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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Dan Bracaglia

I walked 6,000 steps with the Apple Watch 10 vs. Polar Vantage M3 — here's the winner

Close up of the Polar Vantage M3 smartwatch next an Apple Watch 10 on a user's wrist against a colorful background.

The Vantage M3 is the latest midrange smartwatch release from the Finnish wellness tech brand Polar. Priced at $499, this sporty and well-constructed device is a direct competitor to the recent Apple Watch Series 10, which also starts at $499 and is one of the best smartwatch models available. 

It's worth noting that the Polar is a dedicated workout and adventure-tracking watch with no third-party apps and limited smart features, while the Apple Watch 10 is a full-featured wearable with an enormous app library.

That distinction aside, both of these watches offer similar fitness and health monitoring capabilities like full-time heart rate tracking, ECG and skin temperature sensors, sleep and workout recovery insights, a built-in barometer for measuring elevation changes and onboard GPS, though the Polar sports a more advanced dual-band antenna and can perform SpO2 readings... sorry, Apple

You also get better battery life with the Polar, which can last for up to seven days in watch mode and 30 hours in GPS tracking mode. The Apple Watch 10, meanwhile lasts just 24 hours in low-power mode and seven hours with GPS tracking.

When it comes to keeping tabs on individual exercises like walks, runs, bike rides and hikes, both device provides detailed post-workout reports with comparable insights into total distance, elevation gained, max and average heart rate, pace, calories burned and more. The question is, which one is more accurate?

To find out, I strapped the Apple Watch 10 and Polar M3 to either wrist and set out on a gloomy afternoon for a hearty one-hour walk around chilly Seattle, Washington. Read on for the results.

Apple Watch 10 vs. Polar Vantage M3: Walk test

Because neither Polar nor Apple provide step count totals for individual walks, hikes or runs — which I continue to find incredibly frustrating — I began my test seated at my desk with both watches charged up to 100% to also test battery exhaustion.

With the Apple Watch secured on my left wrist and the Polar watch on my right, my journey began. As always, I manually counted every step I took for the duration of the walk using an old-school tally counter to denote every hundred steps. I also tracked the walk using the Strava app on my iPhone 12 Mini for additional data. 

6,000 steps and almost an hour to the dot later, I returned to my front doorstep and checked the results of each watch, careful not to take any additional steps before jotting down my day's total from within the Polar Flow and Apple Fitness apps. 

Apple Watch 10 vs. Polar Vantage M3: Walk test results

Both devices were within 50 steps of my manually counted total, which is quite impressive, but the Polar Vantage M3 was closer, overcounting by just 15 steps, compared to the Apple Watch undercounting by 33. 

Distance data is a near-match and Apple and Polar recorded similar average paces, as well. However, both are noticeably slower than Strava's average pace. This is probably because Strava aggressively pauses workout tracking when you physically stop moving even for just a few seconds to wait for a passing car or a crosswalk light to change. 

The Apple Watch measured around 20 additional feet of elevation gain compared to the Polar and Strava, suggesting it may have overcalculated my climb by just a bit. Interestingly, in my last walk test with the Apple Watch 10 vs. Pixel Watch 3, it was the Apple Watch that had nearly the same total elevation gain as Strava and its competitor that seemingly miscalculated.  

Heart rate data, meanwhile, is noticeably different between the Apple Watch and the Polar. The Apple Watch calculated my average heart for the walk at 144 bpm but the Polar watch said that same number was my maximum heart rate. So, what's the deal? 

Based on numerous prior walk tests, my hunch is that the Apple Watch's data is largely correct and the Polar watch vastly undercalculated my heart rate. For this walk, I moved quite vigorously during the second half, and with a steep three-block hill to climb right at the finish, I was definitely breathing deeply and sweating profusely by the time I made it home, suggesting a fairly elevated heart rate. 

Looking again at my previous walk test, where I didn't push myself quite so hard, the Apple Watch measured my average heart rate at 133 bpm and the Pixel Watch 3 measured it at 129 bpm. Assuming those numbers are close to correct, then 144 bpm seems like a sensible average for this walk. By the way, my max heart rate for the prior walk was 172 bpm (Apple) and 167 bpm (Google), which matches up with the Apple Watch's 179 bpm max measure for this walk. 

Both devices calculated roughly the same amount of calories burned for my walk, around 550. And despite vastly different battery life claims regarding GPS tracking usage, the Apple Watch only used 1% more battery than the Polar. 

Apple Watch 10 vs. Polar Vantage M3: And the winner is...

(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

With the step count total being the primary metric we use to determine a winner, the Polar Vantage M3 wins this challenge, beating out the Apple Watch Series 10 by a mere 18 steps. There is one major caveat, though. While most of the metrics between the two devices line up nicely, the Polar M3 appears to have undermeasured my heart rate by a marked amount. 

Further investigation is needed to determine whether this seemingly faulty heart rate data is a one-off or something more telling. Either way, additional testing on the Polar Vantage M3 is planned, including a full review. So, stay tuned! 

Which smartwatch models would you like me to test head-to-head next? Let me know in the comments below. 

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