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Garmin fenix 5 Plus, Premium Multisport GPS Smartwatch, Features Color Topo Maps, Heart Rate Monitoring, Music and Contactless Payment, Titanium with Orange Band

  • Based on 240 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Thursday, May 29
Order within 9 hours and 40 minutes
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Features

  • Premium multisport GPS smartwatch that estimates heart rate at the wrist and includes color TOPO maps featuring trend line popularity routing to help you find and follow the best paths
  • Fit for adventure with rugged design that features stainless steel or diamond-like carbon (DLC) Titanium bezel, buttons and rear case
  • Easily store and play up to 500 songs on your watch, and connect with Bluetooth headphones (sold separately) for phone-free listening
  • Garmin Pay contact less payment solution (available for supported cards from participating banks)lets you make convenient payments with your watch
  • Built-in navigation sensors include three-axis compass, gyroscope and barometric altimeter as well as multiple satellite system (GPS, GLONASS and Galileo) network capability to track in more challenging environments than GPS alone
  • Battery performance: up to 10 days in smartwatch mode and 8 hours in GPS mode with music

Description

For athletes and outdoor adventurers, the Fenix 5 Plus multisport GPS watch is the high-performance way to beat yesterday and bring your maps and music along. This rugged, premium-crafted watch features routable color mapping, estimated heart rate at the wrist, storage for up to 500 songs and the Garmin Pay contactless payment solution (available for supported cards from participating banks). Connectivity Bluetooth, ANT+, Wi-Fi Smartphone compatibility iPhone, Android , Display resolution 240 x 240 pixels


Product Dimensions: 1.9 x 0.6 x 1.9 inches


Item Weight: 3.04 ounces


Item model number: 010-01988-04


Batteries: 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Connectivity technologies: Bluetooth


