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Garmin is now offering a $6.99/month subscription called Connect+ that provides āpremium features,ā including AI, on top of what you already get for free with the Garmin Connect app. So far, nothing is being paywalled, but it feels like the end of an era. Garmin watches were some of the last few wearables where you pay for a device and then all of its features are free to use forever. (The hardware has impressively long lifespans, too.) I signed up for Connect+ to see whatās inside, so letās take a look.
The new Connect+ subscription costs $6.99/month or $69.99/year. It only adds features on top of what you already get with the Garmin Connect app; no existing features are being paywalled.
Garmin did tease that āpremium enhancements may be made to existing features,ā leading users to speculate that any new features that come down the line may be limited to paid members. Garmin is in the habit of adding new features pretty frequently, and often enables them even on older watches. In the past year alone, weāve gotten strength coaching, a new type of run coaching, and the ability to detect your lactate threshold heart rate without a chest strapāall things that just appeared on my watch or in my app one day. I wouldnāt expect watch firmware updates to be affectedāthis is a premium subscription for the phone appābut I have to wonder if there will be fewer of those new app feature rollouts for free users going forward.
Connect+ is not Garminās first subscription offering, by the way. They have long offered a slate of services for various special purposes, including hiking and hunting maps, marine charts, search and rescue insurance, dog tracking, kidsā smartwatch tracking, and more. But this is definitely Garminās first foray into a premium subscription for health and fitness features, in the same vein as, say, Fitbit.
Garmin says the Connect+ subscription will come with:
Screenshots of a live activity on the home screen, editing sets and reps, and what you see when you do a treadmill workout. Credit: Beth Skwarecki
Until now, a workout you do on your Garmin watch stays on your Garmin watch, at least until you finish the activity. At that point, it syncs to your phone, where you can view and edit the details.
But with Live Activity, you can now use the Garmin Connect app while youāre doing an activity on your watch. Thatās especially useful for strength workouts, which previously required you to edit weights and reps through an awkward interface on the watch after each set.
To test this out, I did a few quick workouts on my Garmin Forerunner 265S. One was a mini workout of kettlebell swings and sit-ups that I created on the app, and sent to the watch.
I started the workout on my watch. Nothing happened on the phoneāI might have expected a notificationābut when I opened the Garmin Connect app on my phone, there was a tile on the home screen for a Live Activity. I tapped it, and there was the same workout I was doing on the watch. I could see my heart rate, the time elapsed, and which exercise I was supposed to be doing.
I didnāt see the promised exercise videos right away, but it turns out you need to swipe left on the heart rate graph. There you can see an exercise video (or a rest timer, if appropriate). Swipe again, and youāll see your heart rate zone. The bottom half of the screen shows your stats in progress, including your reps, sets, heart rate, and a timer.
Importantly, if youāve turned off rep counting or weight editing on your phone (because theyāre so annoying in normal use), youāll want to turn them back on for this. The watch counted my kettlebell swings, and at the end of each set prompted me to edit my reps and weight. This editing screen came up on both the watch and my phone, and of course it was easier to edit that information from the phone.
With Live Activity, you can do the following from the watch or phone:
But only the watch can do the following:
Live Activity definitely improves the usability of the watch for strength workouts. I donāt entirely see the point for running workouts, but maybe thereās a use case I havenāt thought of yet.
Four of the charts I can view in my Performance Dashboard Credit: Beth Skwarecki/Garmin
One of Garminās better-kept secrets is its web dashboard. You can log in here and view all your activities and dataāessentially a web view of everything thatās in the app.
The Performance Dashboard is a new item in the sidebar of the web dashboard. To set it up:
Some of the charts on the performance dashboard are also available from the free Reports tool, although Reports will only show you one chart at a time. The Performance Dashboard is definitely a better tool if youāre looking to really nerd out about your data.
For example, I can get a simple report from the Reports tool that shows my running mileage over the past six months. It gives me a bar chart with one bar per month. The Performance Dashboard, on the other hand, can give me a bar for each week, and I can select a custom timeframe instead of just selecting one of a few options. There are also more options for types of data you can view. Do you know how your watch will ask you at the end of each run how hard it felt? You can now see that on a graph called āperceived effort over time.ā
Thereās good news here for people who want AI in everything, and for those of us whose reaction is āoh god, not here tooā (this meme sums up my personal stance). The AI (āactive intelligenceā) is the one feature of Connect+ that requires you to opt in, even after you have subscribed to the whole package.
