Wednesday, 18 March 2026

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Garmin Just Launched a Long-Awaited Integration on Its Fitness Watches

Garmin Just Launched a Long-Awaited Integration on Its Fitness Watches

WhatsApp on Garmin has been a popular request for a long time, and it's finally here.

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Garmin has finally launched an official WhatsApp integration for its watches—and this time it's the real deal. Unlike the limited functionality that existed before, you can now compose and reply to WhatsApp messages and threads directly from your wrist. No more fumbling for your phone just to say "yes" to dinner plans.

Is your Garmin watch on the list?

First things first: check if your watch is supported. Here's the full list at launch:

The rule of thumb seems to be that all 2025 or 2026 releases are covered. The one 2024 exception is the Fenix 8.

Garmin Forerunner 570 $514.99 at Amazon $549.99 Save $35.00 Shop Now Garmin® Forerunner® 570, 42mm, Advanced GPS Running and Triathlon Smartwatch, AMOLED Display, Training and Recovery Features, Cloud Blue Aluminum with Translucent Whitestone/Band Garmin® Forerunner® 570, 42mm, Advanced GPS Running and Triathlon Smartwatch, AMOLED Display, Training and Recovery Features, Cloud Blue Aluminum with Translucent Whitestone/Band Shop Now $514.99 at Amazon $549.99 Save $35.00

How to install WhatsApp on your Garmin

Open the Connect IQ app on your phone and WhatsApp should be front and center at the top of the list. Or head straight to the app store here.

A couple of limitations worth noting:

  • There's no LTE support. Even on the Fenix 8 Pro series (which has built-in cellular) this still requires your phone to be connected and nearby.

  • It's a full app, not a widget. It's installed like a sport app rather than a quick-access glance, so it's not quite as frictionless to pull up.

  • There are no images. Photos, stickers, GIFs, and in-app camera shots all show up as "unsupported."

If your WhatsApp threads are photo-heavy, this probably won't wow you. But if you mainly need quick text replies—the classic "on my way," "yes," "give me five mins" stuff—it's genuinely handy when your phone isn't right next to you.

The usefulness also depends a lot on how central WhatsApp is to your life versus native messaging apps. iOS users in the U.S. might shrug; much of the rest of the world will care a lot more.

The big wishlist item now is LTE support. If Garmin is going to sell watches with built-in cellular, having messaging actually work over that connection would be prime.