Garmin Forerunner 35, Easy-to-Use GPS Running Watch, Lime, 1 (010-01689-01)

£189.00

Price: (as of – Details) Stay fit, stay connected, and share your progress with forerunner 35. This stylish, easy-to-use GPS running Watch offers elevate wrist based Heart rate, giving you the option to run Without a chest strap. It also doubles as an all-day activity tracker to give you steps and calories. Forerunner 35 includes […]

Description

Price: $189.00
(as of Apr 05, 2025 21:26:17 UTC – Details)



Stay fit, stay connected, and share your progress with forerunner 35. This stylish, easy-to-use GPS running Watch offers elevate wrist based Heart rate, giving you the option to run Without a chest strap. It also doubles as an all-day activity tracker to give you steps and calories. Forerunner 35 includes connected features like smart notifications, automatic uploads to the Garmin connect online fitness community, live track and music controls right on your wrist. Meet your fitness goals with help from various Sport profiles, intervals, vibration alerts to keep you motivated and useful features such as auto pause and run/walk activity mode. Forerunner 35 running Watch has what you need to take your running to the next level. Just put it on and go! Strap material : silicone.
Built-in GPS – built-in to acquire satellites quickly to track how far, how fast and where you run, even under tree cover. No phone required
24/7 heart rate monitoring – warm gives you heart rate all day and night -no additional Strap required
Vibration alerts – helpful vibration alerts notify you of running prompts, activity tracking milestones, smart notifications and virtual pacing progress
Updated display – new high resolution display that is perfect for indoor/outdoor viewing
Smart connectivity – auto uploads, smart notifications, live track, music controls and automatic sw updates

Customers say

Customers find the GPS watch easy to set up and use, particularly appreciating its heart rate monitoring capabilities. They consider it a good entry-level running watch that’s great value for money, with battery life lasting around four days. They like its fitness features, being suitable for both running and walking activities. The functionality and durability receive mixed reviews – while some say it works well, others report inconsistent performance, and while some say it holds up well, others mention it breaking quickly.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

7 reviews for Garmin Forerunner 35, Easy-to-Use GPS Running Watch, Lime, 1 (010-01689-01)

