Coros Pace Pro: One minute review
The Coros Pace Pro is a higher-priced model for the brand as the company sets its sights on the Garmin, Suunto, and Polar competition. As such you have a watch that’s crammed with all the best features you’d expect from a premium all-sports smartwatch.
So why pay for this over a similarly priced Garmin Forerunner 265? Well, the AMOLED screen on this is the same one found in the Apple Watch with a whopping 1500-nits of brightness, making it a stunner you can read in all light conditions. It does this while remaining battery efficient too for a top class 38 hours with all sensors up and running, or a good 20 days of standby time – with a zippy two-hour recharge time.
It is a lot lighter than a lot of the competition too, as light as 37g with the right strap, yet is still made from robust casing materials and features a useful rotating crown button. The display covering does let it down though, as it’s made from mineral glass rather than the hardier Gorilla Glass you’ll find from the competition.
GPS and HR accuracy aren’t perfect but will be more than good enough to serve most needs, and it’s the best on a Coros device yet. If you want even more accuracy you’ll need to pay more for the top-end kit or factor in buying a chest or arm strap HR monitor too.
Coros Pace Pro: Specs
Row 0 – Cell 0 | Coros Pace Pro |
Price | $349 / £349 / AU$599 |
Dimensions | 46 x 46 x 12.25 mm |
Weight | 49g |
Caze/bezel | Fiber reinforced polymer |
Display | 1.3-inch AMOLED, 416 x 416, mineral glass |
GPS | Yes |
Battery life | 38 hours, 20 days |
Connection | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Water resistant | 5ATM |
Coros Pace Pro: Price and Availability
- $349 / £349 / AU$599
- Cheaper than some premium smartwatches
- Relatively affordable despite AMOLED
The Coros Pace Pro steps out from the usual business model for this company – of undercutting the competition – instead standing more alongside. As such it is more expensive than many models that have gone before.
The Coros Pace Pro is available to buy now starting at $349 / £349 / AU$599.
For all the specs this offers – including AMOLED display, multi-band GPS, mapping and navigation, and music onboard – this is a really well-priced option. The mineral glass screen is not as impressive as the competition and means it will be more prone to damage.
The watch comes in Black, Grey, or Blue options. There are silicone or nylon band options, which vary the weight from 49g for silicon to just 37g for nylon. The silicon comes as standard but these bands are in the optional extras section, charged at $29 on top of the standard price if you want a second type.
All decent, but when you consider you can buy a Garmin Forerunner 265 for the same price, which is a far more established and reliable brand, this price doesn’t seem quite so impressive.
Coros Pace Pro: Design
- Useful rotating crown
- Bright AMOLED display
- Super lightweight
Right from the outset the Coros Pace Pro feels so light compared to the competition, which is great news for runners and longer-distance triathletes. I did think it felt a bit less premium as a result, but once I got used to it I realized it’s built to a very high-quality finish just with lightness in mind rather than flashy materials.
The watch features a stunning 1.3-inch AMOLED, with a whopping 1500-nits brightness. This is actually the same screen technology used in the recent Apple Watch models – meaning a very bright and color-rich display no matter the conditions. Even reading it underwater feels better than any of the competition.
Unfortunately, the use of mineral glass, instead of the sapphire crystal that Garmin uses, can mean more damage is likely from this less resilient material. Not that I got any damage while testing this, even with heavy gym use.
The watch is a touchscreen, which works fantastically well in a super responsive way, but there is also a rotating crown option. This doubles as one of the two buttons on the watch. Press and hold to unlock then push again to access the various sports which you can scroll through using the rotation. This is so effortless and effective that I found myself using that instead of the touchscreen mostly – keeping the screen lovely and smudge-free.
The second button can be touched to cycle through on-screen metrics, like steps, heart rate, sunset and sunrise, and more. Or press and hold that to access the system settings, alarms, maps, music, and more.
The menus in general deserve a mention as part of the design section as they’re clearly well thought out with a minimalism that makes use intuitive and – crucially – fast. You can go from locked to run tracking in as little as four button touches. That crown comes into use again when training as a quick roll can often be easier than using the touchscreen, thanks to that very tactile analog feel.
Round the back, you’ve got a new optical heart rate sensor with green lights, which also come with the more advanced red light for the detection of SpO2 data and even ECG recordings. Despite the case size moving up to 46mm from the Pace 3’s 42mm, this is still compact enough to be worn comfortably on most wrists.
The charger is similar to Garmin’s, but is bespoke. It uses a cable that plugs into USB-C so can work with many outlets and charger blocks too. All that and it charges back to full in just two hours.
Coros Pace Pro: Features
- Lots of sensors
- Always-on display
- Offline TOPO maps
The Coros Pace Pro is packed full of smart sensors meaning you can enjoy a broad range of tracking. That includes – deep breath – Optical Heart Rate Sensor, Barometric Altimeter, Accelerometer, Gyroscope, Electronic Compass, Pulse Oximeter (SpO2) and ECG.
That all means this will offer tracking while exercising, sleeping, walking, and on-demand for things like SpO2 measurement. But it also means everything can be combined to offer smarter overall measurements and more effective feedback on things like training readiness or recovery needs.
