Apple doesn’t always make the big leap forward feel affordable, but with the Apple Watch SE 3, they came close.
At the same $249 starting price as the SE 3 arrives with the S10 chip (the same powering the $799 Ultra 3), a first-ever Always-On display for the SE line, 5G cellular, fast charging, wrist temperature sensing, sleep apnea notifications, and a dramatically tougher Ion-X cover glass. That’s a meaningful upgrade from a two-year-old model that was starting to feel its age.
The compromises are real and honest: no ECG, no blood oxygen sensor, no hypertension notifications, no sapphire glass, and only 18-hour battery life. But for iPhone users who want a capable everyday fitness and health companion and don’t need the advanced clinical features of the Series 11 or the extreme durability of the Ultra 3, the SE 3 at $249 may be the most sensible Apple Watch ever made.
Here’s the complete Apple Watch SE 3 Review:
Quick Verdict
Overall Rating: 4.2 / 5
| Best For | iPhone users who want a capable everyday health and fitness watch at an accessible price |
| Skip If | You need ECG, blood oxygen, or more than 18 hours of battery life |
| Price | From $249 (GPS) / from $299 (GPS + Cellular) |
| Standout Feature | S10 chip + Always-On display + fast charging at $249 — the biggest SE upgrade in years |

AppleWatch SE 3
Pros
Cons
Specs Overview
| Spec | 40mm | 44mm |
|---|---|---|
| Display | Always-On Retina LTPO | Always-On Retina LTPO |
| Chip | Apple S10 | Apple S10 |
| Case Material | 100% recycled aluminum | 100% recycled aluminum |
| Glass | Ion-X (4x crack resistant) | Ion-X (4x crack resistant) |
| Battery | Up to 18 hours | Up to 18 hours |
| GPS | Built-in | Built-in |
| Cellular | Optional (5G) | Optional (5G) |
| Health Sensors | Optical HR, wrist temp, accelerometer, gyroscope | |
| Safety | Fall Detection, Crash Detection, Emergency SOS | |
| Water Resistance | WR50 (50 meters) | |
| Gestures | Double Tap, Wrist Flick | |
| Colors | Midnight, Starlight | |
| GPS Price | $249 | $279 |
| Cellular Price | $299 | $329 |
| Released | September 19, 2025 |
Related: Best GPS Running Watches / Best Affordable watches
Price
The Apple Watch SE 3 starts at $249 for the 40mm GPS model, unchanged from the SE 2, which makes the upgrade meaningful without any price sting. The 44mm GPS model is $279, and cellular models start at $299 (40mm) and $329 (44mm).
Here’s how it sits against the full Apple Watch lineup and its closest external competition:
| Watch | Price | Always-On | ECG | SpO2 | GPS Battery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Watch SE 3 | From $249 | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ~18 hrs total |
| Apple Watch Series 11 | From $399 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ~18 hrs total |
| Apple Watch Ultra 3 | $799 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ~20 hrs GPS |
| Garmin Forerunner 165 | $249 | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | 19 hrs GPS |
| Coros Pace 4 | $249 | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | 41 hrs GPS |
Within the Apple ecosystem, the decision is straightforward: the SE 3 is the right choice for most iPhone users who don’t have a specific clinical need for ECG or blood oxygen monitoring. For $150 more, the Series 11 adds those sensors along with a more modern edge-to-edge display and faster charging.
Against external competition, the SE 3 is positioned as a smartwatch first; its GPS-only battery endurance (~18 hours total use, not pure GPS tracking) is much shorter than sport-focused rivals like the Coros Pace 4 or Garmin Forerunner 165 at the same price. If dedicated running analytics and a multi-day battery are the priority, those watches are the better tools.
Design
The Apple Watch SE 3 carries the same exterior design as the SE 2 and, honestly, as the Series 5 from 2019. The rounded rectangular aluminum case, the flat display, the Digital Crown, and side button placement are all unchanged. If you’re upgrading from an older SE model expecting a fresh look, you won’t find one here.
That said, the design is Apple Watch, and Apple Watch is comfortable, well-proportioned, and recognizable on any wrist. At 40mm and 44mm, both sizes suit a wider range of wrists than the 49mm Ultra 3. The recycled aluminum case keeps it lightweight for all-day and sleepwear.