  1. Moss Parker

    Excellent overall with better than average wrist HRM. Great for walking!
    While I was in the military from 1895 till 2005 I was in excellent shape. I was doing about 4 hrs of progressive weight training/week and getting 7.5 hrs/week of very high intensity cardio. When I retired, I was probably in the best physical condition of my life, at 6% body fat. I was 51, then. After I retired, for the first few of years, I maintained a gym membership and kept up my training. By 2010, I was working in my consulting business, and I began teaching part time at a local university. More time on my ass and less time in the gym. In 2013, I began teaching full time, and I became almost totally sedentary. About the only exercise I was getting was walking across campus between classes. Just before Christmas, I calculated my body fat percentage using the Navy method. At 5’8″ and 178 lbs I found myself to be 29% body fat and obese! That did it for me. I realized I had to start to get back into shape, and I realized that it would be a lot harder now at 65 than it was when I was in my 20s.I have never been much of a distance runner/jogger. In the Navy, I ran my 3 miles a year for my two physical readiness tests, and that was about all the running I actually did (even though I was a sprinter in college). It also occurred to me that I probably just couldn’t jump on a Stairmaster, and workout at 175 bpm heart rate for 90 min, either. So, with the recommendation of my internist, I decided to start increasing my activity by walking. We live in a subdivision on a street that is an oval of exactly 1/2 mile in length (I drove around it eight times and it really is exactly 1/2 mile). I started walking around my street on Dec 26. I started going around twice (i mile), then I increased the distance by a lap a day, until I was up to 10 laps on Jan 3 (I took Jan 1 off). Since then I had been walking between 8 and 10 laps daily, trying to increase my pace as I went. Somehow, I knew I wasn’t getting enough feedback from just the mileage/time calculations. Back when I was working out in gyms, I always wore a chest strap, with one of the more advanced Polar watches. Now that it is over 10 years later, I explored more modern technology, in the age of FitBit and Apple Watches.Actual review starts here: One of the first decisions I made about getting an exercise watch, was that it would need to have GPS, since I have resigned myself to a walking regimen until I get my weight under control, and I regain some of my cardiovascular endurance. I also wanted a watch that used ANT + as its transmission system, because I knew that at some time I would want to add a chest strap for more accurate heart rate measurements (I purchased a Powr Labs strap that arrived today, more about that coming up). I also wanted the watch to be water resistant enough to allow me to swim (This is south Florida, and in the summer, it is a lot easier to do laps in a pool than it is to even walk, and by Summer, I will probably need to change to an activity that will allow me to increase my heart rate above the aerobic zone). The final thing was that the watch needed to be easy to read in a number of different lighting conditions. As I was purusing the various devices here at Amazon, I was immediately struck by the Garmin watch. Ergonomically it appeared to fit exactly the way I would want a watch to fit (I haven’t worn a watch in over 20 years), and the way the contrast is set to make the LCD display easier to read with more intense light, it appeared to be perfect for outdoor use in Florida. After reading a number of reviews, that suggested it was a good watch (but not great) at $200, I figured that for under $100 it was probably more than enough to satisfy my needs.The watch came the other day, and I spent about two hours reading the manual and playing with the features. I took the watch outside, selected the “Walk” activity and the watch set the time and date through the GPS signal (None of the Polars I had previously owned did anything like that, and the most annoying thing about those watches was setting date and time). Yesterday was my first day actually using the watch. Before I left for school, I did four laps around my street, and sure enough, the watch registered 4.1 miles ( I stopped it after walking up my driveway). It also had my HR average at 122 bpm, which seemed reasonable to me. At school, the class I taught yesterday was in the library, which is about a half mile from the building in which I have an office. Since “walking” is to be my fitness thing, I walked to and from class from my office building. After I got home, I walked another two laps around my street. After dinner, I synched the watch to my iPhone. After the synch, all of the activities I did since I began wearing the watch were displayed. I guess I’m still fascinated by the GPS thing, and when I tapped each of the saved exercises, I was treated to a GPS map of my actual walking path. The repeated oval around my street wasn’t too interesting, but at school I took two different paths to and from the library, and it was very cool to see them clearly defined on the map display.Today is my day off from school, so this morning I set out walk my 10 laps around my street oval. Just before I left the house, the Amazon Prime truck arrived dropping off Powr Labs ANT + chest strap. I took some time to synch the strap to the watch, and then set out on my walk. I walked eight laps, then paused to remove the strap so that I could proceed with just the watch measuring my HR, so I could make some “in the ballpark” comparisons. After two more laps, I went into the house and synched the watch to the iPhone. Of course, I got the same boring GPS map of the “circle” on which I live, but the thing I was most interested in was how close the average HR measurements were between the watch and the chest strap. For the chest strap, the eight lap HR average was 130 bpm (I try to walk at a little over 3.5 mph pace), and the two lap average for the watch alone was 132 bpm. As far as I can tell, the physiological variables were probably more noisy than the actual differences between the measurements, and, at least for my wrist physiology, the watch is probably “close enough for Government work”.So, in conclusion, all I can say is that I really love this watch. It does way more than I really need it to, and things I need it to do it does exceptionally well. If you are a competing tri-athlete, you may need something more powerful and complicated, but for me, and I’m sure the many people who want to invest in a product that will help get them off there asses, for the cost, there really isn’t a lot that competes well with the Garmin Forerunner 35.

