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Review: Garmin Instinct 2S Solar

When I went on a two-week beach vacation, this was the only fitness watch I considered taking.
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Garmin Instinct 2S Solar
Photograph: Garmin
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Garmin Instinct 2S Solar
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Rating:

9/10

WIRED
Best value for the money in the sports category. Insane battery life. Small. Sharp monochrome screen. Tracks an incredible array of fitness-related features. Uses three GPS systems to pinpoint location and distance, even at sea or under tree cover. Can see your notifications, use Garmin Pay, or control your music. 
TIRED
Do you need all these features? Probably not. Still expensive. Some algorithms have an outdated focus on body weight. 

When I first tested a solar-powered Garmin several years ago, the solar function extended the battery life by a few days. Now, every solar-powered Garmin I’ve tested has lasted more than two weeks. As I was about to leave on a two-week family beach trip for a long overdue vacation, I naturally donned Garmin's new Instinct 2S Solar.

This latest solar-powered version of Garmin’s popular backcountry Instinct series is smaller and has a sharper display than previous ones. More important, I didn’t have to charge it for 21 days. That was three weeks of multiple GPS-tracked activities per day, including running, swimming, hiking, snorkeling, paddle boarding, and boogie boarding. If you value accurate backcountry tracking and not having to charge a battery, this is the best adventure watch on the market.

Fun in the Sun
Photograph: Garmin

The Apple Watch has consistently dominated the smartwatch and fitness tracker market for several years. But there’s one area where it simply cannot compete: battery life. If you’re busy enough to want a smartwatch, you’re busy enough to find it annoying that you have to charge it every day (sometimes more than once).

The Instinct 2S Solar uses a Power Glass face to convert the sun’s energy (as measured in lux) to battery power. If you’re the kind of nerd who likes to check your solar intensity and how much sunlight your watch is exposed to per day, you can scroll down the watch face to find this information from the previous six hours, along with other useful at-a-glance stats like notifications and step count.

It’s kind of fun to see your solar intensity go up and down as you bike, run, or sit in the shade. But all I really needed to know was that with a lot of direct sunlight, the Instinct 2S Solar got quite a bit of power. In my months of testing, I got up to three weeks on a single charge. That’s less than Garmin’s claim of 50 days, but way more than almost every other fitness tracker. I never had to put it in power-save mode, which would’ve extended the battery life by lowering the brightness on the watch face and disconnecting the watch from the paired phone. Three weeks is plenty of time.

It’s especially astonishing because the Instinct 2S Solar is much smaller than previous Garmin Instinct watches I’ve tested. The case is 40 mm, almost 5 mm smaller than the frankly enormous original Instinct; it’s about the same size as my Apple Watch Series 7. It still has a monochrome memory-in-pixel display, but it’s noticeably sharper to me than its predecessor. Even with a 1.2-inch screen, I can read my notifications clearly.

Beat the Heat
Photograph: Garmin

Since it debuted in 2018, the Instinct has been one of Garmin’s top sellers. It now comes in solar- and non-solar-powered versions; different specific editions, including a tactical version with, er, “stealth mode”; and some of the craziest colors in the sports watch market. Different colors are available for different editions, so Garmin now has a “design your own” tool on its website to make sure you get the Instinct you want.

I tested the standard version, which worked well for every sport I tried while wearing it. I used the compass to stay oriented while snorkeling (my nightmare is that I will surface to find that I’ve been abandoned, like the couple in Open Water). It accurately tracked the time and length of my lap pool swims and calculated my Swolf score. (I may be a slow swimmer, but at least I’m efficient!)

The running maps pinpointed when and where I slowed down on big hills in the stifling summer heat, and the Instinct 2S also accurately recorded when and where I veered off the trails to check out better views. As always, the Body Battery measurement was eerily accurate. The algorithm takes into account your physical activity, stress levels, and the amount and quality of sleep you get to calculate how ready you are for the day. It’s nice, if not strictly necessary, to feel a little bit off, check my watch, and get confirmation that yes, today is a bad day to run.

That's not all. The Instinct 2S still has many of Garmin’s advanced training features. Did I do the daily suggested workouts? No, but at least they made sense to me in terms of length and intensity. Running in high temperatures this summer gave me the chance to check heat acclimation in my training status (doing well, thank you for asking). 

Just about the only factor I'd change is how your self-reported weight affects your fitness age. Personally, I tend to be in better shape when I have more muscle mass. A lower BMI doesn’t always correlate with being in better shape, but Garmin Connect thinks it does; this summer, my fitness age lowered as I shrank, like the proverbial raisin in the sun. However, you can always not record it.

You pay a lot for a Garmin watch, but you also get a lot, and you also get a little confused. Unless you’re already familiar with Garmin’s five-button system, finding and managing all your options can be confusing. It does all the normal smartwatch things, like let you check your notifications, pay with Garmin Pay, or control your music. But for the more obscure functions, I still spend days Googling “Garmin how to find ambient temperature” and “Garmin how to check health snapshot.”

Apple’s latest software developments for its smartwatch are extremely interesting to me as a runner, and the Series 7 is Apple’s hardiest watch yet. But until Apple’s battery life improves, Garmin still makes the best rugged sports watch, and the Instinct series offers some of the best value for the money. It’s still the tracker I have a hard time taking off.