Last updated: 17 February 2026

By Stiv · Design, technology and personal finance

This is an opinion piece. Views expressed are the author's own and do not constitute professional advice.

This article contains affiliate or referral links. If you click through and sign up I may earn a commission or referral bonus at no extra cost to you. It does not affect my editorial view.

Quick summary: This Pixel Watch 4 review explains who it’s for (Android people), who it’s not for (iPhone people), and what’s actually improved.

Price check: UK prices tend to float between £279 (41mm WiFi) and £449 (LTE), depending on colour, strap, and retailer.

Check the Pixel Watch 4 41mm WiFi price
Check the Pixel Watch 4 LTE price

If you’re eyeing the Pixel Watch 4, here’s the truth: it’s not a neutral little timepiece. It’s an Android companion device with opinions. Pair it with an Android phone and it’s brilliant. Pair it with an iPhone and it’s basically a lovely, expensive reminder that tech companies enjoy building walled gardens.

Before you buy: iPhone vs Android compatibility

Wearables are basically health-sensing, shrunken extensions of your phone. That’s why the ecosystem matters. Apple Watch is designed to work best with iPhone. Pixel Watch is designed to work best with Android. If your main phone is an iPhone, the Pixel Watch 4 will feel limited, even if it looks stunning on your wrist.

Design: round, domed, and actually… sexy

Google stuck with the round watch life, and it pays off. The Pixel Watch 4 comes in 41mm and 45mm, with a slightly domed face that gives proper depth. It makes the watch faces feel more “under glass” than “on screen”, especially if you like complication-heavy layouts (date, weather, steps, heart rate, the lot).

Two sizes, one vibe

The 41mm is the tidy, minimal option. The 45mm is the one you’ll pick if you want more screen, more battery, and less squinting. Either way, the form factor feels like a deliberate alternative to Apple’s squoval approach.

The strap situation: stock band syndrome

The default Active Band is fine, but “fine” is not what you want from something you wear all day. If you ever get the “slightly too loose or slightly too tourniquet” feeling, you’ll know exactly what I mean. The good news is you can fix this with a better strap. The bad news is you probably will.

Battery life: finally not embarrassing

Battery is where the Pixel Watch line used to feel a bit optimistic. Pixel Watch 4 is genuinely improved. In real life, that means you can track sleep without doing mental maths about charging windows.

  • Best case scenario: you wear it all day, sleep with it on, then top it up while you have breakfast.
  • Actual win: it’s now realistic to keep sleep tracking on without the watch constantly begging for a charger.

Health and fitness: Fitbit is still the brain (for better and worse)

A lot of the health data flows through Fitbit. Sleep tracking is excellent, and the “just wear it, it figures it out” vibe is strong. If you love a big holistic dashboard, you’ll be happy. If you only care about workout stats, you might find Fitbit a bit cluttered.

Workout tracking: effortless, but sometimes too passive

The watch is great at quietly tracking activity in the background, but the trade-off is that passive tracking can feel a bit “where are my live stats?”. If you’re the kind of person who wants pace, splits, and the whole running-data buffet on your wrist, you may prefer starting workouts manually, or using a dedicated app like Strava for the workout itself.

Safety features: the sleeper hit

Pixel Watch 4’s safety story is strong, particularly if you’re out and about a lot. Fall detection, emergency features, and (on supported models and conditions) satellite emergency communication are the sort of things you hope you never need, but you will be glad they exist.

Gemini on your wrist: handy, not magic

Yes, Gemini is part of the pitch. In practice, voice features live and die on how well they interpret you in the moment. When it works, it’s great for quick reminders, weather, calendar checks, and navigation prompts. When it doesn’t, you will suddenly become shy about talking to your wrist in public.

UK pricing: what you’ll actually pay

Prices vary a lot depending on model and retailer. As a rough guide, you’ll commonly see the 41mm WiFi model around £279, and the LTE model up to around £449.

Quick price check links

Affiliate note: These are affiliate links (meaning CoolCuration may earn a commission). Prices and availability can change.

Verdict: who should buy the Pixel Watch 4?

Buy it if:

  • You use Android and want the smoothest “everything talks to everything” smartwatch setup.
  • You care about sleep and everyday health tracking, not just hardcore workout stats.
  • You want a smartwatch that looks like a proper watch.

Skip it if:

  • You’re on iPhone and expect a full-fat experience.
  • You want a sports-watch-first workflow without any Fitbit dashboard faff.

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