Samsung’s next Galaxy Watch is being pitched as a longer-lasting, more accurate health companion, but the upgrade case remains incomplete. Samsung has not said which features will require new hardware or which will reach recent watches through software.
The company is expected to introduce the Galaxy Watch 9 at Galaxy Unpacked in London on July 22. Battery capacity, runtime, sensor changes and compatibility with the Galaxy Watch 7 and Watch 8 remain unconfirmed.
Samsung adds more health context
In a July 14 preview of its next watch, Samsung said new internal components would improve battery life, measurement accuracy and continuous health tracking. Those claims still need supporting specifications and independent testing.
Samsung has been more specific about software. Its June Samsung Health announcement detailed Vitals, Heart Health Score, Daily Cardio Load and Fitness Index.
Vitals compares heart rate, heart-rate variability, respiratory rate, skin temperature and blood oxygen with a wearer’s overnight baseline. Heart Health Score combines sleep, stress, activity and body-composition data, while Daily Cardio Load evaluates cardiovascular strain against training capacity.
The platform can also display readings from compatible glucose monitors, although the data comes from the connected sensor rather than the watch. Samsung continues to research noninvasive blood sugar tracking, but it has not announced that capability for the Galaxy Watch 9.
Samsung’s US health lineup is also changing. According to an in-app Samsung Health notice reported by Android Central, Vascular Load will be removed for US users with Samsung Health 7.0 and One UI 9 Watch in July 2026. The Galaxy Watch 8 feature analyzes overnight blood-flow and vascular-stiffness measurements to estimate cardiovascular strain. Samsung has not publicly explained the withdrawal, but the notice says users can export their historical data.
Blood Pressure Trends is expected to accompany the update. Reports say it will require calibration with a separate upper-arm cuff every 28 days and is intended for general wellness rather than medical diagnosis.
Battery and compatibility remain unanswered
Samsung has not identified which features need new sensors or processing hardware. That uncertainty also affects organizations evaluating Samsung wearables for employee wellness programs, research pilots or managed-device deployments, because feature support may vary by hardware generation, region and connected phone. Watch 8 owners may have little reason to upgrade if the main additions arrive through Samsung Health and the new model delivers only modest battery or accuracy gains.
Watch 7 owners face a larger two-generation gap, but they also need direct comparisons. Samsung has not disclosed runtime, charging speed or performance gains over either existing model.
Battery life could be the clearest differentiator. Overnight baselines and continuous monitoring lose value when the watch must be removed frequently for charging, so Samsung’s claim needs hours-of-use figures and tests with continuous tracking enabled.
Availability may also vary by country, watch and connected phone. Similar limits affect the developing smartwatch health market, where sensor accuracy, medical-device rules and companion hardware can determine which features reach users. Vascular Load’s planned US removal shows that availability can change after launch.
Current owners should wait for Samsung’s July 22 specifications and compatibility details before upgrading. Hardware exclusivity, measured battery gains and long-term feature support will determine whether the Galaxy Watch 9 is a meaningful platform upgrade or mainly a software refresh.
Read more: See which wearables can currently display blood sugar data and which promised capabilities remain in development.