But I did it, dear readers. I opted in for you, so I could let you know what the AI can actually tell you about your trainingāand whether itās any better than Stravaās notoriously clueless AI.
Unfortunately, thereās not much to say at the moment. My home screen āinsightā (which you can turn off, by the way, even with AI enabled) at first just told me to check back later. My recent runs donāt have any AI commentary attached. Garmin says that āAs customers use Garmin Connect+ more, the insights will become more tailored to them and their goals.ā
As I was finishing up this article, I noticed that I now have a home screen insight. It tells me that I achieved 255 intensity minutes this week, exceeding my goal of 150. (I guess I set a goal for that at some point? OK.) Then it tells me consistency is good (not wrong) and gives a few sentences of encouragement.
The AI feature is labeled as a ābeta,ā with a thumbs up/thumbs down icon that lets me rate the insight I just read. I can say that itās interesting, not interesting, or āreport a concernā if itās inaccurate, discouraging, or poorly written. (You can also give a custom response.) Iāll keep an eye on these notes and report back as the AI gets to know me better.
To turn on the AI features, you need to click through an agreement where you allow the AI to access your training and health data (so that it can run its analyses). This also allows your data to be used as training data for the AI.
I asked Garmin if this means that the AI is only trained on people who opt-in. A spokesperson confirmed: āWe only train with data from users who have consented.ā The existing model was trained on users who previously granted permission for their data to be used for product improvements. Garmin has a brief AI transparency policy here.
You can revoke permission at any time in your Connect+ settings, which will also turn off your access to AI features.
Full story here:
Garmin is now offering a $6.99/month subscription called Connect+ that provides āpremium features,ā including AI, on top of what you already get for free with the Garmin Connect app. So far, nothing is being paywalled, but it feels like the end of an era. Garmin watches were some of the last few wearables where you pay for a device and then all of its features are free to use forever. (The hardware has impressively long lifespans, too.) I signed up for Connect+ to see whatās inside, so letās take a look.
Subscription details
The new Connect+ subscription costs $6.99/month or $69.99/year. It only adds features on top of what you already get with the Garmin Connect app; no existing features are being paywalled.
Garmin did tease that āpremium enhancements may be made to existing features,ā leading users to speculate that any new features that come down the line may be limited to paid members. Garmin is in the habit of adding new features pretty frequently, and often enables them even on older watches. In the past year alone, weāve gotten strength coaching, a new type of run coaching, and the ability to detect your lactate threshold heart rate without a chest strapāall things that just appeared on my watch or in my app one day. I wouldnāt expect watch firmware updates to be affectedāthis is a premium subscription for the phone appābut I have to wonder if there will be fewer of those new app feature rollouts for free users going forward.
Connect+ is not Garminās first subscription offering, by the way. They have long offered a slate of services for various special purposes, including hiking and hunting maps, marine charts, search and rescue insurance, dog tracking, kidsā smartwatch tracking, and more. But this is definitely Garminās first foray into a premium subscription for health and fitness features, in the same vein as, say, Fitbit.
Garmin says the Connect+ subscription will come with:
Active Intelligence (an AI analysis of your activities; this requires opt-in)
Enhanced LiveTrack (also available with an Outdoor Maps+ subscription), allowing you to text contacts when you start an activity, or set up a public tracking page
Live Activity, which lets you follow a workout from your phone and not just your watch
A new Performance Dashboard on the web with new charts and comparison features
Social features, including double points on badges and the ability to earn badges from anywhere in the world (some badges are only available in certain locations). Immediately upon signing up for Connect+, I noticed a little yellow star on the corner of my profile pic on the app.
Extra training guidance if youāre following a Garmin Coach program
What you get with Live Activity

Screenshots of a live activity on the home screen, editing sets and reps, and what you see when you do a treadmill workout. Credit: Beth Skwarecki
Until now, a workout you do on your Garmin watch stays on your Garmin watch, at least until you finish the activity. At that point, it syncs to your phone, where you can view and edit the details.
But with Live Activity, you can now use the Garmin Connect app while youāre doing an activity on your watch. Thatās especially useful for strength workouts, which previously required you to edit weights and reps through an awkward interface on the watch after each set.
To test this out, I did a few quick workouts on my Garmin Forerunner 265S. One was a mini workout of kettlebell swings and sit-ups that I created on the app, and sent to the watch.
