Apple has big changes in store for this yearβs Apple Watch revamp. A new report today details that the Apple Watch Series 10 lineup will feature bigger screens, a thinner design, and faster performance. However, Apple has hit some snags in its plans for new health features.
In the latest edition of his Power On newsletter, Bloombergβs Mark Gurman reports that both Apple Watch Series 10 models, codenamed N217 and N218, will have bigger screens this year. In fact, Gurman says that the larger of the two models will have a screen thatβs βabout as large as the one found on the Apple Watch Ultra.β
This aligns with leaked schematics that surfaced last week, showing that the bigger version of the Apple Watch Series 10 will feature a 2-inch display, which is slightly bigger than the Apple Watch Ultraβs 1.93-inch display. Gurman also says that the Apple Watch Series 10 will be thinner, but the βdesign itself is unlikely to look much different.β
The Apple Watch Series 10 and Apple Watch Ultra 3 will both get a more powerful processor this year. While this could βlay the groundwork for some AI enhancements down the road,β Gurman says Apple currently has βno plansβ to bring the full set of Apple Intelligence features to the Apple Watch.
As for new health features, previous reports suggested that the Apple Watch Series 10 would add blood pressure monitoring and sleep apnea features. In todayβs report, Bloomberg says Apple made progress on these features last year, but has since βrun into some serious snags.β
The hypertension technology for the Apple Watch βhasnβt been as reliable as hoped during testing,β the report says. The reliability problems βmay force Apple toΒ postponeΒ the release beyond this year.β When it is available, the feature wonβt show the user their exact systolic and diastolic readings. Instead, the feature will show blood pressure trends over time, similar to how the body temperature feature on the Apple Watch currently works
The Apple Watchβs rumored sleep apnea detection feature is tied to blood oxygen saturation data. Currently, Apple Watch models sold by Apple in the United States donβt offer blood oxygen monitoring because of an ITC import ban.
Either Apple will resolve that issueΒ by September or find a way toΒ work around it (perhaps the companyΒ couldΒ argue that its oxygen reader can be used for purposes that arenβt directly related to blood oxygen levels). It also couldΒ announce the feature but not release it until a later date βΒ or just delay it altogether.
Is this the Apple Watch X?
Bloomberg previously reported on Appleβs plans to debut an βApple Watch Xβ overhaul to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the device. This has describedΒ the redesign as the βbiggest overhaul yetβ to the Apple Watch.
In todayβs report, Gurman says itβs not clear if this yearβs new Apple Watch will get the anniversary branding, or if a bigger release is set for 2025:
Itβs still not clear whether Apple will brand the upcoming watches as an anniversary model or wait until next year. Given that the Apple Watch was announced in 2014 but not released until 2015, the company could either tout the anniversary this year or have a splashier release in 2025.
The Apple Watch Series 10 and Apple Watch Ultra 3 are expected to be announced in September alongside the iPhone 16.