A feature-by-feature breakdown for lifters who want real data — rep tracking, recovery scores, structured programming, and more.
For pure weightlifting analytics, the Garmin Fenix 8 wins clearly. The Fenix 8 focuses on professional training metrics with advanced strength training modes, while the Apple Watch Ultra 3 excels in smart features and everyday connectivity. If lifting is your primary sport, that difference is meaningful.
1. Rep & Set Tracking
This is the most critical feature for weightlifters — and the biggest gap between the two watches.
Garmin Fenix 8 has the deeper implementation. The strength training profile includes rep counting, one-button set marking, and weight entry directly on the watch. You log the weight used per set, and that data is stored in Garmin Connect for long-term progression tracking. Garmin also added Strength PRs — personal records per exercise — in Q1 2026, along with a post-session muscle map showing primary and secondary muscles worked, displayed in Garmin Connect after each session.
Apple Watch Ultra 3 auto-detects reps for common movements and lets you log sets, but weight entry and exercise-level detail are much thinner. The ecosystem leans on third-party apps like Strong or Hevy to fill the gap — which works well, but requires extra steps.
2. Recovery & Readiness
This is where Garmin pulls furthest ahead for serious lifters. The Fenix 8 provides a Training Readiness score based on continuous monitoring of sleep, recovery, and heart rate variability (HRV) — helping you decide whether to push hard or pull back before you even start warming up.
The Garmin Connect app presents core health metrics like sleep, heart rate, and HRV in a clean dashboard, alongside Body Battery — Garmin’s proprietary energy readiness score. The Fitness Coach feature delivers adaptive plans combining cardio and strength, adjusted dynamically using Body Battery and HRV data.
Apple Watch Ultra 3 includes HRV tracking and training load, but the readiness modeling is less granular and doesn’t adapt workout suggestions with the same depth. You get data — but fewer actionable recommendations built around it.
3. Training Load & Structured Programming
The Fenix 8 gives you training load broken down into aerobic vs. anaerobic focus, alongside stats like endurance score and hill score, suggested workouts to balance your load, and a daily Training Readiness rating based on sleep and recent activity.
Garmin’s Strength Coach plans offer well-structured progressive programs using accumulation, intensification, and deload phases — available directly on the Fenix 8. Apple Watch Ultra 3 has a structured workout builder and training load, but relies on third-party apps for serious progressive overload programming.
4. Ecosystem & App Integration
Garmin Fenix 8 supports Connect IQ apps, meaning you can download specialty weightlifting apps or custom data fields to enhance tracking. Garmin Connect is data-rich and allows you to build and sync custom strength workouts to the watch. The interface can feel dense, but the depth is real.
Apple Watch Ultra 3 integrates seamlessly with a wider app ecosystem — Strong, Hevy, MyFitnessPal — and syncs effortlessly with the iPhone Health app. If you’re already deep in the Apple ecosystem, the daily workflow is smoother. The gap is in native analytics depth, not third-party support.
5. Battery Life & 24/7 Recovery Tracking
Battery matters less for gym sessions themselves than for continuous recovery monitoring between them. Sleep tracking and overnight HRV data require the watch to be on your wrist at night — which means battery anxiety is a real problem.
- Garmin Fenix 8: Up to 16 days in smartwatch mode (AMOLED). You can track sleep and HRV every night for two weeks without charging.
- Apple Watch Ultra 3: 2–3 days in normal mixed use. You will need to charge it daily or every other day, which can interrupt sleep tracking consistency.
For recovery data quality, the Fenix 8’s battery advantage is a genuine practical win — not just a spec sheet number.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Garmin Fenix 8 | Apple Watch Ultra 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Rep & set logging | ✔ Deep — weight entry + PRs | ⚠ Basic — needs 3rd-party app |
| Post-session muscle map | ✔ Yes | ✘ No |
| HRV & recovery readiness | ✔ Body Battery + Training Readiness | ⚠ HRV present, less actionable |
| Structured lifting programs | ✔ Strength Coach plans | ✘ Relies on 3rd-party |
| Training load breakdown | ✔ Aerobic vs anaerobic split | ⚠ Basic load, no split |
| iPhone ecosystem integration | ⚠ Functional but clunky | ✔ Seamless |
| Battery for sleep & HRV tracking | ✔ ~16 days | ⚠ 2–3 days |
| Smartwatch features | ⚠ Good but secondary | ✔ Best-in-class |
Final Verdict — Who Should Buy Which
Choose Garmin Fenix 8 if you…
- Want detailed rep, set, and weight logging
- Use recovery data to plan training intensity
- Follow structured progressive programs
- Don’t want to charge your watch daily
- Also do running, hiking, or other endurance sports
Choose Apple Watch Ultra 3 if you…
- Already use iPhone and Apple ecosystem
- Use third-party apps like Strong or Hevy
- Want a great all-around smartwatch
- Prioritize notifications, payments, and daily use
- Lifting is one of several activities you track
Garmin is one of the few platforms that has made a serious, sustained effort to account for strength training in a meaningful way — and the Fenix 8 represents the best that effort has produced. Apple Watch Ultra 3 is an excellent watch, but its native lifting analytics remain secondary to its identity as a premium smartwatch. Know which one you are, and the choice is easy.
