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

Wear OS 4 is coming to your smartwatch this year — here’s what’s new

Add as a preferred source on Google

Wear OS is getting a major update with Wear OS 4, and with it, Google’s promising a big improvement to the overall smartwatch experience.

Announced today at Google I/O 2023, Wear OS 4 is adding a slew of new features on both a system level as well as an individual app level, meaning that smartwatch owners will be able to have a more streamlined and productive experience when using their devices.

The Galaxy Watch 5 and Pixel Watch main screens.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Going live later this year, Wear OS 4 will improve battery life for all devices running it.  Wear OS has never been known for great battery life, so improvements here are more than welcome. Additionally, the OS update will add “new and improved accessibility features” that include a greatly improved text-to-speech engine that will work faster and be more reliable, resulting in clearer hands-free reading.

Recommended Videos

While perhaps not immediately exciting for non-developer smartwatch owners, Wear OS 4 introduces Watch Face Format, a tool that allows developers to easily create custom watch faces without having to worry about battery optimization. Although this won’t change much for casual smartwatch wearers when Wear OS 4 goes live, it will result in more exciting watch faces being offered via Google Play later down the line.

Beyond Wear OS 4, Google has also announced numerous updates to popular Wear OS apps — including changes to first-party Google apps such as Google Home, Gmail, and Calendar. Smart locks and other devices will now be able to be controlled entirely from watches, emails will be able to be managed and sent using the improved text-to-speech functions, and all Calendar functions will be available without needing to unlock a paired phone.

In addition to first-party app optimizations, the new dedicated WhatsApp Wear OS app allows owners to send messages and make calls right from their wrists. New updates and improvements for Spotify and Peloton will also be coming soon to allow for more seamless app experiences.

In terms of a release date for Wear OS 4, we don’t know much about when it’ll finally be going live other than to expect it “later this year.” When it eventually does launch, we expect the update will be available on the Pixel Watch, the Galaxy Watch 4, the Galaxy Watch 5, and the Galaxy Watch 5 Pro as well as on any other Wear OS devices.

Peter Hunt Szpytek
A podcast host and journalist, Peter covers mobile news with Digital Trends and gaming news, reviews, and guides for sites…
Samsung Display just showed why XR’s future may come down to better tiny screens
Its AWE USA lineup connects high-brightness OLEDoS, MR demos, and glasses-free 3D concepts into one bigger bet.
Galaxy XR

Samsung Display is using AWE 2026 to push RGB OLEDoS as a core building block for the next wave of XR hardware. The showcase centers on displays designed for mixed reality headsets and augmented reality smart glasses, where brightness, size, and efficiency all collide.

The standout spec is a 1.3-inch RGB OLEDoS panel rated at 40,000 nits. Samsung Display is presenting it in a dark-room Big Dipper installation, where only two of seven panels use the ultra-bright tech to make the brightness and color gap obvious. It’s a booth demo with a sharper message underneath.

Read more
Got a smartwatch? You can now join a study measuring how the football world cup is affecting your heart
Your World Cup heartbreak might be valuable smartwatch data now
Heart rate on the Apple Watch Series 7.

Watching the World Cup can be an intense (and fun) affair that makes your heart race. And now, your smartwatch could be ready to track just how worked up you got over your favorite team winning or losing. Researchers at Bielefeld University are inviting football fans to join the World Cup Fever Study, a project that uses smartwatch and fitness tracker data to measure how fans physically respond to matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The study is looking at heart rate, stress levels, movement, and sleep to understand how football events like goals, wins, losses, and tense moments show up in the body.

Read more
Beats Studio Buds get a critical fix for a creepy microphone flaw
The security update addresses a Bluetooth issue involving the earbuds’ microphone before pairing is complete.
Beats Studio Buds+ in Transparent case closed in garden pillar

Apple's Beats Studio Buds security update fixes a Bluetooth microphone flaw with an unsettling setup-stage risk. Firmware 1B211 patches a vulnerability affecting Beats Studio Buds that haven't been paired yet and are still looking for connection requests.

Apple says an attacker within Bluetooth range could potentially listen through the microphone under those pre-pairing conditions. That detail makes the update harder to ignore, even though it doesn't add any visible features.

Read more