I started the workout on my watch. Nothing happened on the phoneāI might have expected a notificationābut when I opened the Garmin Connect app on my phone, there was a tile on the home screen for a Live Activity. I tapped it, and there was the same workout I was doing on the watch. I could see my heart rate, the time elapsed, and which exercise I was supposed to be doing.
I didnāt see the promised exercise videos right away, but it turns out you need to swipe left on the heart rate graph. There you can see an exercise video (or a rest timer, if appropriate). Swipe again, and youāll see your heart rate zone. The bottom half of the screen shows your stats in progress, including your reps, sets, heart rate, and a timer.
Importantly, if youāve turned off rep counting or weight editing on your phone (because theyāre so annoying in normal use), youāll want to turn them back on for this. The watch counted my kettlebell swings, and at the end of each set prompted me to edit my reps and weight. This editing screen came up on both the watch and my phone, and of course it was easier to edit that information from the phone.
With Live Activity, you can do the following from the watch or phone:
Pause or unpause the workout
Edit reps or weight in a strength workout
Advance to the next set (strength), or start a new lap (in activities like running)
View stats like your heart rate, time elapsed, reps, pace, and so on
But only the watch can do the following:
Start the workout
Finish and save the workout
Create custom data screens
Live Activity definitely improves the usability of the watch for strength workouts. I donāt entirely see the point for running workouts, but maybe thereās a use case I havenāt thought of yet.
Whatās in the Performance Dashboard

Four of the charts I can view in my Performance Dashboard Credit: Beth Skwarecki/Garmin
One of Garminās better-kept secrets is its web dashboard. You can log in here and view all your activities and dataāessentially a web view of everything thatās in the app.
The Performance Dashboard is a new item in the sidebar of the web dashboard. To set it up:
Mouse over the black sidebar at the left side of the screen.
Select Performance Dashboard, which I see as the last blue item, just under Reports.
Click Add dashboard, and choose whether you want a running, cycling, multisport, or custom dashboard. (You can have more than one.)
Some of the charts on the performance dashboard are also available from the free Reports tool, although Reports will only show you one chart at a time. The Performance Dashboard is definitely a better tool if youāre looking to really nerd out about your data.
For example, I can get a simple report from the Reports tool that shows my running mileage over the past six months. It gives me a bar chart with one bar per month. The Performance Dashboard, on the other hand, can give me a bar for each week, and I can select a custom timeframe instead of just selecting one of a few options. There are also more options for types of data you can view. Do you know how your watch will ask you at the end of each run how hard it felt? You can now see that on a graph called āperceived effort over time.ā
What you get with Active Intelligence
Thereās good news here for people who want AI in everything, and for those of us whose reaction is āoh god, not here tooā (this meme sums up my personal stance). The AI (āactive intelligenceā) is the one feature of Connect+ that requires you to opt in, even after you have subscribed to the whole package.
But I did it, dear readers. I opted in for you, so I could let you know what the AI can actually tell you about your trainingāand whether itās any better than Stravaās notoriously clueless AI.
Unfortunately, thereās not much to say at the moment. My home screen āinsightā (which you can turn off, by the way, even with AI enabled) at first just told me to check back later. My recent runs donāt have any AI commentary attached. Garmin says that āAs customers use Garmin Connect+ more, the insights will become more tailored to them and their goals.ā
As I was finishing up this article, I noticed that I now have a home screen insight. It tells me that I achieved 255 intensity minutes this week, exceeding my goal of 150. (I guess I set a goal for that at some point? OK.) Then it tells me consistency is good (not wrong) and gives a few sentences of encouragement.
The AI feature is labeled as a ābeta,ā with a thumbs up/thumbs down icon that lets me rate the insight I just read. I can say that itās interesting, not interesting, or āreport a concernā if itās inaccurate, discouraging, or poorly written. (You can also give a custom response.) Iāll keep an eye on these notes and report back as the AI gets to know me better.
Garmin asks your permission to train its AI on your data
To turn on the AI features, you need to click through an agreement where you allow the AI to access your training and health data (so that it can run its analyses). This also allows your data to be used as training data for the AI.
I asked Garmin if this means that the AI is only trained on people who opt-in. A spokesperson confirmed: āWe only train with data from users who have consented.ā The existing model was trained on users who previously granted permission for their data to be used for product improvements. Garmin has a brief AI transparency policy here.
You can revoke permission at any time in your Connect+ settings, which will also turn off your access to AI features.
Full story here: