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Garmin Vivoactive HR Review

The best of the best if you want a fitness tracker that can keep up with all of your adventurous outdoor activities and your golf game
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Garmin Vivoactive HR Review (The Garmin Vivoactive HR.)
The Garmin Vivoactive HR.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman
Price:  $250 List
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Manufacturer:   Garmin
David Wise
By David Wise ⋅ Senior Review Editor  ⋅  August 23, 2017
Contributions From: Austin Palmer
72
OVERALL
SCORE
  • Fitness Impact - 30% 8.0
  • Health Impact - 25% 7.0
  • Ease of Use - 20% 6.0
  • Ergonomics - 15% 6.0
  • Display - 10% 9.0

Our Verdict

Earning our Top Pick for Outdoor Activities award, the Garmin Vivoactive HR is for those that want a piece of wearable tech that goes beyond simply counting steps or flights of stairs climbed. This waterproof fitness tracker has tons of preloaded activity profiles, like skiing or SUPing (stand up paddleboarding), as well as an extensive set of abilities to track your golf game. The Vivoactive HR is a great choice for the more outdoorsy among us.
REASONS TO BUY
Tons of activity profiles
Rugged
Waterproof
REASONS TO AVOID
Large
Not very stylish
The Garmin Vivoactive HR is no longer available as of 2018.

Our Analysis and Test Results

This product has a built-in GPS module and an optical heart rate sensor packed into a tiny package. While it is a little bit on the bulkier side and doesn't have that long of a battery life compared to non-GPS models, it also has an absolutely astonishing array of additional sensors crammed in its decently small profile, such as a barometer, altimeter, accelerometer, and a thermometer. This model is also compatible with plenty of other Garmin products, allowing it to be used as a remote for the VIRB action cameras or feed data to a head mounted cycling display.

garmin vivoactive hr - this tracker is one of the top models when it came to fitness impact.
This tracker is one of the top models when it came to fitness impact.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Fitness Impact


The step counter on the Vivoactive HR proved to be highly accurate in our tests, with an average deviation of about 10 steps or 0.47% on a mile-long walk when compared to our manual count with a mechanical tally counter.


However, this model didn't do the best at estimating true distance traveled — even with the GPS — showing a track of 1.08 miles, when our course was exactly a mile, measured by a surveyor's wheel.

garmin vivoactive hr - the step count on the vivoactive hr was highly accurate in our tests.
The step count on the Vivoactive HR was highly accurate in our tests.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

This tracker has an excellent suite of features for tracking a cycling workout, displaying your top speed, average speed, distance traveled, time, and elevation changed, as well as calories and heart rate. One feature that we particularly like was that all of this information is shown on the tracker itself, rather than requiring you to open up the companion app.

garmin vivoactive hr - the vivoactive hr has tons of profiles for different activities...
The Vivoactive HR has tons of profiles for different activities, such as biking.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Overall, we found this product to give the most detailed set of stats of any of the models that we tested. It will provide a similar set of information when tracking a workout, as well as the applicable stats for its exceptionally large set of trackable activities.

garmin vivoactive hr - some of the different activities that this model can monitor.
Some of the different activities that this model can monitor.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

These include, but aren't limited to, swimming, skiing, SUP, XC ski, running, indoor rowing, pilates, gymnastics, and golf. Finally, this model does keep track of how many flights of stairs you climb a day, though it did miss one flight in our testing process.

garmin vivoactive hr - we found the heart rate sensor to be highly accurate in our test.
We found the heart rate sensor to be highly accurate in our test.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Health Impact


This model scored very well in our heart rate test, almost exactly matching the chest strap when measuring a resting heart rate. However, it was a little less accurate when measuring an active heart rate in our tests, averaging about 8 bpm off of the chest strap.


The Vivoactive HRand its companion app do not offer any methods to help you maintain a diet and track caloric intake; instead, they rely on the third-party MyFitnessPal app. However, it does keep a tab on the calories you burn throughout the day, both active and RMR (Resting Metabolic Rate). This wearable does a great job at helping you get up and get moving, with vibration alerts when you have been still for too long and a movement bar that will build up the longer you have been sitting. It takes a proportional amount of activity to reduce the bar back to zero.

There is a vibration alarm clock and the ability to track your sleep, but we struggled with it slightly, only getting it to properly record on our third night with it.

garmin vivoactive hr - this model didn't have the longest battery life when using the gps.
This model didn't have the longest battery life when using the GPS.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Ease of Use


This product has a relatively average battery life, lasting for a claimed 8 days in “Smart Mode” and for 13 hours when in GPS mode.


It takes a little time to send a day's worth of data to your mobile device, anywhere from 5-15 seconds — longer than the Fitbit brand models. The Vivoactive HR uses the Garmin Connect app. This companion app isn't our favorite, being a little less intuitive and harder to use than others we looked at, but it's a decent app on the whole.


It's relatively easy to navigate between menus on the device, with a touchscreen interface in addition to two buttons underneath the screen. The only real quirk we found is that there is a difference between holding and tapping the buttons in terms of navigation. The Vivoactive HR is also waterproof to 5 ATM — a necessary match to its swim and paddling tracking capabilities.

garmin vivoactive hr - this model is essentially an oversized watch, making it very easy to...
This model is essentially an oversized watch, making it very easy to take on and off.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

It is also very easy to put this fitness band on, with its watch-style clasp, though the retaining clip can be a little fickle.

garmin vivoactive hr - for its bulk, this tracker is surprisingly comfortable.
For its bulk, this tracker is surprisingly comfortable.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Ergonomics


The Vivoactive HR definitely isn't the most comfortable fitness tracker that we have tested, feeling a little bulky on the wrist due to its size. It has a relatively low profile and hugs your wrist tightly, but there is no getting around its heft.


It's also quite generic in terms of looks — a flattened black plastic rectangle with a few curves. It doesn't look bad, but it definitely isn't trying to make any statements.

garmin vivoactive hr - this model has a fantastic display that is easy to read, even in...
This model has a fantastic display that is easy to read, even in bright light.
Credit: Jenna Ammerman

Display


The Vivoactive HR displays the time and date on the front face, as well as giving you the option to create your own customized watch faces. The screen is exceptionally easy to read — even in bright outdoor lighting conditions. The touchscreen is also highly responsive to commands and the tactile buttons work very well.


You can also receive a handful of notifications on the device, such as text, call, email, and app push notifications. Further displays off of the home screen also show your basic fitness stats for the day.

Value


The Vivoactive HR is a premium fitness tracker at a premium price. It can occasionally be found on sale, making it a decent value when the sale is occurring.

Conclusion


The Garmin Vivoactive HR is a fantastic pick if you have a whole host of activities that you are trying to track. It's a little on the bulky side, so you should look elsewhere if you want a more petite or discreet model, but the Vivoactive HR is your best bet if you want to take a fitness tracker on your more extreme outdoor activities, compared to a daily walk or run.

David Wise and Austin Palmer