The most meaningful exterior upgrade is the Ion-X glass, now 4x more crack-resistant than the previous generation. For an everyday watch that’s going to take the inevitable countertop knock or gym equipment bump, this is a real-world improvement. It’s still Ion-X rather than sapphire (used on the Series 11 and Ultra 3), so it will show scratches over time, but it’s significantly more durable than before.
Four corner buttons on the watch face give quick access to media, Workout Views, and features like Pacer and Custom Workouts, and an interface refresh that makes navigating fitness features faster mid-run.
The updated Double Tap and new Wrist Flick gestures allow hands-free control, tap thumb and forefinger together to answer calls or stop timers, flick the wrist to dismiss notifications. Useful during runs when you don’t want to reach across and touch the screen.
Available in Midnight and Starlight subdued, understated colorways that work in any setting.
Display
The biggest functional upgrade from the SE 2 is the Always-On display, a feature finally arriving on the SE line after debuting on the Series 5 back in 2019.
It sounds simple, but it changes how the watch feels in daily use. You can glance at the time, check complications, or see a notification preview without a wrist raise or screen tap. For runners checking pace mid-stride, it means one less gesture between you and your data.
The display itself is an Always-On Retina LTPO panel, bright, clean, and of the same quality you’d expect from Apple. It’s smaller than the Series 11’s edge-to-edge display and doesn’t quite reach the peak brightness of the Ultra 3’s 3,000-nit panel, but for everyday use and outdoor runs, it’s more than adequate.
One small limitation: the always-on mode on the SE 3 doesn’t support the ticking-seconds animations available on the Series 11 and Ultra 3, a minor detail that won’t affect most users but is worth noting for watch face enthusiasts.
Training Features
Running & Fitness Tracking
Accurate outdoor route tracking for running, walking, cycling, hiking, with built-in GPS
Build structured interval sessions with multiple segments, targets, and rest periods with custom workouts.
Apple Intelligence-powered spoken motivation and pacing guidance during runs requires an iPhone nearby with Apple Intelligence enabled and Bluetooth headphones
Set a target pace with pacer for any distance, and get real-time feedback on how you’re tracking
Advanced running metrics such as Cadence, stride length, ground contact time, and vertical oscillation
Auto-workout detection automatically detects when you’ve started a run, walk, swim, or cycling session
Activity rings: Move, Exercise, Stand, goal tracking, the core Apple Watch fitness system
Apple Music integration automatically selects playlists based on your workout and preferences — or choose your own
Health Features
Wrist temperature sensing enables retrospective ovulation estimates for cycle tracking and richer Vitals app data, a significant upgrade from the SE 2
Sleep score tracks sleep quality based on duration, consistency, and interruptions
Sleep apnea notifications monitor breathing disruptions during sleep and alert if consistent signs are detected
Heart rate monitoring: Continuous optical HR tracking, high/low heart rate notifications, irregular rhythm alerts
Fall Detection detects hard falls and automatically contacts emergency services if you’re unresponsive
Crash Detection detects severe car crashes and contacts emergency services
Emergency SOS calls emergency services and shares your location
What’s missing vs Series 11:
- No ECG (atrial fibrillation detection)
- No blood oxygen (SpO2) sensor
- No hypertension notifications
- No always-on ticking-seconds animations
Smart Features
5G cellular (cellular models) make calls, stream music, send messages without an iPhone nearby
Siri on-device access, Siri with health data context, faster and more private than previous SE models
Messages, Phone, Maps, Calendar, Apple Pay
AirPods integration, pair with AirPods Pro 3 for combined heart rate data. Reviewers note this delivers accuracy on par with a chest strap, providing a compelling upgrade path for SE 3 owners
WatchOS 26 Smart Stack, Apple Intelligence integration, Liquid Glass design language
Performance
GPS Accuracy
The SE 3 uses built-in GPS for outdoor workout tracking. It does not have dual-frequency GPS like the Ultra 3, but only a single-band GPS. In normal running conditions on roads and open paths, GPS accuracy is reliable and consistent with Apple Watch quality. In urban canyons with tall buildings or dense tree cover, single-band GPS can occasionally show position drift, a limitation it shares with the Garmin Forerunner 165 at the same price.
Heart Rate Accuracy
The optical HR sensor in the SE 3 delivers solid accuracy for steady-state running and general fitness tracking. For high-intensity intervals and sprint work, optical HR can briefly lag as with all wrist-based sensors. For serious heart rate training, pairing with AirPods Pro 3 for biometric data or an external HR strap is a viable option.
