
















🏃♂️ Lead the pack with precision, power, and unbeatable endurance!
The Garmin Forerunner 955 is a premium GPS running and triathlon smartwatch designed for serious athletes. Featuring a vibrant always-on color display, multi-band GPS for superior location accuracy, and up to 15 days of battery life, it delivers comprehensive health insights including training readiness, HRV status, and adaptive workouts. Built-in full-color maps and a race widget provide real-time navigation and personalized race strategies, making it the ultimate companion for pushing your limits and achieving peak performance.





















| ASIN | B09WTTD27P |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Best Sellers Rank | #9,234 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #235 in Smartwatches |
| Color | Black |
| Connectivity technologies | Bluetooth, USB |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,703) |
| Date First Available | June 1, 2022 |
| Department | unisex-adult |
| Display resolution | 260 x 260 |
| GPS | Gps enabled |
| Human Interface Input | Buttons, Touchscreen |
| Item Weight | 1.9 ounces |
| Item model number | 010-02638-10 |
| Manufacturer | Garmin |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
| OS | Android & iOS |
| Other display features | Wireless |
| Product Dimensions | 1.8 x 1.8 x 0.6 inches |
| Scanner Resolution | 480 x 272 |
| Special features | PacePro™ Feature; Grade-Adjusted Pace; VO2 Max; Performance Condition; Sync Training Plans; Built-in Sports Apps; Visual Race Predictor; Track Running; Targeted Adaptive Coaching for Cycling, Race Adaptive Training Plans; Daily Suggested Workouts; Garmin Coach; Triathlon and Multisport Profiles; Wrist-Based Running Dynamics; Wrist-Based Running Power; Endurance Score; Real-Time Stamina |
| Standing screen display size | 1.3 Inches |
| Weight | 1.9 Ounces |
| Whats in the box | Forerunner 955, power/data cable, documentation |
| Wireless communication technologies | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
B**E
First time Garmin user
I’ve been using this watch daily for 3 months now and have lots to say about it! This was my first Garmin/fitness watch, although I’ve been wearing an Apple Watch for many years. So this review is primarily a comparison of Apple Watch vs Garmin. First of all, the pros: *this thing is so powerful! The first time I did a run with it, the data blew me away. I’m currently obsessed with watch my VO2 max climb and seeing my HR and run power after every workout. *the Garmin Coach is SO COOL. I used one of the integrated plans to train for a 10k (I was already a competent runner and not slow) and managed to shave 30s off my pace. Knocked out a PR I was super proud of, with just a couple weeks of following a plan. *I love the training readiness score. I’m slowly learning that I generally like to push myself harder than I should and this thing keeps me from injury and over exertion. I’m often surprised at how slow it tells me to go on Z2 runs, and yet I keep getting faster. *I love this thing when following a plan or doing a race! It regularly tells me (via AirPods) when I’m going too fast or too slow. It helps me stay solidly in my training zone. Then, during a race, you can tell it what finish time you want to hit and it will keep you on track the whole time! I don’t think I would’ve hit my PR without that. Just a quick glance at my watch and I immediately knew how many seconds I was ahead or behind my plan. *i love the touch screen but will say that the majority of the time I’m using the buttons to navigate. Took me a minute to figure out what they all did. *the battery life!!! Coming from Apple Watch, I was floored that this thing lasts for literally over a week on one charge. Come on Apple, get it together with the battery life! A few cons: *this watch is not small. I actually kinda like the large size but as a woman on the smaller side of average, it’s pretty bulky. Which leads me to.. *I never sleep with it (it’s too big to be comfortable) which means that my training readiness/body battery isn’t as accurate as it could be. I did try sleeping with it the first week but it did a terrible job of tracking my sleep. Seemed to only notice when I was sleeping from 6am on…?? *the Garmin is definitely not a smart watch. Sure, it tells you when someone is calling or has texted but there’s no communication from the watch to the phone (no answering calls, responding to texts). I found myself constantly irritated that I couldn’t send a quick reaction to a text from my watch like usual. (I now only wear my garmin for workouts and put my Apple Watch back on for the rest of the day) *BEWARE the dreaded blue triangle. About a month after having this, a blue triangle showed up on screen and I couldn’t get it to turn off/on or go away. After some googling, I realized it’s a common software glitch. There is a way to reboot it, but I had to do it three times in just a few days and that was annoying. So far so good though, it hasn’t happened in a long time. Overall, I’m thoroughly pleased with this purchase and feel like a legit athlete. I bought it mainly for its triathlon capabilities but haven’t trained for another tri yet. Unfortunately, the integrated Garmin coach only has running and cycling plans, but I did read that you can get a triathlon plan directly from the Garmin website (just haven’t tried it yet).