  2. Purple Rabbit

    A Great GPS Watch
    I’ve had this watch for about a month and a half now, and I love it!!! I had the Forerunner 15 (which is also a great watch) before this, and I like the 35 even better! It is definitely slimmer than the 15 and looks more like a smart watch than just a GPS watch. It is not touch screen – it has the same 4 buttons as the 15, and the interface is similar. The 35 has a bigger face and the time is displayed in white with the background black which makes it easier to read in the dark (it does still have a backlight button like the 15). I wear my watch all day, but not at night. It’s supposed to do sleep tracking if you wear it while you sleep, but it bothers me to have something on my wrist while I sleep, so I haven’t tested that feature. I think the step tracking is accurate – it seems comparable to what my 15 was calculating. The GPS is very accurate – within .05 of a mile I would say. If I’m running on a measured course, it usually is a bit under what the course is supposed to be, but that’s probably because I’m running as close to the inside as possible making the distance I actually ran a bit shorter than what the course is supposed to be. The 35 offers several features that the 15 does not have: smartphone notifications, bluetooth connectivity, displaying the weather, and heart rate. Starting with the smartphone notifications: it is pretty simple to set this us – just connect via bluetooth through the garmin connect app (I have a Samsung Galaxy S4 and it was easy to set up and works well). There is a setting where you can set which apps you get notifications from and you can set it to beep or vibrate or both. I have mine set to vibrate and it works perfectly. You can NOT send messages from the watch – it ONLY READS notifications. If you want to send messages or make calls from your watch, this is not the watch for you. However, you can answer/reject a phone call from your watch. This has been surprisingly useful – if my phone is in my bag, across the room, or somewhere else, I can answer the call from my wrist then look for the phone so I don’t miss the call. Also, I keep my phone on silent all the time, so its nice to know when I get a message and not disturb others. There is a do not disturb mode – the watch won’t vibrate/beep which comes in handy sometimes. On to bluetooth connectivity: You don’t have to plug in your watch to sync it with garmin connect! It will automatically sync with your phone when bluetooth is enabled! I didn’t think that this would be a big deal, but now that I have it, I don’t think I’ll buy another watch without it – its just so convenient. Weather: It will display the weather, but you have to have the GPS on your phone turned on (I don’t leave the GPS on my phone on, so I don’t use the weather feature). I set it up at first and turned on the GPS just to see what it looked like, and its pretty nice – it gives you hourly temperatures and rain chances. Heart rate monitor: I think I like the idea that it has a hr monitor more than I actually look at it. There is an option to turn the hr monitor off if you want (I assume it would save battery). It calculates your average resting hr which is nice (I haven’t tested its accuracy, but the numbers seem right). It also gets your hr during a run/workout which is nice, but I rarely look at it. One final feature that may be the best thing about this watch – it does “find my phone.” You have to have it connected up by bluetooth and be in range (which is surprisingly far and can even go through a wall/door). When you select find my phone on the watch, it makes your phone ring (even if its on silent), vibrate, and the flash for the camera blinks. I haven’t tried it with my phone turned off, but I don’t think that would work since it has to be bluetooth connected. I almost forgot about music control! This is a great feature that lets you play/pause/skip. I don’t use it because I don’t listen to music when I run, but it works well – I played with it when I first go it. Overall, I love this watch and highly recommend it!Pros:Accurate GPSHR MonitorPhone notifications/answer callsBluetooth connectivity – automatically syncs”find my phone”control music from itInterface and overall look of the watch is much sleeker than the previous forerunner models which have a very sporty lookCons:Can’t send a text from the watchHave to have your phone’s GPS turned on the use the weather featureThere is nothing that the watch does poorly, the cons are just features that would be nice if it had them.Another quick note: Battery Life – It has not been an issue for me. I charge my watch every night, but it usually still has 2/3 bars of battery when I plug it in. I run every morning for 30-75 minutes with the GPS on which is the primary loss of battery. If I don’t run, it stays at 3 bars the whole day. I think the HR Monitor can drain the battery too, so if you wanted you could turn that off.

