Watch series 8

3 min read

Mid-tier smartwatch gets iterative update with few new features

The Apple Watch Series 8 comes in a variety of aluminium and stainless steel finishes, including this colourful (Product)Red.

> From £419 (41mm) / £449 (45mm) FROM apple.com/uk > FEATURES 41mm or 45mm case size, Apple S8 processor, Always-On Retina display, dust-resistant to IP6X, water-resistant to 50m, up to 18 hours’ battery life, GPS, mobile connectivity options

The Apple Watch Series 8 feels like the slightly forgotten middle sibling in a family of three – sandwiched being the flashy new Apple Watch Ultra (see p24) with its rugged design, Action button and dual-channel GPS, and the Apple Watch SE (see p27), which shares many features with the Apple Watch Series 8, but at £259 for 40mm and £299 for the 44mm, costs up to £160 less.

The Apple Watch Series 8 is also practically identical to last year’s Apple Watch Series 7 – it shares the same rounded-corner case design with an edge-to-edge Always-On Retina display in 41mm and 45mm case sizes, is still dust-resistant to IP6X and water-resistant up to 50m – and offers identical battery life of up to 18 hours between recharges. Put an Apple Watch Series 7 and Apple Watch Series 8 side by side and they’re impossible to tell apart, with the biggest changes externally being to the finishes – aluminium Series 8s come in Midnight, Starlight, Silver and (Product)Red, while stainless steel versions come in Silver, Gold and Graphite.

Prices, not surprisingly, have changed too. While the Apple Watch Series 7 cost £369 (41mm) and £419 (45mm) when it arrived last year, the new models are more expensive at £419 and £449 respectively. All of which makes the Watch Series 8 a hard sell in a world where both the affordable Apple Watch SE and more capable Apple Watch Ultra exist, and there are still enough Apple Watch Series 7 models kicking around to make it worthwhile picking up one of those instead.

Wear your Apple Watch to bed, and you’ll be able to see how well – or badly – you’ve slept the night before.

And yet, the Apple Watch Series 8 also has a long list of benefits in the ‘pro’ column. It remains a brilliant and highly capable smartwatch for most people, but now adds Crash Detection – which enables the Watch to identify if and when you’ve been involved in a serious car accident and so alert the emergency services automatically – and includes two new temperature sensors, which are able to record fluctuations in your body temperature (and the things that might affect it, such as illness, alcohol, jet lag or ovulation) as you sleep. As with the Apple Watch Series 7, the Apple Watch Series 8 also includes an Always-On Retina display, an ECG and a blood oxygen sensor, all of which the Apple Watch SE lacks. The Apple Watch Series 8 also has a Low Power Mode, which can extend its battery life by 18 hours to a maximum of 36.