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Home / Reviews / Polar Grit X Pro watch review - Multisport watches - Tri-tech

Polar Grit X Pro watch review

Is the Polar Grit X Pro enough of an upgrade to justify the spend? James Witts finds out...

Polar Grit X Pro multisport watch

220 Triathlon Verdict

A fine watch, albeit one lacking in upgrade inspiration. Score: 79%

Pros

  • Reliable GPS
  • Decent run time
  • Music can be controlled with your phone
  • Stacks of performance analysis metrics

Cons

  • Lacks unique features
  • Barely improves on the Grit X

Polar’s original Grit X is one of the best triathlon training watches of recent times. The new X Pro features minor upgrades, plus a swathe of functions seen on the Vantage V2.

How we test multisport and triathlon watches

Our team of expert reviewers has tested each watch for at least a month. During this time they wore each watch for several runs, rides and swims in urban and rural areas and at different intensities to test GPS and HR accuracy. They also assessed battery life, comfort, screen readability, ease of use, fitness and health metrics, activity tracking and value for money. For more details, see how we rate and test products.

When it comes to pure multisport, you’re given the usuals, namely GPS and heart rate information on open-water swimming, pool swimming, triathlon mode, cycling (road, indoor, mountain biking) and running (trail, road, treadmill).

The GPS is very good, picking up and retaining signal reliably; the optical heart rate’s solid for its kind, delivering reasonable chest-strap accuracy until you crank up the running. When you’re tuned into GPS mode, battery life’s around 40hrs. That’s good, albeit a modicum of power’s saved by the brightness of display. It’s okay but not pin-sharp.

The Pro’s major evolution is the battery of physical tests seen on the Vantage. You can now assess your multisport performance via cycling FTP tests, a running VO2max test, a leg-recovery test and an orthostatic test based on heart rate and heart rate variability data. They’re all beneficial to state of readiness to train.

Polar Grit X Pro features and connectivity

Not borrowed from the Vantage is enhanced navigation that offers turn-by-turn routing. Yes, it’s only a breadcrumb trail but it’s still of use. You can also tap into the side profile, which highlights where you’re positioned on the elevation. It maintains the Hill Splitter feature from the original.

This is useful for hill-rep sessions that you can collect data from and so accurately prescribe for the next time you do it. It’s just a shame that breadcrumb trail doesn’t combine with the Hill Splitter function to flag up duration and difficulty of the climb’s remaining metres for pacing.

Polar Grit X Pro watches

Another upgrade’s a musical one, though it’s to control the music on your phone rather than storage. That means changing volume or skipping tracks. And you can now pair your Pro X with Zwift for on-the-screen HR data. It’s perfect timing for the winter months but connection is erratic.

As you’d expect for a watch at this price, there are many more features to analyse the life out of your performance, from measuring sleep quantity and quality to a virtual coach that recommends sessions each day, though they’re more fitness-specific than multisport-specific. Scrolling’s via touchscreen and good solid buttons. In all honesty, I’m very much a committed button man, especially during the off-season when gloves are standard.

Polar Grit X Pro bottom line

Overall, it’s a fine watch, but there are disappointments. If you have the original Grit X, there’s not enough useful newness here to warrant the spend. It also feels a little lazy, its major changes coming from the Vantage V2. That’s clearly not a biggy if you don’t have a Vantage V2, but it does highlight the trend of ‘upgrades’ feeling somewhat underwhelming.

Polar Grit X Pro specs

Price$615 / £459
Weight79g / 2.8oz
Dimensions47x47x13mm
FeaturesTouchscreen, 100m water resistance, wrist-based running power and HR, sleep tracking, multi-band GPS navigation with turn-by-turn navigation
Battery life 6 days in smartwatch mode / 35 hours training mode
Profile image of James Witts James Witts Freelance sports writer and author

About

Former 220 Triathlon magazine editor James is a cycling and sports writer and editor who's been riding bikes impressively slowly since his first iridescent-blue Peugeot road bike back in the 80s. He's a regular contributor to a number of cycling and endurance-sports publications, plus he's authored four books: The Science of the Tour de France: Training secrets of the world’s best cyclists, Bike Book: Complete Bicycle Maintenance, Training Secrets of the World's Greatest Footballers: How Science is Transforming the Modern Game, and Riding With The Rocketmen: One Man's Journey on the Shoulders of Cycling Giants