  3. Brendan

    I had a lot of questions about how this watch connects to an ANT heart rate monitor. In case anyone is wondering, it’s an automatic connection that usually happens after selecting an activity, but before starting that activity. The screen will flash briefly “HR monitor connected”. The optical HR sensor built into the watch stays active before starting the activity and several seconds after the activity starts. When it stops shining green, but you’re still collecting HR data, then the ANT HR monitor is connected (there is no icon that shows which HR monitor data is being taken from, this is the only method I’ve found that lets me know which HR monitor is being used).Pros:* Very consistent daily calorie expenditure (my watch always estimates ~500 calories under how many I should be eating, took a few weeks of weight and calorie counting to get that number)* Tracks all my metrics for my activities and I can view them in Garmin’s app / website.* Amazing battery life, usually charge it once a week for an hour.* Great “smart” watch functions. vibrates when I get calls, texts, and emails.Cons:* Randomly, the watch will vibrate and display “GOAL”. It does this every day and I have no idea what its talking about. Towards the end of a week it will start displaying things like “GOAL x7”.* Very difficult to extract metrics from an activity into a .csv or excel spreadsheet. Need to download third party software that processes a .fit file. The .fit file contains all the data from a specific activity. It’s tricky to find the link in Garmin’s web page to download this.* I don’t trust the step count. It increments when I’m on the bus or driving. Use go up by a lot when I first got the watch. Fast forward three months and it usually counts 1 step for every 5 seconds of motion in a bus/car.* The information on sleeping is a cute, but useless function. Impossible to characterize a person’s sleep pattern based on wrist motion, especially if there is more than one person in their bed.Overall:Amazing watch for tracking work outs, counting daily energy expenditure, and notifying you about phones, calls, texts, etc.

  4. Marcie

    I have gone through about 7 watches and returned them all because when you try to read a message you cant see it. My eyes are good and if I cant see it, no one can! But this watch is awesome, the font is large and the display is a very beautiful smoke grey digital look that is easy on the eyes. This watch keeps me in shape and beeps when I need to get up and start moving to keep those calories off. It receives all notifications from text to whatsapp to phone calls, etc. The app is the best part of this phone as it keeps track of everything and is well designed and professional. If you are a health nut or a jock, this watch is for you. There are a ton of things this watch can be used for but for now, I am just happy getting the notifications. Also, I prefer this not being a touch screen. The screen stays clean and isn’t covered with my finger prints and swiping isn’t necessary. We do it enough on our phones already. Its awesome!

  5. rajpal singh

    Difficult to operate..needs more smooth functioning.

  6. Cliente de Kindle

    Es un reloj muy básico, de la línea más económica de Garmin claro por no ser un reloj actual, el reloj es agradable a la vista y cumple sus funciones, yo suelo correr y para los entrenamientos y carreras funciona perfecto, por el precio vale mucho la pena.Además el costo por esta aplicación es más económico que en tiendas físicas, la entrega muy rápida y en excelentes condiciones.

  7. Noé Martín Carreón Aguiñaga

    Buscas lo básico de un monitor de ejercicio pero con prestaciones ligeramente superiores? Aquí lo tienes. Lo uso para corridas en exterior y en caminadora, y funciona de maravilla.Ventajas- Funciones básicas pero suficientes.- Fácil sincronización con smartphone (probado en android).- Pantalla visualmente sencilla y práctica.- Correa resistente y de sensación agradable.- Batería de buena duración (5 días con 2 sesiones de ejercicio diarias y 7 días sólo con función de reloj).- Puedes ver notificaciones y llamadas entrantes.- Carga en poco tiempo (de 1 a 4 rayitas en 1hr).- Para corredores, es bastante preciso y proporciona datos como ritmo, cadencia y ppm.Desventajas- Pantalla sin colores ni touch. Cuesta tiempo acostumbrarse a los botones.- No aporta datos avanzados para corredores pro.- Algunas veces no muestra el ID de llamada entrante.- La distancia de conexión de bluetooth es corta (5 metros máximo).- La batería se baja rápido con uso prolongado de GPS.Yo como corredor amateur, es más de lo que puedo pedir. No sólo me es suficiente, sino que superó mis expectativas. A menos que seas un corredor pro o elite, este reloj es todo lo que necesitas para mantener un monitoreo decente y preciso de tus sesiones.

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