A**Y
Excellent watch, worth every penny!
I was a little worried initially if this would look a bit small on my wrist. Something about a big bold watch on my wrist I was really drawn to. This watch fits just that and is a little more elegant than the Fenix line, in my opinion. My first Garmin watch was the Venu Sq Music, which I still currently use for work. Work is a bit physical, and I want to keep this watch for just my workouts, mainly running. The Venu Sq Music is a little small for my liking, but I really like the look and feel of this watch. I would personally recommend to get the solar option, but as others have said, if you never go outside it's probably not needed. I ordered this watch mid Oct 2022, so not as many opportunities in WI to gauge the charging/maintaining abilities- I will have to wait for summer or a vacation for that. I did have a nice sunny day in late October here, and sitting for roughly 1hr in the sun charged a percent. Pretty decent in my opinion. I do not use any of the music, txt alert, or other Bluetooth options other than to sync to my phone every few days. Battery life is amazing. To a point that I actually have to think hard when my last charge was when it finally needs to be plugged in. I'm sure not using the Bluetooth alerts help a lot. I run just about everyday and use the GPS on run mode, so I still do challenge the battery a bit. Tons of features that I am still learning. The watch does take a few weeks to "learn you". I take the training suggestions with a grain of salt, but have noticed suggestions are not all that far off from my pre-planned training program. I like the quick morning report each morning. Kinda fun to wake up and look at phone for this info. Sure it's expensive but GPS tracking, battery life, and overall software/options on this watch are very expensive. I was on the fence at first, but very glad I pulled the trigger.
T**T
FANTASTIC WATCH
Where to begin... I bought this watch on some kind of super sale. I am not a watch guy, and always thought people with smart watches were just in the craze. Decided to take the leap since I already have a garmin bike computer, and I recently started running and swimming. I'll try to keep it short. There Are a million how to videos that show this watches features so I'll skip that This watch, is jammed pack with features. I don't even use them all there is so many. I love the ease of use, great tracking for running and swimming. Easy to start, pause and stop workouts. The touch screen works deceptively well under water? Its weird I've never seen a touch screen work when wet. The screen is plenty bright with sunglasses on outside, and I've been getting almost 2 weeks of battery with 7ish hours of logged activity a week. I love the morning report (I sleep with it on) The best part, hands down, is it works with the dexcom g7. For all you diabetic folks. There is dexcom and freestyle apps and watch faces to get your blood sugars right on there in a slightly delayed display. Love this watch, if you're in the fense like me, buy it. If you're friends have lower versions, talk smack
C**W
Best running watch
This is an absolute game changer for running. I’ve tried the Apple Watch I’ve tried my phone and nothing compares to the watch. I can leave everything at home but the watch and my head phones and it will track the distance perfectly with GPS.
K**S
Excelente! Estava discrente em relação à precisão dos monitoramentos, porém ao testar com fita e balança, foi muito eficaz na medição dos sinais vitais, bioimpedância, análise antropométrica e avaliação dos sinais vitais. Utilizei um estetoscópio em repouso e os traçados acompanharam os resultados no relógio. A bateria está surpreendendo! Um smartwatch tem seu tabu na duração da bateria, essa realmente está durando muito (liguei numa sexta e após 5 dias ainda tem a carga inicial de fábrica, abaixo de 50% mas durando, uso contínuo), mesmo com uso médio das funções ( monitoramento do sono, frequência cardíaca etc). Satisfeito com a aquisição, realmente uma máquina e tanto !!!
E**R
Dentro de la gama forerunner y sin dar un paso a las pantallas amoled, se presenta este fr 955 como una excelente opción, casi casi no le pide nada a los fenix....
