Samsung Galaxy Watch5 and Watch5 Pro review

GSMArena Team, 3 October 2022.

Introduction and specs

Samsung made a bold step last year by ditching its own Tizen OS for watches and moving over to Google's Wear OS with its own One UI skin on top. The bet was big, but it seems like it's paying off because the appetite for Galaxy smartwatches has remained steady. And you get considerably better integration with your Android smartphone.

Samsung Galaxy Watch5 series review

This year, the company made another bold move - removing the rotating bezel from the Classic model and renaming it to Pro. Now, the lineup consists of the Galaxy Watch5 and the Watc5 Pro. There's still the virtual bezel control, but the physical one will be missed.

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Galaxy Watch5 Pro Galaxy Watch5
Body Titanium body, 45mm diameter Aluminum body, 40mm or 44mm diameter
Build Sapphire crystal front glass, MIL-STD-810H compliant, 50m water resistant (IP68), 20mm straps
Display 1.40" Super AMOLED, 450x450px resolution, 321ppi
Chipset Exynos W920 (5 nm): Dual-core 1.18 GHz Cortex-A55; Mali-G68.
Memory 16GB 1.5GB RAM
Sensors ECG certified, blood pressure monitor, accelerometer, gyro, heart rate, barometer
OS/Software Android Wear OS 3.5, One UI Watch 4.5
Battery 590mAh 410mAh for 44mm model and 284mAh for 40mm model
Misc Qi wireless charging 10W, NFC, Samsung Pay, loudspeaker & mic for calls, virtual rotating bezel

Hardware-wise, there are few changes in place, but they are more than welcome. The Pro model has almost twice the battery capacity compared to its direct predecessor, now 590 mAh. The vanilla Watch5 also gets a bigger battery, but the upgrade is relatively modest - 410 mAh from 361 mAh - at least as far as the 44mm is concerned.

Samsung Galaxy Watch5 series review

Another upgrade worth noting is that the new Watch5 series have a sapphire crystal protecting the display and the Watch5 Pro takes it one step further with a titanium body.

As for the rest of the hardware, it's pretty much identical as all four watches run on the same Exynos W920 platform, use the same 1.4-inch Super AMOLED display with 450 x 450px resolution and have the same set of sensors. This includes the ECG monitor, and the blood pressure monitor, too. The Watch5 Pro also has a body temperature sensor as a bonus, which might come in handy these days.

Although small, these changes may affect user experience quite a bit, so we dive deeper into the Galaxy Watch5 and Watch5 Pro capabilities in the following pages.

Unboxing the Galaxy Watch5 and Watch5 Pro

We have both the Galaxy Watch5 and the Watch5 Pro. The former came in the 40mm variant, while the latter is available only in the 45mm option. This means that the Watch5 Pro came in a slightly bigger box compared to the Watch5, but the contents were pretty much identical.

Galaxy Watch5 Pro and Watch5 unboxing - Samsung Galaxy Watch5 and Watch5 Pro review Galaxy Watch5 Pro and Watch5 unboxing - Samsung Galaxy Watch5 and Watch5 Pro review
Galaxy Watch5 Pro and Watch5 unboxing

Both watches have the usual set of user manuals along with a magnetic wireless charging cable. This time around, however, the cable ends with a USB-C connector instead of USB-A, and that's a welcome change, given that more and more charging bricks work with USB-C cables. Samsung's higher-tier Galaxy phones have been using PD USB-C connectors for a while now, so it makes sense.

Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 17 Aug 2023
  • CbI

Does it have lte.

  • Me wae
  • 07 Jul 2023
  • LbA

Did you turn off the GPS, that sensor drain battery more than others sensor...

  • ss
  • 29 Jun 2023
  • 0mc

Battery life in Garmin Fenix 7X Solar (Transreflective screen) after full week of: -6x 50 min walk tracking with precise GPS -2 workouts 30 min, no GPS -AOD 7 days x 24h -heart rate tracking 7 days x 24h -oxygen rate tracking 7 days x 24h ...