I just traded in my Polar running watch for a Garmin after learning a rather expensive lesson
Date:
Fri, 09 Jan 2026 15:56:28 +0000
Description:
Just because two devices should be compatible in theory, that doesn't necessarily mean they are.
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Garmin sports watches have seen me through many years of running. My first
was a chunky but functional Garmin Forerunner 35, which saw me through my first foray into 'serious' training, through to a Garmin Fenix 7S, which was frankly much more watch than I needed. Get Fit for '26 This article is part
of our Get Fit for '26 series, in which our writers talk about the wellness and fitness challenges and experiences they've taken on, and the ones set to shape the year ahead. You can read all the articles in the series here.
My love of the brand's watches didn't last forever though. Worried by a prolonged server outage , and feeling jaded by the launch of Garmin Connect+ (which sneakily put LiveTrack text alerts for runners behind a paywall but not ones for cyclists), I decided that my next device would be from Polar.
The switch was easy, and I was already familiar with the interface and the Polar Flow app from my time as TechRadar's fitness editor many years ago. Everything went perfectly smoothly until it didn't.
The problem was a heart rate monitor. I've owned a chest strap heart rate monitor for several years, and find it particularly useful for interval training on a spin bike, where a wrist-based monitor isn't as quick to
respond as I'd like, and can be affected by me gripping the handlebars.
Having a reading from the chest strap fed straight to the bike's screen via ANT+ is quick, convenient, and makes it easy to see how my efforts are impacting my heart rate in as timely a manner as possible.
The problem is the strap itself. If you wear a bra to exercise, as I do, you have to position the heart rate monitor somewhere below the bra's bottom
band, meaning it's sitting awkwardly around your ribs. Even if it doesn't
slip down (which it might), it's not a particularly comfortable arrangement. Unlike other chest-worn heart rate monitors, the Garmin HRM-Fit (bottom)
snaps onto the bottom of a sports bra, meaning there's no need for a full elastic strap (Image credit: Amanda Westberg)
I was therefore very pleased when, a few years ago, Garmin released the HRM-Fit a heart rate monitor that snaps directly onto your bra's band. No more worrying about a second strip of elastic sliding down mid-workout. It's
a brilliant idea, and one I've not seen copied by any of the other major fitness tech brands to date.
Sure, there are HRMs that get around this problem by strapping around your
arm rather than your chest (eg the Polar Verity Sense ), but these use the same tech as the monitor in a watch and are therefore subject to the same limitations
My Polar watch supports sensors via ANT+ and Bluetooth, so I put the HRM-Fit on my Christmas wish list. Santa kindly obliged, and I quickly connected the two, excited to take the new duo on their maiden run on Boxing Day. Running smoothly?
With the HRM-Fit clipped comfortably into place and wrapped up against the British weather, I stepped outside, hit the start button, took a few paces and... nothing. Not only could I see no heart rate on my watch, there was no pace or distance visible either. I cancelled the workout and began again, making sure to wait until the watch had established a firm GPS link before hitting 'start'. Again, nothing.
Starting to get cold, I decided to go ahead and start running anyway, making up a rough 5km route along my home town's empty footpaths.
When I got home, the workout showed no speed or distance in the Polar Flow app, though the route had been tracked somehow, and even appeared plotted on
a map when synced with Strava. Most strange.
A quick search online suggested that it might be a temporary GPS hiccup with the watch, but that seemed like a strange coincidence considering the only factor that had changed that day was the new heart rate monitor. Then I found it. Apparently several Garmin heart rate monitors, including but not limited to the HRM-Fit, misidentify themselves as foot-pods when connected to Polar watches. Comment from r/Polarfitness
The watch is therefore expecting data like cadence and stride length, not heart rate, and to make a long story short, everything gets very messed up. There's no fix for the problem; the devices are simply incompatible. Bother.
It was then a choice keep either the heart rate monitor or the watch, and stick the other on eBay. I decided I valued the comfort of the Garmin HRM-Fit more than my (possibly somewhat childish) urge to stick it to Garmin for bringing out a paid tier to a previously free-to-use app.
After a lot of research (I used to review sports watches as part of my job, but that was several years ago) I opted for a Garmin Lily 2 Active . It's the company's smallest sports watch with on-board GPS (I've never been a great
fan of connected GPS that piggybacks off your phone), and unlike the standard Garmin Lily 2 , it supports accessories via ANT+ and Bluetooth. The Garmin Lily 2 Active does exactly what I need it to, and no more (Image credit: Garmin)
Its feature set is much leaner than the Polar, or even my previous Garmin,
but that's fine for me. I've never actually used maps on a watch unless I'm writing a review, so their absence isn't an issue, and I don't miss a color screen. As long as it allows me to sync a plan from TrainingPeaks and nags me when I'm outside the appropriate heart rate range, it's all good.
The Lily 2 Active's tiny size means it's also comfortable enough to wear at night, so I'm actually tracking my sleep without feeling like I have a brick strapped around my wrist. It has everything I need and absolutely no more,
and that's fine.
The moral of the story is clearly that if you're planning on picking up a new sensor or accessory, make sure you search for the names of both products together to find out whether they're truly compatible even if the specs suggest that they should be.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the
Follow button!
And, of course, you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.
======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/health-fitness/i-just-traded-in-my-polar-running-wat ch-for-a-garmin-after-learning-a-rather-expensive-lesson
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 (Linux/64)
* Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)