Battery Life
Battery life is the SE 3’s most discussed limitation. Apple rates it at 18 hours of normal use, and real-world experience confirms this means daily charging for most users.
With the Always-On display active, GPS tracking for a 30–60 minute run, and regular notification use throughout the day, most reviewers end the day with 15–25% battery remaining. That’s enough to start sleep tracking, but tight enough that a morning top-up is often necessary.
For reference, the Coros Pace 4 at the same $249 price delivers 41 hours of GPS battery. The Apple Watch SE 3 is not a sport endurance tool; it’s a daily-charge smartwatch that also does fitness tracking very well.
Fast charging is a genuine improvement. 15 minutes of charging adds approximately 8 hours of use. Dropping it on the charger while showering gives enough battery to get through most of the day or night comfortably.
Who Should Buy It?
Buy the Apple Watch SE 3 if:
- You’re an iPhone user who wants a capable health and fitness watch at an accessible price
- You’re upgrading from an older Apple Watch (SE 2, Series 4, 5, 6) and want meaningful improvements
- You’re entering the Apple Watch ecosystem for the first time and want the best-value starting point
- Every day, fitness tracking, running, walking, cycling, and swimming, the gym covers your needs
- You want Always-On display and fast charging without paying for the Series 11
- You’re a casual to intermediate runner who doesn’t need deep training analytics or a multi-day battery
- Apple ecosystem integration, AirPods, iPhone, Health app, and Strava are central to your setup
Skip it if:
- You need ECG or blood oxygen monitoring, step up to the Series 11 at $399
- Battery life beyond 18 hours matters. The Coros Pace 4 or Garmin Forerunner 165 at the same price deliver far more GPS endurance
- You’re on Android, the SE 3 requires an iPhone
- You’re a serious runner or triathlete who wants deep training load analytics, offline maps, or multi-day GPS purpose-built sport watches from Garmin, Coros, or Polar are better suited
- You want a distinct new look the SE 3 design is essentially unchanged from 2022
Final Verdict
The Apple Watch SE 3 is the best value Apple Watch ever made and one of the most practical smartwatches at $249 for iPhone users.
The S10 chip, Always-On display, fast charging, wrist temperature sensing, sleep apnea notifications, and the dramatically tougher Ion-X glass all arrive at the same price as its predecessor. That’s a generational leap, not just a spec refresh.
For casual to intermediate runners who want a daily companion that handles workouts, health monitoring, safety features, and everyday smartwatch use beautifully, and who charge their watch every night without a second thought, the SE 3 delivers everything they need.
The gaps are real: no ECG, no SpO2, no multi-day battery. If those matter, the Series 11 or a dedicated GPS sport watch is the right call. But for the wide majority of iPhone users who just want a capable, reliable, everyday Apple Watch, this is the one.
Scores:
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Design | 3.8 / 5 |
| Display | 4.3 / 5 |
| Training Features | 4.0 / 5 |
| Performance | 4.1 / 5 |
| Value | 4.7 / 5 |
| Overall | 4.2 / 5 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Apple Watch SE 3 good for running?
Yes, for casual to intermediate runners. Built-in GPS, advanced running metrics (cadence, stride length, vertical oscillation), Custom Workouts, Pacer, and Workout Buddy cover everyday training needs well. For serious runners who want deep training load analytics, a multi-day battery, or offline maps, dedicated sport watches from Garmin or Coros offer more.
What is the difference between the Apple Watch SE 3 and the Series 11?
The Series 11 adds ECG, blood oxygen (SpO2) monitoring, hypertension notifications, an edge-to-edge, always-on display with ticking-seconds animations, faster charging, and sapphire glass for $150 more, starting at $399. The SE 3 covers everyday fitness and health monitoring without these clinical sensors.
Does the Apple Watch SE 3 have an Always-On display?
Yes — for the first time in SE history. The Always-On Retina display lets you glance at the time and complications without raising your wrist or tapping the screen. It doesn’t support the ticking-seconds animations available on the Series 11 and Ultra 3.
Does the Apple Watch SE 3 work with Android?
No, Apple Watch requires an iPhone running iOS 16 or later. It is not compatible with Android phones.
What sizes does the Apple Watch SE 3 come in?
40mm and 44mm, both available in GPS-only and GPS + Cellular variants, in Midnight and Starlight aluminum finishes.
This review is based on aggregated expert testing data, official specifications, and real user feedback compiled from across the running and smartwatch community. We bring together the most accurate and up-to-date information so you can make a confident buying decision.