J**K
Este modelo Garmin Forerruner 955 é excelente. Funções excelentes para quem pratica esportes em ambiente fechado ou aberto. Navegação com GPS é excepcional em seus sistemas. A única questão a ser colocada é a Nota Fiscal.
A**R
There are some deep dives discussing the Garmin 955 Forerunner on the internet, so I will not reinvent the wheel. This is just an overview by an average non-competitive runner. I'm 69 and have been running for 50 years. While I get slower yearly, I run 3000K a year. I replaced my aging Fenix 5X with the Garmin 955. I debated staying with the Fenix line, but I am glad I moved to the Forerunner series of sports watches. My last Forerunner was a big orange 910 back in 2011, and believe me, the 955 isn't your Grampa's Forerunner! The Forerunner 955 is a light watch and fits on my thin wrist. The large screen is quite legible indoors and outdoors. I covered the screen with a screen protector (reviewed elsewhere on Amazon), and the screen is still easy to read in all situations. The 955 has excellent maps, and the touchscreen makes navigating very smooth. The on-the-fly routing leads the field. (See what I did there?) The 955 works with Komoot and provides turn-by-turn navigation. While I prefer Suunto's mapping software to Garmin's, the 955 is a close second for designing a course. One of my favourite features of the 955 is the daily morning report. Your watch analyzes sleep, recovery and training, mixes it up with weather and heart rate variability and gives you a suggested training plan for the day. If you are like me and subscribe to a coached running plan, you can load a week's schedule into the watch. The Body Battery feature is Garmin's answer to the Whoop, and I will be curious how the two stack up. I'll update this review in a few months. The 955 has a built-in power meter, which reads higher than my Stryd unit. There is no standard for power so that each company will generate different numbers based on proprietary algorithms. What is essential is that the numbers are consistent, and the 955 and Stryd graphs parallel each other for the most part. The Stryd reacts slightly quicker to intervals than the Garmin. The 955 will also provide running dynamics. While I know some folks swear by these metrics, I've only been concerned with cadence. There are too many metrics to discuss in a short review, but I will mention my two favourites: ClimbPro and PacePro. Seeing a visual chart of a hill with the gradients is handy for long trail races, and PacePro, with grade-adjusted pacing, helps you pace a long race. While I don't listen to music when I run, I did test the 955 with Amazon and Spotify. Both platforms loaded and played music easily. Remember that you will need these services' premium (paid) versions to load music on your watch. (For some reason, I seem to need three paid streaming services.) I tried pairing several Bluetooth headphones, and all worked. I'm assuming playing music from your watch would be very detrimental to battery life. Garmin's software is complex, and there is a learning curve to getting the most out of the data the watch collects. The Connect software is being redesigned for Spring 2024, and I hope the UI will be updated and more organized. That noted it is simple to track the metrics that are important to you and ignore the rest. I'm not a triathlete, but I understand that Garmin will significantly improve the Automatic transition mode for the triathlon feature on the next update to Connect. Also slated for an update is track mode, making it more in tune with Apple's excellent track database. I'm a track rat and love that feature on my Apple Watch. Garmin is the big player in the room, so most third-party software is written to work with Garmin. I use Training Peaks, and the integration is seamless. I don't use Strava, but my running buddies tell me the "Orange App" imports Garmin's data. The 955 works with all Garmin hardware. I weigh myself on my Garmin scale each morning, and all the weight-based metrics are imported to Connect instantly. I've not had good luck with wrist-based heart rate in any watch, and I use the HRM Pro strap, which integrates fluidly with the 955. There is an App Store for Garmin, and you can buy widgets, watch faces and apps. I've never bothered, as the watch does all want, with one exception. I miss Suunto's excellent Backyard Ultra widget. It is an immaculate and elegant way to track a 100-miler. I keep my Suunto P9P just for Backyard Ultras. The 955 will run for 40-plus hours on a charge, so I top it up midweek. The 955 uses a proprietary charging cable. I usually ding any company using a proprietary charging cable, but the Garmin cable is so ubiquitous that you can find one to borrow at any race you attend. In conclusion, I'm happy with the Garmin 955. My only quibble is I wish Garmin had included a quick-release watch strap with the 955 as they do with the Fenix line.
B**N
Upgraded from the vivo active and the battery life and features is n this watch are fantastic. Navigation through menus is intuitive as well so easy to learn and use.
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