The company’s new wearables come in a three-pronged upgrade: Apple Watch Series 11 for the masses, Ultra 3 for outdoor and pro users, and a spruced-up SE, which amplifies the entry-level model. The headliner here is consistency with meaningful improvements — 5G (at least one version of the phone), tougher builds, smarter health tools — without going far from the core recipe that keeps Apple on top of the smartwatch market.
Pricing comes in at $399 for Series 11, $799 for Ultra 3, and $249 for the SE. It’s a spread that keeps Apple positioned from first-time buyers to serious endurance athletes, while also leaving room for accessories and higher-end band options that will still help drive ecosystem stickiness.

Series 11: stronger glass, 5G and all day battery life
Visually Series 11 remains recognizably Series 11, though the sapphire cover glass has been cooled to double its scratch resistance – a handy change against life’s everyday knocks. A watch can lean on the power-optimizing S10 chip from Apple while actually aiming for a reliable 24 hours per charge, with some smarter power management and a more efficient display stack aiding its goals.
Built-in 5G is a big change. For runners who prefer to leave their phones at home, or commuters in areas of sketchy Wi‑Fi, faster on-wrist data will keep music streaming, maps, and Siri results running more smoothly. The watch also includes machine learning-based hypertension notifications that search for patterns related to high blood pressure. Apple is simultaneously pursuing regulatory clearance in the United States; the F.D.A. has said previously that it considers these kinds of features wellness aids, not diagnostic tools.
It will be watchOS 26 that launches with the hardware, and with it you’ll get a new ‘Liquid Glass’ interface polish, freshly designed watch faces and Workout Buddy AI coaching. None of it is fancy for the sake of fancy: instead, these alterations are all about cutting down on taps, surfacing glanceable info and making week-to-week training feel more intentional.
Ultra 3: expedition-grade display and two-way satellite
The Ultra 3 is Apple’s other tough boy but with the display and radios slid forward. A new LTPO3 panel that incorporates wide-angle OLEDs creates the biggest Apple Watch display to date with 24 percent narrower borders and improved off-axis readability — helpful when you’re checking your wrist while gripping bike bars or a climbing hold. The always-on display now refreshes once per second, so you get a true ticking seconds hand without rousing the screen.
Battery life extends to 42 hours claimed (72 if using Low Power Mode) and Apple says just a 15-minute fast charge will see you through 12 hours or so, great if you’re heading off on a second day’s trail. New Waypoint face, fast Night Mode toggle and streamlined action button options further lend the watch a sense of being purpose-built for navigation.
Connectivity is the news: Ultra 3 introduces a new radio system with dual-antenna boosts for low-signal areas, 5G cellular and built-in two-way satellite comms for the first time. Beyond Emergency SOS (for which Apple includes a three-month trial), the watch can transmit Messages and Find My updates off-grid with the right plan. That’s an important differentiator from many competitors, which restrict satellite to emergencies only, and it could be a game-changer for backcountry runners, guides, and field teams.

SE (3rd gen): always-on display meets smarter health
Apple’s more affordable version closes the feature gap in smart ways. The new SE finally gets an always-on display and a cover glass Apple claims is four times more crack-resistant, alleviating two of the line’s biggest trade-offs. It also switches to the S10 chip, which enables double-tap gestures and on-device Siri for more responsive interactions.
Health capabilities grow appreciably: wrist temperature sensing (for retroactive ovulation estimates), Apple’s Vitals tracking, sleep apnea notifications and the newly introduced sleep score all are included. Battery life is still a claimed 18 hours, though faster charging — up to twice as fast — minimizes that for overnight trackers who charge up during their morning routine. Being able to air the audio directly through the speaker will take a small measure of dependence away when on spontaneous workouts.
Health features: promise and guardrails
Hypertension notifications will draw attention. It is the American Heart Association’s position that cuff-based measurements remain the gold standard for BP measurement, and that any wrist-based approximation should be considered as a screening tool. That context matters: features like Apple’s new alerts, sleep apnea notifications and sleep score are intended to flag trends and encourage clinical follow-up, not replace a visit to a clinician. Should Apple receive F.D.A. clearance, it would be one of the most significant steps forward for consumer wearables in preventive care.
Comparisons are inevitable. Fitbit made sleep scoring mainstream years ago, and Samsung includes blood pressure monitoring in its ecosystem. Apple’s edge continues to be integration — tight coordination of sensors and silicon and software — and, again, the extensive validation data, which it frequently points to in peer conversations and medical partnerships.
Why 5G on a watch is even a thing
Jumping to 5G isn’t about speed tests on the wrist. It’s not that wireless charging will be faster than plugging in, but it does mean you can easily leave a charger in those marginal areas and experience less lag for Siri, safety features, and notifications. The problem is power draw, and Apple’s insistence on a ‘day long’ Series 11 and ‘multi day fast charge capable Ultra 3 imply aggressive modem scheduling and tighter display power control. It’s the most “untethered” Apple Watch lineup yet for commuters and athletes who don’t take a phone on a run.
Strategy and market context
Apple’s three-tier approach is classic platform tightening: The SE widens the funnel, Series 11 fills the broad middle, and Ultra 3 is the keystone in the halo. Research firms like Counterpoint have long crowned Apple the leader in smartwatch revenue, and this cycle appears built for defending that crown as competitors (Google’s Pixel Watch, multisport mainstay Garmin among them) push more specialized features.
There’s nothing revolutionary here, but there doesn’t need to be. With 5G everywhere, tougher durability, and clearer health narratives, Apple has through step-by-step changes into practical wins users will actually feel day after day — while running, while working, when it actually matters.