That super bright display is also worth mentioning here as it’s very clear even in direct sunlight, but won’t cost you too much battery – with a decent 38 hours with all systems tracking. There is the option to go for always-on, or intermittent, with the former costing you about 6 days on that 20-day standby battery life. In always-on, you’ll see the clock dimmed and it will brighten when you lift to look, as opposed to only doing that to turn on with the intermittent option. I found it super responsive either way.
The inclusion of offline TOPO maps elevates this model forward over its predecessor. It means you can have maps and routes, although it doesn’t offer auto re-routing when on the move, unfortunately. Much like the maps, which can be a faff to get routes loaded onto the watch, music is also a drag-and-drop affair as there’s no offline Spotify support – although the 32GB storage is plenty.
Run-specific features are fantastic, with this clearly aimed at the racers or those who want to get to that level. You have a workout builder to plan training with dedicated plans, training status so you know if it’s time to rest or get out there, a virtual pacer, and a race predictor. All really useful features that can be viewed both in the app and on the watch itself.
The watch does offer notifications for text and WhatsApp messages which come through right away and with that big screen, messages are clear and easy to read. Unfortunately, there isn’t yet support for emojis, which might have been a nice touch given the AMOLED display.
Coros Pace Pro: Performance
- Decent battery life
- Fantastic display
- Good GPS but average HR
To start on a really positive point, the display is stunning not only to view but also to control. Thanks to a new processor in this model that doubles the speed, the sensitivity and responsiveness are super-premium meaning accessing all the menus is a pleasure. The large and clear display is good for going through your data, including graphs, without the need to reach for the phone and app as it’s so fast, responsive, and clear. That applies to mid-training too where even movements don’t seem to put off that tactile responsiveness.
Tracking is good but not amazing when you consider how many GPS systems are at play here. GPS acquisition is fast and a helpful bar system shows you signal strength too. While tracking is very accurate over longer distances (5K+), you may find that shorter than that and with hills in the mix can leave you a little less clear. And cycling performance was a little off too, even over longer distances. We’re talking meters here, nothing huge, but still not quite as accurate as the smarter algorithms that the competition uses to work out your movements. To be clear, it performs well compared to most watches – and is the best Coros yet – just not quite as well as the latest top-end premium offerings from more established brands.
Heart rate tracking is the other area that wasn’t perfect. While some longer runs and gym sessions were well-recorded – compared to a leading brand chest strap there were some inaccuracies. For higher heart rate bursts or longer rides, the accuracy wasn’t as good as it perhaps could have been. That said, I’ve found similar issues with higher-priced competitors so it’s not a deal breaker – I’m just being super clear. Coros does offer an armband heart rate monitor which may help improve this output if high-intensity work is what you need to track very accurately – or you’re working in zone training.
Battery life is excellent with the 20-day standby time easily being reached or surpassed in my testing. Even training, with all sensors on and music playing over a Bluetooth headset, was still as good as predicted at 38 hours, if not better. I did use the watch with the display off when not in use though, so if you want the always-on display option expect the standby figure to drop by a few days. The USB charger and two-hour charge time combination do make battery something you won’t really need to worry about often – which is the goal right?
Get into the app and you’re met with clear, bright, and helpful displays that give you data in various forms without getting too complex as some of the competition does. I found it refreshing to have everything I needed there, with breakdowns available front and center, but without feeling like I had to dig around menus or be overwhelmed with too much information in my face. A difficult combination to achieve which Coros seems to have managed in record time.
I did have a few connectivity issues where the WiFi wouldn’t work on the watch until I tried to sync a few times. Usefully you can also sync over Bluetooth, which takes longer but gets the job done. Hopefully, the WiFi issue will be fixed with updates although I’ve had two while testing this and it’s still not working perfectly.
The silicon strap is super comfortable, very accurate to fit many wrist sizes, and it doesn’t move about at all. That secure fit does mean it’s a bit fiddly to get back on each time, so if you remove your watch regularly this might be worth keeping in mind if you’re considering buying a different strap.
Coros Pace Pro: Scorecard
Category | Comment | Score |
Value | Higher price for this brand but still a lot for the money. | 4/5 |
Design | Lightweight, stunning screen, and great fit. Points lost for mineral glass. | 4/5 |
Features | Various HR metrics, training status, notifications and multi-sport. | 3.5/5 |
Performance | HR and GPS are good but not perfect. Battery life is excellent. | 3.5/5 |
Coros Pace Pro: Should I buy?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Also consider
Component | Coros Pace Pro | Apple Watch Ultra 2 | Coros Pace 3 |
Price | $349 / £349 / AU$599 | $799 / £799 / AU$1,399 | $499.99 / £479.99 / AU$999.99 |
Dimensions | 46 x 46 x 12.25 mm | 49 x 41 x 14 mm | 45 x 45 x 16.2 mm |
Weight | 49g | 61g | 65g |
Caze/bezel | Fiber reinforced polymer | Titanium | Fiber-reinforced polymer |
Display | 1.3-inch AMOLED, 416 x 416, mineral glass | 502 x 410 px poly-silicon always-on OLED Retina Display | 176 x 176 px, MIP, chemically-strengthened glass |
GPS | Yes | Yes (unspecified) | GPS, Glonass, Galileo, |
Battery life | 38 hours, 20 days | 36 hours | 28 days, up to 25 hours GPS |
Connection | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi, LTE | Bluetooth |
Water resistant | 5ATM | WR100 (diveproof) | 10ATM |