Motorola has fully revealed the specs of its new Moto Watch, at CES 2026, a device built in partnership with Polar. As expected – it features a 47mm circular case, 1.43-inch OLED display, dual-frequency GPS, long battery life up to 13 days, and a stripped-down OS that mimics Wear OS without third-party apps.
Hardware feels more premium than expected
Starting with the hardware, and the new device is built around a 47mm case, which gives it a fairly masculine form-factor. It uses an aluminum frame paired with a stainless steel chassis and crown. Gorilla Glass 3 sits over the 1.43-inch circular OLED display, which is bright enough for both indoor and outdoor use.
The whole thing is water and dust resistant, with IP68 and 1ATM certification. That should make it safe for everyday wear, including sweat, rain, and the odd splash. Motorola is shipping the watch in a matte grey tone they’re calling “Volcanic Ash,” with a silicone band to match. The strap uses standard 22mm lugs, so swapping it out won’t be a problem.
It also includes a built-in speaker and mic, which is handy for taking calls or using voice features without needing your phone in hand.
Motorola is quoting up to 13 days under typical use, or about seven days with the always-on display turned on. That’s quite a bit more than what most full-screen watches manage these days. It also supports fast charging, with a five-minute top-up giving you around a full day of use. That’s helpful if you forget to charge before heading out.
Image source: Motorola
It looks like Wear OS but isn’t
This isn’t a Wear OS device. Motorola has opted for its own stripped-down operating system. Hence the excellent battery life.
There’s no app store and no support for third-party apps. But visually, it borrows heavily from Google’s design language. You get tiles you can swipe through, a quick settings shade at the top, and notifications at the bottom. The app drawer even follows the same circular layout.
It’s a UI that should feel familiar, but it stays lightweight by skipping the heavy integrations. The benefit is longer battery life and simpler day-to-day performance.
Polar handles the health side
As we saw in the initial announcement, Motorola has teamed up with Polar to handle the health and fitness side of things. And that shows in the feature set.
Workout tracking includes a built-in dual-frequency GPS chip, which should offer better accuracy than single-band systems. There’s a smart calorie logging feature that breaks down energy burned by activity type. The watch also tracks daily intensity and builds it into an “Activity Score,” which gives you a quick snapshot of how much you’ve moved.
It sends idle alerts when you’ve been sitting too long, and there’s full sleep tracking with breakdowns of REM, light, and deep stages. The “Nightly Recharge” metric uses sleep and autonomic recovery data to give insight into how your body’s bouncing back from daily stress.
This is the same recovery system used in Polar’s own devices, so it’s encouraging to see it here.
Launch is just around the corner
The Moto Watch is due to land in the US on January 22. It’ll be sold through Motorola’s own website. Pricing is expected to be around the $100 mark, with an extra $50 for the premium version. Based on the stripped-back OS and Polar’s software, this seems pitched more as a fitness-first watch than a full smartwatch.
That makes sense given what Motorola and Polar are each bringing to the table. It’s not trying to compete with Galaxy Watch or Pixel Watch in terms of app ecosystems. Instead, it’s banking on strong hardware, long battery life, and trusted fitness features to hit a different sweet spot.
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