watchOS 11 Review: A Smarter, Healthier Future for Your Wrist
watchOS 11 Review: A Subtle but Significant Leap Forward
After the major visual overhaul of watchOS 10, Apple is taking a different approach in 2025. The watchOS 11 update, unveiled at this year's WWDC, isn't about radical redesigns. Instead, it's a focused, intelligent refinement that weaves deeper health insights and smarter assistance into the fabric of your daily life.
Based on our extensive testing of the public beta, watchOS 11 centers on three core pillars: proactive health monitoring, smarter athletic training, and more intuitive, context-aware interactions. While it may not look dramatically different at first glance, the underlying changes make this one of the most meaningful updates for the Apple Watch in years. This review will dive deep into every major new feature, its real-world application, and whether it’s time to get excited for the public release this September.
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What's Actually New in watchOS 11? The Core Features
Apple's latest software update for the Apple Watch introduces several powerful new capabilities. From the groundbreaking Vitals app to the much-requested Training Load feature, here’s everything you need to know.
The Vitals App: Your Personal Health Dashboard
The undisputed headline feature of watchOS 11 is the new Vitals app. For years, the Apple Watch has collected a vast amount of health data overnight—heart rate, respiratory rate, wrist temperature, blood oxygen, and sleep duration. However, interpreting this data was left largely to the user. The Vitals app changes that completely.
How it Works: The Vitals app works silently in the background while you sleep. It establishes your personal baseline for key health metrics over several nights. Once it understands what’s “typical” for you, it can intelligently identify when one or more metrics fall outside your normal range.
- Baseline Establishment: Wear your Apple Watch to sleep for at least four nights to establish an initial baseline.
- Overnight Analysis: The watch continues to measure your heart rate, respiratory rate, wrist temperature, and blood oxygen.
- Out-of-Range Alerts: If two or more metrics are outside your typical range, you'll receive a notification in the morning. The app will provide a clear summary of what’s unusual, for example, "Your heart rate was higher and your respiratory rate was elevated last night."
- Contextual Insights: The app allows you to log contributing factors like alcohol consumption, illness, or increased stress. This helps you (and the app) understand the context behind the data, turning raw numbers into actionable insights.
Real-World Example: Imagine you go to bed feeling fine but wake up feeling groggy and "off." You check your Apple Watch and see a notification from the Vitals app. It highlights that your respiratory rate was significantly higher than usual and your wrist temperature was elevated. This could be an early warning sign of an impending illness, prompting you to take it easy, hydrate, and monitor your symptoms before they become severe. According to a study published in The Lancet Digital Health, wearables can detect physiological changes related to infections like COVID-19 even before symptoms appear, making features like the Vitals app incredibly powerful.
Training Load: Smarter Fitness for Everyone
For athletes and fitness enthusiasts, the new Training Load feature is a game-changer. Previously available only through third-party apps, this feature is now baked directly into the Workout app, providing a more holistic view of how your exercise impacts your body over time.
How it Works: Training Load helps you understand the strain your workouts put on your body, preventing overtraining and optimizing recovery.
- Effort Rating: After most cardio-based workouts (running, cycling, HIIT, etc.), you'll be prompted to provide an Effort Rating on a scale of 1 (easy) to 10 (all out). This subjective rating is combined with objective data like heart rate and duration to calculate a workout score.
- 7-Day vs. 28-Day Load: The system compares your accumulated training load over the last 7 days to your load over the last 28 days.
Training Status: Based on this comparison, it assigns you one of four statuses:
- Underreaching: Your training is lighter than usual, which could lead to a loss of fitness.
- Maintaining: You're balancing training and recovery well.
- Building: You're increasing your training load, which is ideal for improving fitness.
- Overreaching: Your 7-day load is too high compared to your 28-day baseline, increasing your risk of injury and burnout.
Real-World Example: You're a casual runner training for a 10K. You've been following a plan and feeling good. After a particularly tough week with three hard runs, your Training Load status shifts to "Overreaching." The Apple Watch essentially tells you, "Hey, you've been pushing hard. Your body might need a break." This prompts you to swap your next planned interval session for a light recovery jog or a rest day, helping you avoid injury and perform better on race day.
For more ways to enhance your workout routine, check out our guide on the
The Smart Stack Gets Smarter with AI and Live Activities
The Smart Stack, introduced in watchOS 10, becomes significantly more useful in watchOS 11 thanks to smarter suggestions and new widget integrations. Apple is leveraging on-device intelligence to make the stack more proactive.
- Smarter Suggestions: The Smart Stack will now automatically surface relevant widgets based on your context. For example, the new Translate widget will appear at the top of your stack when you travel to a country with a different language. If there's a severe weather alert for your area, that widget will pop up automatically.
- Live Activities Integration: Live Activities from iPhone apps now appear in the Smart Stack. You can track your Uber's arrival, follow a food delivery, or see live sports scores directly from your wrist without having to open an app. This makes glancing at your watch for real-time information faster and more fluid.
- Check In: The Check In feature, which lets friends or family know you've arrived safely, is now integrated. You can start a Check In directly from the Messages app on your watch, and its progress will be visible in the Smart Stack during your journey.
Enhanced Customization and New Watch Faces
Customization is always a key part of any watchOS update. This year, the focus is on the Photos watch face. Using machine learning, your watch now analyzes your photo library to suggest the best images for your watch face, automatically cropping and framing them for optimal composition. It intelligently considers things like portraits, landscapes, and even the empty space needed to place the time.
