Our first day with the first-gen Apple Watch was disappointing, battery-wise. By 6.15pm our iPhone had run out of battery, and just half an hour later the Apple Watch gave up the ghost. Perhaps that day’s use had been a little excessive – we’d been checking out the apps and messing around with settings – but it’s not as if we’d run a marathon.
This poor experience was shared by many new Apple Watch owners. Apple said the device would offer an “all day battery life”, which it defines as “90 time checks, 90 notifications, 45 minutes of app use and a 30-minute workout with music playback from Apple Watch via Bluetooth, over the course of 18 hours”. That first day we we managed just 11 hours.
As time went on we got better at managing our watch use, and the hardware got better too; the Series 3 was good for a solid two days of typical use when brand-new, and the Series 4 and 5 aren’t far behind – provided you don’t hammer the cellular feature too much. But even owners of these newer models are sure to be interested in ways to stretch that performance still further.
With this in mind, we present our top tips for saving battery life on the Apple Watch. For similar advice for your smartphone, take a look at our tips to get better iPhone battery life.