A CNET reviewer who wore both the Apple Watch and Oura Ring for months has concluded that the Apple Watch better suits her needs, particularly for fitness and daily use. While praising the Oura Ring for long-term health tracking, she notes their complementary roles rather than direct competition. The decision hinges on individual priorities in health monitoring and lifestyle demands.
In a detailed comparison, the reviewer tested the Apple Watch Series 11, priced at roughly $400, and the Oura Ring 4, costing around $500, over several months. She found that both devices track similar health metrics like heart rate, sleep, and temperature, but they differ significantly in form and function.
The Apple Watch stands out for its interactive features, serving as a compact extension of the iPhone with capabilities for notifications, calls, mobile payments, and timekeeping. During workouts, it provides real-time metrics such as pace alerts and heart-rate zones, enhancing exercise motivation. Safety tools like fall detection and crash detection add practical value. However, its daily charging requirement can interrupt data collection, especially overnight.
Conversely, the Oura Ring offers a discreet design with up to a week's battery life, promoting consistent wear and reliable long-term tracking. It excels in identifying trends, such as early illness signs through readiness scores or ovulation via temperature shifts. The app interprets data with actionable advice, like entering Rest Mode during recovery. A key limitation is the $6 monthly subscription needed for in-depth insights, unlike the Apple Watch's subscription-free health features.
For fitness, the Oura Ring's activity detection is less robust, often missing lower-intensity sessions and lacking live feedback. The reviewer appreciates the Apple Watch's third-party apps and workout integration but values the Oura Ring's subtlety for cycle and recovery monitoring.
Ultimately, she selects the Apple Watch for its role in managing daily tasks and fitness amid a busy life with three children, though she envisions using both ideally. "If I had it my way, I'd wear the Apple Watch during the day and the Oura Ring at night," she writes, emphasizing that choices depend on personal priorities.