This AI-driven curation saves you the effort of manually sifting through thousands of pictures and often produces results you wouldn't have thought of yourself, making your watch feel more personal and dynamic.
While you're personalizing your software, don't forget the hardware. Explore our top picks for
watchOS 11 Compatibility and Release Date
As with every new OS, some older models are left behind.
- watchOS 11 Supported Devices: watchOS 11 is compatible with Apple Watch Series 6 and later, Apple Watch SE (2nd generation), and Apple Watch Ultra (1st and 2nd generation). This means support has been dropped for the Apple Watch Series 5.
- Release Date: Following Apple's typical schedule, watchOS 11 was announced at WWDC 2025 in June. The developer beta was released on the same day. A public beta followed in July, and the final public release is expected in mid-to-late September 2025, alongside the new iPhone and Apple Watch models.
Is watchOS 11 Worth the Update? Our Verdict
After weeks of testing, our verdict is clear: watchOS 11 is an essential update. It trades the visual "wow" factor for meaningful, practical improvements that enhance the core strengths of the Apple Watch.
The Vitals app alone makes it a must-have for anyone interested in their health. It transforms the Apple Watch from a passive data collector into a proactive health companion. Similarly, Training Load provides professional-grade fitness insights that were previously inaccessible to casual users.
While the changes to the Smart Stack and watch faces are more iterative, they contribute to a more seamless and intelligent user experience. The update feels mature, thoughtful, and powerfully useful. It solidifies the Apple Watch's position as the leading wearable for health, fitness, and smart connectivity.
Conclusion
watchOS 11 is an update focused on intelligence. It learns your health baselines, understands your workout intensity, and anticipates your needs with a smarter widget stack. It may not be the flashiest update Apple has ever released, but its new features provide genuine, tangible benefits that you'll feel every day. It’s a powerful step forward that makes a great product even better, laying a solid foundation for an even smarter, more AI-driven future for the Apple Watch.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Should I update to watchOS 11?
Yes—if your watch is compatible and your iPhone runs iOS 18. watchOS 11 brings Sleep Apnea Notifications, the new Vitals app (out-of-range health alerts), Training Load for workout intensity, smarter Smart Stack widgets, and more flexible Activity rings (rest days, per-day goals). It’s now a mature, stable release.
What's new for watchOS 11?
- Sleep Apnea Notifications (Series 9, Series 10, Ultra 2).
- Vitals app with alerts when multiple overnight metrics are outside your typical range.
- Training Load with 7-day vs 28-day effort tracking and manual/estimated effort ratings.
- Activity rings: pause without losing streaks; per-day goals.
- Smarter Smart Stack, new/interactive widgets, and upgrades to Check In, Translate, and double-tap.
Which devices will get watchOS 11?
Apple Watch Series 6 and later, SE (2nd gen), Ultra, and Ultra 2.
When was watchOS 11 released?
watchOS 11 was publicly released on September 16, 2024. Subsequent point updates have added fixes and refinements.
What does watchOS 11.1 do?
watchOS 11.1 delivered bug fixes and improvements, including a fix for writing breathing-disturbance data to HealthKit for some users, plus security patches (Kernel, Siri, and more).
Does watchOS 11 require iOS 18?
Yes. Updating/pairing with watchOS 11 requires an iPhone XS or later (or iPhone SE 2nd gen or later) running iOS 18 or later.
Which Apple Watch is the best?
- Ultra 2: best for battery, durability, GPS/diving, outdoor use.
- Series 10: best everyday pick—thinner body, larger/brighter display, fast charge.
- SE (2nd gen): best value—core features at a lower price.
Choose based on your priorities: rugged endurance (Ultra 2), balanced features/price (Series 10), or budget (SE).
Will the Apple Watch 11 have blood oxygen?
Unknown as of today. Apple has not announced Series 11 yet. Note: due to an ongoing U.S. patent dispute, recent Apple Watch models sold by Apple in the U.S. shipped with the Blood Oxygen feature disabled; availability could depend on the outcome of Apple’s appeal and regional rules.
How much will the Apple Watch 11 cost?
Not announced. Historically, flagship Apple Watch pricing has started around $399 (US) for aluminum GPS models. Expect official pricing at Apple’s September event.
How long do Apple Watches last?
With normal care and occasional battery service, many users comfortably get 4–5+ years of useful life. Apple designs Watch batteries to retain ≈80% capacity after ~1000 cycles and offers paid battery service; AppleCare+ can cover batteries under 80% capacity.
Will the Apple Watch 11 have blood pressure?
No official announcement. As of now, Apple hasn’t shipped on-wrist blood-pressure measurements on any Apple Watch. If it appears, Apple will announce it at launch with regional availability details.
Which Apple watches won't get watchOS 11?
Series 4, Series 5, and the first-generation SE (2020) don’t support watchOS 11. If you’re on one of these, you’ll remain on watchOS 10.
Author:
By Wiredu Fred, a senior tech analyst and wearable technology expert at FrediTech. With over eight years of experience reviewing consumer electronics, Fred has covered every Apple Watch release since Series 2. His analysis focuses on the practical application of technology in everyday life, with a special emphasis on health and fitness innovations. He has tested every beta of watchOS 11 since its release at WWDC 2025.