Special Features: Bluetooth


Other display features: Wireless


Device interface - primary: Buttons


Scanner Resolution: 240 x 240


Colour: Titanium W/Orange Band


Included Components: Documentation, Charging/data cable, Fenix 5 Plus Sapphire


Manufacturer: Garmin


Date First Available: June 18, 2018


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, May 29

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Near perfect sports tracking device!
12/10/18 Update Titanium bezel I have to question as really titanium as it is so soft it is marking up and frankly looks bad just months after purchasing this watch, and I am not rough on it. Taking another star off for lame materials in what is supposed to be a premium product. 11/01/18 Update So I will take a star off as the battery is not living up to what the marketing states. I noticed I was charging the watch a lot, but I was running and using music so it didn't phase me. I've not run in the last 2 weeks and decided to watch battery life. At best I get 6 days on a charge where Garmin states 12 days in smart watch mode. I am not someone always on their phone, nor do I send/receive dozens of texts a day, it should not be that far off. Oh watch faces can impact your battery life. No problem I will grab a Garmin watch face, unfortunately I can't find one where the minute hand actually shows consistently which is well documented by the user community, yet Garmin doesn't fix them. On my comment about needing to grab a golf course in advance of playing was not accurate. The one course we play each week did not come up on the watch so I went to the app, but all other courses I played were on the watch. Golf is okay not great because it auto-advances the hole on you at odd times. In the middle of the hole, up by the green, on the tee box, etc. If you use the watch to score, you screw around with getting the watch to the correct hole, then enter your score, then get it to the correct hole. Running and music has been great. My Jabra earbuds stay connected and the tracking/ stats are awesome. We were recently in the mountains, and the altimeter was almost dead on to actual elevation (checked against a helicopter altimeter dialed in to the barometric pressure), and the trail tracking with step/heart rate was very cool. I'll stick to my original title of near perfect, but shame on Garmin for marketing battery life that is not even close. Original review below: The Fenix 5 Plus is the first of the Fenix line to come with music built into the watch. I actually had ordered a Fenix 5X about 2 weeks before this device was announced and returned it, as music in my device is one of those check off items. We are a running, hiking, golf, and swimming type of family, and I like to run 5-6 miles a few times a week, and believe it or not this is my first Garmin device (I've been using Polar). Why this device over the 5x? I like to wear as few devices as possible when I run. Now with the 5 plus I wear the watch, my Jabra Sport Elite bluetooth earbuds, and sunglasses. Tracking is excellent and there are a ton of metrics for each run (too many to list, look at the product specs), plus the music streaming to the buds was perfect, never a dropped moment. I use Google Play for my music, and you simply need to load it manually on to the watch via USB cable. Oh and I did take it golfing already to my local course. You need to plan a little in advance as you need to download the course before you play, but that isn't a big deal to me as you can do it via your smartphone or PC/MAC USB cable. Distances were accurate and on many holes I did find the center of the green on the device. Battery life is excellent even with runs/music in use...I can say "days" but haven't tried to totally drain the battery yet. So far I have gone 5 days and 2 runs and it was still 37% when I plugged it in. Why is it so excellent? The stuff you need to accept and get used to helps the battery life. The vibrant contrast they show in the promotional photos is NOT the screen you get. I wish they would post some realistic looking photos of the screen as it is not backlit, and when you do push the back light button, it looks more like the 80's LCD watches than a modern smartwatch. The only time this screen is close the promotional photos is outside as it uses bright light to reflect and illuminate the screen. So battery life is really long because there is no lamp on for the screen...unless you push a button (there is a gesture setting where if you twist your wrist the back light will automatically come on, however you use it so infrequently I turned this setting off). This is not a touchscreen watch, you use buttons to control all functions. Actually after going through a few Google Wear devices, I am actually okay with a non-touch screen. The 5 buttons allow you to navigate wherever you need, and there are much fewer navigation errors using buttons over the sometime twitchy touchscreens. The navigation I am still not used to it. The primary buttons there is a light, up/menu, down, enter, and previous screen. When I went to start my first run, I launched the run app, then selected the screen I wanted to see, and could not figure out how to start the run after the GPS locked in. After some fumbling I figured it out, but I am a computer gadget nerd and I am having a few issues...to the non-nerd this thing may be too many button sequences to figure out. I would give it a 5 out of 5 if this very expensive sports watch had some honest photos of what customers will see, and if the navigation was cleaner using the buttons. It is a kitchen sink device and so far working great...but it better for the money they want for it!! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 2, 2018 by MinnesotaWT

  • Great activity "instrument"
I bought the Garmin Fenix 5 Plus to upgrade/validate monitoring health and physical workouts. I am in my mid-70s and running is not a priority but checking that my physical activities benefit my heart condition and validating I was getting sufficient sleep is important. I have gone down the path from originally using Jaw Bone products to FitBit along with Free Running app on my smart phone to track exercise events. FitBit was a great improvement over Jaw Bone but I noticed irregularities in the daily data especially regarding resting heart and peak heart rates that I became suspect of the device(s) worn. Likewise the sleep summary was not consistent and it sometimes would not capture the times I went to bed or it would get the time right but not document awake times accurately. I wanted to refrain from commenting on the Garmin Fenix until I had had some consistent use. Likes I feel it is a better 'instrument' in all aspects for monitoring daily activities and rest periods. Battery life has been adequate as I only top off the watch while taking a shower. Comparing the data it tracks with my other devices there are similarities but it currently is more consistent than FitBit (I have three different devices and this comparison is with each of them) It also arrays the data in more detail if desired so seems to allow the user more options for tracking and verifying. Swapping watch straps is easy and it appears they both will have long wear life. Dis Likes I have a manual and have looked at manual on line too but find the process to save a workout more complicated than other activity watches, yes you can tailor the watch face but that too is more complicated than it should be. Would even be better if Garmin loaded more than one watch face instead of having aftermarket software provide those functions. I have not downloaded a watch face to use yet, my experience with other systems is a user can get down loads to their watch but then some functions don't work as should be and I have not found the process to remove down load and reinstall the OEM delivered watch so I have not experimented. Don't like the term "stress" they use to monitor activity levels, yes exercise may stress the body but not in the sense of stress (physiological or physical ) that wears down someone over time and may not be apparent. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 17, 2019 by RKW

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