Garmin Lily review: The best smartwatch for women?
A common problem in the wearables world is the significant lack of devices geared towards women (or simply those with smaller wrists). Even the smallest Apple Watch can look too big on some wrists. That’s why Garmin is launching the Garmin Lily — a smartwatch designed specifically for women.
The Lily is a capable fitness tracker — and a pretty one at that. However, it oftentimes left us wanting a bit more. Read our full Garmin Lily review to find out why.
About this Garmin Lily review: Lily and Jimmy used the Garmin Lily for nine days running software version 2.30. The Garmin Lily review units were provided to Android Authority by Garmin.
What you need to know about the Garmin Lily
The Garmin Lily smartwatch borrows many of the brand’s staple fitness tracking features from the Vivoactive 4 and Vivosmart 4 lines. It’s fairly economical compared to the competition. It affords you the basics like heart rate tracking, weather readings, and activity metrics. Outdoor enthusiasts may need a dedicated adventure watch (and Garmin has you covered there), but casual gym-goers will gravitate to the Garmin Lily.
Garmin offers two Lily variants: the Lily Sport Edition and Lily Classic Edition. Depending on your style and needs, the Garmin Lily can complement formal attire, accompany you to the gym, or both. While the Lily is marketed toward women, cisgender or otherwise, it’s great for anyone with slim wrists and a predilection for small timepieces.
Hardware and design
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
This is the company’s smallest smartwatch to date, measuring just 34mm. Regardless of which model you fancy, the 14mm-wide watch band accommodates wrist circumferences of 110-175mm. As someone with narrow, thin wrists, this band is just right. The holders manage the strap tail well.
More fashion-conscious consumers will gravitate towards the pricier Garmin Lily Classic Edition. It includes an Italian leather band, stainless steel bezel and hardware, and modest lens designs. Garmin trades the leather band for a silicone one with the Sport Edition, and includes aluminum hardware rather than stainless steel. The Garmin Lily Sport features organic, nature-derived lens patterns, while the Classic features a classy X pattern.
The unique display patterns are a bit too eye-catching for my taste. In harsh lighting, they distract my eyes from the monochromatic numbers and letters on the thin-film-transistor (TFT) LCD. This effect is mitigated when you increase the screen’s brightness. However, doing so is at the expense of battery life. Both Garmin Lily variants feature Gorilla Glass 3 to protect the 25.4 x 21.3mm display.
Additionally, both leather and silicone watch bands feel nice to the touch and comfortable on the wrist. This watch uses Garmin’s proprietary “t-bar” lugs, which require a special tool to be replaced. This tool only comes with replacement watch bands, which you can only buy from Garmin.com. Those hoping to buy a cheaper third-party strap from Amazon will therefore be disappointed.
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
Despite its compact size, Garmin claims the Lily can last up to five days on a single charge. We’ve found that to be mostly accurate. Nevertheless, you’ll need to be a little reserved with your usage. Our Garmin Lily review units have lasted on average 4-5 days with normal to heavy usage. Also, expect decreased battery life if you keep SpO2 monitoring turned on during sleep tracking.
Garmin has used the same charging port and cable on most of its wearables for years. The Lily ships with an older cable, which needs to be clipped on the side of the device for charging. It’s not a big deal, but those with multiple Garmin chargers lying around their house won’t be able to use them with the Lily.
Garmin Lily review: Fitness and health tracking
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
Wellness is the name of the Garmin Lily game, and the watch supports a variety of fitness tracking metrics. Garmin highlights two main features of the Lily: menstrual and pregnancy tracking, which go hand in hand. The former is familiar in the world of wearables, and even smartphone apps. The latter, on the other hand, can be found in other Garmin watches like the Venu. It’s good for women who want to log specific pregnancy information like blood glucose levels, and when their child-to-be is in motion.
The Garmin Connect app’s Menstrual Cycle module is easy to understand at a glance. It immediately displays a divided, color-coded ring that communicates fertility, period, and ovulation information. Its Cycle Calendar follows the same color-coding and depicts predicted period and ovulation dates too.
You can add as much or as little information as you’d like, ranging from hormonal contraceptives to period duration and more. If you’re not interested in cycle tracking, you can disable it too. Naturally, the more information you share with the Garmin Lily and its associated app, the more accurate its predictions.
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
There are two ways to input your menstrual cycle: directly from the Garmin Lily, or via the Garmin Connect app on your smartphone. The app log breaks symptoms down into a few groups, which can be toggled from the settings menu of the Women’s Health section. Within each category, you have an array of options to choose from. However, I wish you could add your own symptoms since every woman’s menstrual cycle varies. For instance, the app presents the option to record a headache, but not dizziness. Though, you can always add more symptoms in the Notes section.
Garmin also includes easy to understand information that pertains to menstrual cycles. This is great for women who may not be familiar with the various phases of their cycle (e.g., menstruation, follicular, ovulation, and luteal). It even breaks down the phases and offers a brief description of what to expect during each one, as well as when it typically occurs.
Also read: The best fitness trackers for women
Credit: Jimmy Westenberg / Android Authority
Other fitness features include pulse oximeter measurements (SpO2), stress monitoring, hydration tracking, heart rate tracking, and advanced sleep logging. You volunteer some of the information like hydration, but other things (e.g., heart rate) are recorded automatically. Information on burned calories can be hidden from both the watch face and mobile app dashboard, which may be preferred by women who struggle with disordered eating. You can easily disable things like heart rate tracking too from the watch’s touchscreen.
For a detailed analysis of Garmin’s SpO2 tracking, Body Battery, and breathwork features, be sure to read our Garmin Venu review.
