Let’s be honest—when you hear “Marine Smartwatch,” you imagine a retired uncle on a luxury yacht in Goa sipping champagne. But the Garmin Quatix 8 Pro, launched this week (Jan 2026), is trying to change that image.
Priced at a jaw-dropping ₹1,17,000 (approx), this isn’t just a watch; it’s a survival tool. For the first time, Garmin has integrated inReach Satellite Technology directly into the watch. This means you can send SOS messages from the middle of the ocean without a phone.
But here is the real question for the average Indian buyer: If you aren’t sailing a yacht every weekend, is this just a glorified, overpriced Fenix 8? Or is it the ultimate flex for the rugged tech lover? I strapped this titanium beast to my wrist for 48 hours, and here is the truth.

2. Quick Specs: The Powerhouse
| Feature | Garmin Quatix 8 Pro |
| Price (India) | ~₹1,17,200 ($1,299) |
| Display | 1.4″ AMOLED (Always-On) |
| Build Material | Titanium Bezel + Sapphire Crystal Lens |
| Battery Life | 15 Days (Smartwatch Mode) / 44 Hours (GPS) |
| Key Tech | inReach Satellite SOS (Two-Way Messaging) |
| Water Rating | 10 ATM (100 Meters) |
| Marine Tech | Boat Data Stream, Autopilot Control, Trolling Motor Remote |
| Flashlight | Built-in LED (Red/White) |
3. Design & Build: Built Like a Tank (A Fancy One)
If the Apple Watch Ultra is an SUV, the Quatix 8 Pro is a Battleship.
- The Look: It features a Titanium Bezel and a Sapphire Crystal lens that is virtually scratch-proof. I accidentally banged it against a metal door frame, and the door frame got a dent, not the watch.
- The Screen: Garmin has finally ditched the dull MIP display for a stunning 1.4-inch AMOLED. It’s bright, vibrant, and readable even under direct Mumbai sunlight.
- The Strap: The box comes with a specialized marine-blue silicone band that doesn’t get sticky with sweat or salt water.
- The Torch: Yes, it has the famous built-in LED flashlight (White and Red). Trust me, once you use a watch with a torch to find your phone under the bed at 2 AM, you can never go back.

4. Display & Visuals: AMOLED Done Right
Garmin purists used to hate AMOLED because it drained battery. The Quatix 8 Pro solves that.
- Brightness: It hits huge brightness levels (over 1000 nits), making map navigation crisp.
- Maps: The TopoActive Maps look incredible on this screen. Unlike the pixelated maps on older Garmins, these look like Google Maps on your wrist.
- Red Shift Mode: For night sailors (or night drivers), the entire screen turns red to preserve your night vision. It looks incredibly cool, like something out of a tactical video game.

5. Marine Features: The “Pro” Stuff
This is why you pay the extra money over a Fenix 8.
- inReach Satellite Tech: This is the game-changer. If you are out of network coverage (trekking in Ladakh or sailing near Andaman), you can type a text message on the watch and send it via satellite. It requires a subscription, but it can literally save your life.
- Boat Integration: If you own a compatible Garmin chartplotter, the watch streams data like water depth, engine RPM, and wind speed directly to your wrist. You can even steer the boat (Autopilot) from the watch.
- For the Non-Sailor: Honestly? You won’t use 90% of these features. But the Tide Alerts and Storm Alarm (barometer based) are useful even if you are just chilling at Juhu Beach.
6. Performance & Health: More Than Just Sailing
Under the hood, this is still a world-class fitness tracker.
- GPS Accuracy: The Multi-Band GPS (SatIQ) is flawless. I tracked a run through a dense building complex, and the GPS line was laser straight.
- ECG App: It comes with FDA-cleared ECG hardware to detect irregular heart rhythms (AFib).
- Sleep Tracking: Garmin’s sleep tracking is detailed, but wearing a huge 47mm metal watch to bed takes some getting used to.
- The Lag: Unlike older Garmins which felt sluggish, the interface here is snappy. Swiping through widgets feels almost as smooth as an Apple Watch.
7. Battery & Endurance: The 15-Day Beast
This is where Garmin humiliates Apple and Samsung.
- Smartwatch Mode: With the Always-On Display disabled (gesture wake), I got 14 days of battery. With Always-On enabled, it dropped to about 6 days.
- GPS Activity: You can run a GPS activity for 40+ hours straight. You could run two marathons back-to-back and still have battery left to track your sleep.
- Satellite Usage: Using the inReach satellite messaging drains battery faster, but it’s still impressive for an emergency device.

8. The Competition: Quatix 8 Pro vs The World
We compared it against the two titans: Garmin Fenix 8 and Apple Watch Ultra 2.
| Feature | Garmin Quatix 8 Pro | Garmin Fenix 8 | Apple Watch Ultra 2 |
| Price | ₹1,17,000 | ₹98,000 | ₹89,900 |
| Battery | 15 Days | 16 Days | 2 Days |
| Screen | AMOLED | AMOLED / Solar MIP | OLED (Brighter) |
| Satellite SOS | Yes (Built-in) | No (Needs Phone) | No (Needs Phone) |
| Marine Features | Advanced | Basic | Basic (Apps) |
| Smart Features | Basic (Notifications) | Basic | Advanced (Siri, Calls) |
The Verdict:
- Winner (Battery & Survival): Quatix 8 Pro. The satellite SOS is unmatched.
- Winner (Smart Features): Apple Watch Ultra 2. If you want to reply to WhatsApps and take calls, Garmin is not for you.
- Winner (Value): Fenix 8. If you don’t own a boat, buy the Fenix 8. It’s the same watch without the boat-steering features.
9. Final Verdict: The Ultimate Flex or Essential Tool?
The Garmin Quatix 8 Pro is a masterpiece of engineering. It is rugged, beautiful, and packed with tech that works when the world goes offline.
Buy it if:
- You are an Adventurer: The inReach Satellite SOS is a safety net that no other mainstream smartwatch offers.
- You own a Boat (obviously): The integration with boat systems is seamless and genuinely useful.
- You hate charging: Charging your watch twice a month feels like a luxury after using an Apple Watch.
Skip it if:
You want a “Smart” Watch: You cannot make calls, use Siri, or type WhatsApp replies easily. It is a data tool, not a phone extension.
- You are on a Budget: At ₹1.17 Lakh, you could buy a decent second-hand bike.
- You don’t go offshore: If you stay on land, the Fenix 8 saves you ₹20,000 and does 99% of the same things.
10. FAQs (People Also Ask)
Q: Does the Quatix 8 Pro require a subscription for Satellite SOS?
Yes. While the hardware is built-in, you need an active Garmin inReach subscription plan (starting approx ₹1,200/month) to send messages via satellite.
Q: Can I use the Quatix 8 Pro for running and gym?
Absolutely. It has all the fitness features of the Fenix series, including running dynamics, HIIT workouts, and muscle maps for gym training.
Q: Is the strap replaceable?
Yes, it uses Garmin’s QuickFit 22mm bands. You can swap the marine blue band for a leather or metal one in seconds for office wear.
Q: Does it have a microphone and speaker?
No. Unlike the Fenix 8 which added voice commands, the Quatix 8 Pro focuses on rugged isolation and does not support on-wrist calls.
Q: Is the touchscreen usable when wet?
It is better than most, but Garmin wisely keeps 5 Physical Buttons. In heavy rain or underwater, you should use the buttons, not the touch screen.