions performance and stability improvements, which is standard language for these kinds of carrier support pages.

Read more
Meta’s creepy smart glasses just found their best use case yet
Meta Ray Bans Display close up shot

For months, the conversation around Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses has swung between fascination and suspicion. Are they the future of wearable computing, or just another gadget raising uncomfortable questions about privacy? This week, the glasses found themselves at the center of a very different story.

The most meaningful upgrade yet for Meta's smart glasses

Read more