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The Garmin Forerunner 970 is the newest and best Forerunner watch (aka Garmin’s flagship running watch line). It’s an improved version of the Forerunner 965, though it does come with a shorter battery life and a higher price tag. Whether that tradeoff is worth it depends on what you’re looking for. For data-driven racers and endurance athletes who want to track, analyze, and optimize every aspect of their performance, the 970 is one of the best watches out there. My full in-depth review is still in the works, but a few standout features are already making a strong impression.
Bright AMOLED display (plus a sapphire lens and titanium bezel)
Right out of the box, the Forerunner 970’s display feels high-end. The AMOLED screen is vivid, sharp, and easy to read at a glance—whether you’re mid-run or just checking your stats on the couch. The sapphire lens and titanium bezel give the watch a durable feel, making it fit for serious training.
Credit: Meredith Dietz
Full-color maps with enhanced navigation
The full-color maps on the 970 hold up impressively well even in signal-challenged environments, including, notably, inside my New York City walk-up apartment, where GPS signals go to die. Whether you’re exploring a new route or just trying to get your bearings in a dense urban environment, the enhanced navigation on this watch delivers right out the box.
Here is where I’d normally place a photo of said GPS working from inside my apartment, but then you’d be able to find me. Nice try, readers!
Running tolerance and training readiness scores
This might be the feature I’ve been most excited to dig into. The Forerunner 970 introduces running tolerance scores that help you better understand the cumulative impact each run has on your body, along with a recommended weekly maximum mileage, so you can keep building fitness without tipping into overtraining territory.
On top of that, training readiness scores greet you from the moment you wake up, pulling together data on sleep quality, recovery, training load, and more to give you a clear signal: go hard today, or dial it back?
Credit: Meredith Dietz
Credit: Meredith Dietz
The thing is, I can already tell I’ll need to override some of Garmin’s recommendations to rest. As I’ve written before, Garmin tends to err on the conservative side for distance runners. That said, I love having this data in front of me, even if I occasionally choose to ignore it.
Projected race times
Projected race time isn’t a brand-new concept, but the 970’s version feels more meaningful thanks to the deeper training metrics backing it up. This prediction shows what your race time and pace could be if you keep training consistently all the way to your goal race date—and with more nuanced inputs like running tolerance factored in, the expectation (and hope) is that these projections will be more accurate than ever. I have a race in May that will serve as the real litmus test. Stay tuned.
Built-in LED flashlight
Last but absolutely not least: the flashlight. A quick double-press of the upper-left button turns it on or off, and it is powerful. In fact, I accidentally shone it directly into my eyes and spent the next several seconds blinking stars out of my vision while trying to type this very sentence.
Beyond my momentary blindness, the flashlight rocks. More importantly, it makes running at night feel a little safer—as long as I’m willing to let the battery drain fast. For anyone logging early-morning or after-dark miles, this is the kind of small feature that could end up mattering a lot.









