What you need to know
- Honor is tackling one of smartwatches’ biggest pain points with the new Watch 6, promising up to 35 days on a single charge.
- A massive 980mAh battery, IP69 protection, and 5ATM water resistance make the Watch 6 better suited for long trips and outdoor activities.
- Fitness is a major focus, with 120+ sports modes and specialized tools for trail running, badminton, and football, backed by dual-band GPS and AI coaching features.
For all the advances smartwatches have made in recent years, battery life remains one of the category’s biggest frustrations. Most high-end Wear OS watches still require charging every couple days, forcing users to treat their watches like another phone-sized responsibility. Honor thinks it can do better.
The company has officially launched the Honor Watch 6, a new wearable that combines extensive sports tracking, AI-powered health tools, and one feature many buyers arguably care about most: a battery that can last for weeks, not days.
That promise is what makes the Watch 6 different from the best Android smartwatches. The Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 series and the Google Pixel Watch 4 are more about deeper Wear OS integration and AI features than ultra-long endurance. Even the new OnePlus Watch 3, which is one of the best battery performers in the Wear OS space, usually maxes out at around five days of use.
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Battery is the headline
The Watch 6’s boldest claim revolves around battery life. With a sizable 980mAh battery rated for up to 35 days of typical use, the Watch 6 is more in the league of endurance-focused devices from Garmin and Amazfit rather than regular Wear OS watches. The device is also IP69 and 5ATM rated for water and dust resistance.
The Watch 6 has a Racing Dashboard design, taking inspiration from performance cars. The smartwatch weighs 41g to 50g (without the strap) and is available in Shadow Black and Twilight Brown finishes. The body is a hybrid of aluminum alloy and stainless steel accents for a more premium look and feel.
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Fitness is still a big focus. Honor says the watch has over 120 sports modes, including specific ones for trail running, badminton, and football. The company’s dual-band six-star GPS provides trail runners with AI coaching, route deviation alerts, climbing metrics, and positioning. Badminton players can monitor the speed of their smashes and the number of rallies, and football fans receive heat maps of movement and trajectory analysis.
Health tracking features include 24/7 heart rate, blood oxygen, stress tracking, sleep, and body energy metrics. A Quick Health Scan gives a snapshot of key indicators, and Honor’s IntelliSense technology is built to enhance signal quality for more precise measurements. As with most wearables, the company says the features are intended for wellness tracking, not medical diagnosis.
The smartwatch also has a few convenience features. Other specifications include a 1.46-inch AMOLED display with up to 3,000 nits peak brightness for better outdoor visibility, Bluetooth 5.4, 4GB storage, and support for Android 9.0 and above and iOS 15.1 and above devices. The watch can connect to two phones at a time, so you can control alerts from both phones in one place.
Honor also packed in an AI Recorder that can generate voice notes and summaries automatically. Wrist gestures enable users to silence alarms, answer calls, and control music without touching the display, while Video Watch Faces let owners turn short clips into animated backgrounds. It also has NFC support, and Mastercard and Visa payments are expected to be available in July 2026, depending on the region.
The Honor Watch 6 will be available in the UK from June 18. The Twilight Brown leather model is RRP £250, while the Shadow Black fluoroelastomer model is RRP £230. Early birds can save £80 between June 18 and July 17, which means the price drops to £170 and £150. Buyers also get a free pair of Honor Choice Earbuds Clip in Black.
Android Central’s Take
AI features are inevitable, but I’d argue most people would happily trade another chatbot feature for fewer charging sessions. The Watch 6 isn’t going to replace a full Wear OS experience from Samsung or Google, but it could make sense for people who just want reliable health tracking and battery life in weeks instead of days. Sometimes the best innovation is no innovation, but fixing an old problem that should never have existed in the first place.

