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Your Galaxy Watch can finally track your blood pressure — but you probably shouldn’t use it

Estimates aren't the same as readings with a medical device.
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2 hours ago

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Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic laying flat with its screen off.
Joe Maring / Android Authority

I used to love drugstore blood pressure machines as a kid. The vague squeeze followed by a string of nonsensical numbers and a smiley face felt as mysterious as it was satisfying. As an adult, I’m much more aware of what those metrics actually mean, and this week, Samsung is bringing them right to your wrist.

Blood pressure monitoring is exactly the kind of upgrade I’ve been waiting to see on the Galaxy Watch in the US. Unfortunately, it’s not the tool people who need accurate readings should be using.

Would you buy a smartwatch just for blood pressure monitoring?

11 votes

The problem with Samsung’s blood pressure monitoring

Samsung BP Monitoring GAlaxy Watch 8
Samsung

As of March 31, Samsung began rolling out blood pressure tracking to Galaxy Watches in the US, something that’s been available overseas for years. The feature will make its way to compatible watches via the Samsung Health Monitor app, so anyone with a Galaxy Watch 4 and newer can tap in over the coming weeks.

On paper, the launch beefs up Samsung’s growing slate of FDA-cleared health tools, including ECG readings, irregular heart rhythm notifications, and its recently authorized sleep apnea detection feature. However, the system isn’t actually measuring your blood pressure in the traditional sense.

Samsung isn’t out here reading the pressure in your arteries. Instead, it leverages optical sensors to peek into your pulse wave patterns and estimate your systolic and diastolic values alongside heart rate. To make that work, you have to calibrate the watch with a standard upper-arm cuff every 28 days. In other words, you’re still making monthly drugstore visits or ordering a cuff off Amazon. The actual medical device sets a baseline, and then your watch approximates data from your wrist until you strap back in a few weeks later.

Samsung isn't offering medically accurate on-the-spot measurements, but estimates based on trends.

The bigger issue is that blood pressure isn’t a health metric to treat like a math problem. It fluctuates constantly based on factors like stress, sleep, posture, caffeine, screaming toddlers, LEGOs underfoot, and phone calls with my mother.

The energy score and health on a Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.
Brady Snyder / Android Authority

A calibrated estimate can’t fully keep up with all of that. That’s not to mention the usual caveats about sensor accuracy on wearables. Fit, movement, and sensor contact can all disrupt the readings your smartwatch gets. These issues aren’t dealbreakers if you are only casually keeping an eye on your blood pressure, but for anyone after medically accurate numbers, that’s not what Samsung is offering.

Whether you’re managing hypertension, adjusting medication, or monitoring pregnancy-related conditions like preeclampsia, accuracy is important. An estimate that’s even slightly off can be misleading.

Samsung acknowledges this, which is why the company positions the feature as a wellness tool, not a diagnostic one. Yet if you need to buy and use a proper arm cuff to calibrate the feature every few weeks, you’re already halfway to the most accurate solution. Reaching for the cuff when you want a reliable reading isn’t significantly less convenient.

A useful tool — for the right users

Samsung Galaxy Watch BP
Samsung

With all of that said, blood pressure is one of the most telling vital signs and a direct read on how hard your cardiovascular system is working. High blood pressure, often called the “silent killer,” rarely shows symptoms until the damage is already done. It’s tied to heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and even cognitive decline. Any device that offers insights that could help someone avoid these conditions is an obvious win, as long as everyone understands the limitations.

Any device that offers helpful insights is an obvious win, as long as you understand the limits.

If you need regular blood pressure monitoring, Samsung isn’t going to replace the cuff in your first-aid kit. It’s just making it much easier to take a look at your trends between measurements. As a casual tracker, wrist-based estimates are a nice perk to owning a Samsung Galaxy Watch. I just don’t recommend relying on it.

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