The watch will still track your caloric burn, however, unless you disable the heart rate sensor. Once you turn off the heart rate monitor, you will no longer have access to your VO2 max estimate, intensity minutes, and the all-day-stress readouts.
Credit: Jimmy Westenberg / Android Authority
The Garmin Lily supports 15 preset activity profiles. Seven of these can be stored on the watch simultaneously. You can swap out activities in the Garmin Connect app at any time.
The Garmin Lily doesn’t have an integrated GPS system. Instead uses your smartphone’s GPS to track fine movement. We tested the Lily connected to a Google Pixel 5 on outdoor walks and runs and didn’t experience any connectivity issues throughout the testing period.
Related: The best GPS running watches you can buy
As mentioned, the Garmin Lily features an optical heart rate monitor for tracking resting heart rate throughout the day and active heart rate data during exercises. Below, you can see a roughly hour-long interval run on the treadmill with the Lily (yellow) compared to the Wahoo Tickr X chest strap (purple).
Credit: Jimmy Westenberg / Android Authority
Overall, the Garmin Lily’s heart rate readings matched up quite well against the chest strap. Both devices picked up on major peaks and valleys during the run. You can see the Lily was a little quick to rise at around the 29-minute mark. However, it quickly got back on track by minute 32.
Interval runs are tough for fitness trackers, and the Garmin Lily appears to have handled them well.
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
As usual, sleep tracking is one of the Garmin Lily’s strong suits. It tracks your stages (deep, light, and REM), any times you wake up at night, as well as your respiration rate and SpO2 readings. Sleep stage tracking lined up well with one of our other favorite sleep trackers, the Fitbit Sense. While SpO2 tracking at night won’t lead to Garmin uncovering any sleep apnea signs like Fitbit or Withings devices can, it’s still a useful metric when determining how well you’re resting every night.
Garmin Lily review: Smartwatch features
Credit: Jimmy Westenberg / Android Authority
We’ve been referring to the Garmin Lily as a smartwatch, but it’s only that in the most basic sense of the word. The watch can mirror your smartphone notifications, and Android users can even reply to texts from the watch with canned responses. Additionally, the Lily can show calendar events, display the weather, and control your phone’s music (though there’s no onboard music storage).
Unfortunately, the Garmin Lily does not support Garmin Pay.
Importantly, the Garmin Lily comes with the company’s incident detection feature, allowing you to notify emergency contacts manually from the watch or automatically if the device senses a sudden deceleration or impact. The Lily uses Garmin LiveTrack to keep tabs on your real-time location during activities. If it senses an incident, and the watch is connected to your smartphone, it will notify your preset emergency contacts of your current location. This will no doubt be a key feature for women who are trepidatious about their safety when running outdoors.
There are 12 watch face options preinstalled on the Lily. The kicker, though, is that it’s not compatible with Garmin’s Connect IQ software. This means you can’t download third-party watch faces or apps to the device. Translation: what you see is what you get. Many of the watch faces are customizable, however.
Read more: Fitbit vs Garmin: Which ecosystem is right for you?
Garmin Lily specs
Garmin Lily | |
---|---|
Display | 25.4 x 21.3mm grayscale touchscreen TFT LCD 240 x 201 resolution Corning Gorilla Glass 3 |
Materials | Case: stainless steel or aluminum, fiber-reinforced polymer Strap: leather or silicone |
Dimensions and weight | 34.5 x 34.5 x 10.15mm Fits wrists with a circumference of 110-175mm 24g |
Battery | Up to 5 days |
Durability | 5ATM |
Storage | 7 timed activities, 14 days of activity tracking data |
Connect IQ compatibility | No |
Garmin Pay | No |
Sensors | Garmin Elevate heart rate sensor Connected GPS Accelerometer Ambient light sensor Pulse oximeter |
Connectivity | Bluetooth Android and iPhone compatible |
Garmin Lily price and competition
The Garmin Lily is now available from Garmin, Amazon, and other retailers. The Garmin Lily Sport Edition costs $199, while the Garmin Lily Classic Edition costs $249. Both are offered in three colorways.
Garmin Lily A compact and comfortable smartwatch for women
The Garmin Lily is Garmin’s first-ever smartwatch geared specifically towards women. It’s small, lightweight, and has all the basic fitness tracking features you could want.
In the fitness world, there isn’t really a 1:1 Garmin Lily competitor. It’s really the only fitness-focused smartwatch that is this geared towards women. However, many other comparable unisex devices exist that offer similar or even more features than the Lily.
The Fitbit Charge 4 comes to mind right away. It too boasts a small form factor and has nearly the same amount of smartwatch features. It has a leg up over the Lily in a few areas as well, with built-in GPS and Fitbit Pay support. It’s also much cheaper, currently sitting at $130.
Be sure to check out our list of the best fitness trackers for even more recommendations. Want to stick with Garmin but need something a little more powerful? Read our guide to Garmin watches.
Garmin Lily review: The verdict
Credit: Lily Katz / Android Authority
Garmin says the Lily is the “small and fashionable smartwatch women have been waiting for.” But is that really the case? We have mixed feelings.
On one hand, the Garmin Lily delivers on the important features. It’s a good overall fitness and health tracker, and the menstrual cycle and pregnancy tracking features are certainly useful for Garmin’s target demographic. Really, aside from the issues we have with the display and design, the Lily is an overall good (and basic) fitness tracker.
But the “smartwatch women have been waiting for?” With that phrasing, we would have really liked to see something more capable. Something that doesn’t lose out on features (Garmin Pay, built-in GPS, etc.) in lieu of a pretty design. We would have liked to see a slightly bigger design if it meant Garmin could include more advanced fitness and smartwatch features.
Marketing aside, the Garmin Lily delivers on the core features. It just left us wanting a little bit more.
Also read: The best fitness tracker deals we could find