Why you can trust TechRadar
We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.
One-minute review
It’s hard to stand out in a crowded field of fantastic fitness trackers, and while the Suunto Race had a lot of great ideas, its execution was ever-so-slightly off.
That gives the Suunto Race 2 a lay-up to be one of the best fitness trackers around, right? Fix the minor issues, and it’ll be a winner. Thankfully, Suunto has taken advantage of the legwork done by the first Race, and its successor is better in just about every way.
It looks great, performs well, and is just as intuitive for a fitness tracker newcomer as it is to someone that’s been tracking their body’s rhythms for years. With two and a half weeks of battery life and a relatively lightweight design, it’s comfortable to wear to bed for sleep tracking, too.
That does come at a cost (it’s more expensive than the original), but it’s easily one of our favorite fitness trackers of 2025 so far.
Suunto Race 2: Specifications
Component |
Suunto Race 2 |
Price |
£429 / $499 / AU$899 (Stainless Steel) or £529 / $599 / AU$999 (Titanium) |
Dimensions |
49 x 49 x 12.5 mm / 1.93 x 1.93 x 0.49 „ |
Weight |
65g |
Case/bezel |
Glass fibre reinforced polyamide |
Display |
AMOLED display with 466×466 resolution |
GPS |
GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, QZSS, BEIDOU |
Battery life |
18 days in Smartwatch mode, 30 days in Standby time mode, up to 200 hours in power saving mode |
Connection |
Bluetooth |
Water resistant? |
100M |
Suunto Race 2: Price and availability
- Two versions: Stainless Steel and Titanium
- Steel starts at £429 / $499 / AU$899
- Titanium is £529 / $599 / $999
One of the big draws of the Suunto Race was its price, but the Suunto Race 2 fixes the problems with the original Race at the cost of a higher price tag. The Stainless Steel model is more expensive, while the Titanium model ratchets the price up again.
It’s now around the price of a Garmin Forerunner 570, so hardly beyond the pale even with the increase.
Expect discounts around the usual sale seasons like Black Friday, but it’ll give Suunto Race 1 owners looking to upgrade some ‘sticker shock’, for sure.
Suunto Race 2 review: Design
- 1.5-inch display
- Feels premium to hold and wear
- Straps feel comfortable
As mentioned, there are two versions of Suunto Race 2: Stainless Steel, and Titanium. Our review unit is the former, in the Coral Orange colorway. In all honesty, three out of four of the Stainless Steel models have the same black chassis color but with different straps, while the Feather Gray is a more off-white color.
Titanium models are, again, the same chassis, but with two different color options; outside of the material choice, you’re getting the same general design throughout.
Straps attach with a pin system, which—while a little fiddly—does mean they’re more secure than other rivals. The display is 1.5 inches (slightly larger than the 1.43-inch panel on the Race 1), and is brighter, too, now up to 2,000 nits.
Two hardware buttons flank a digital crown for scrolling through menus, and the display is touch-sensitive, too, which could give it a leg-up over non-touchscreen rivals that can feel slightly less intuitive.
On the underside, there are the sensors, and the straps have gaps in them, which can make them feel more breathable than fabric-based alternatives.
There’s a pleasing weight to the Suunto Race 2. It doesn’t feel flimsy or too light, but it’s not too light where it feels cheap, either. That’s a tough balance to find, so kudos to the team at Suunto for finding a way to make it feel premium while not being too heavy to wear to bed.
Suunto Race 2: Features
- Built-in GPS
- No music storage
We’re still sad offline music streaming isn’t more common across fitness trackers, as it feels like such an obvious inclusion, but at least if you don’t need a killer playlist, you can take your Suunto Race for a run without your phone safe in the knowledge there’s GPS built in.
It’s accurate, too, doing a good job of identifying my location whether I was in busy London streets or riverside pathways closer to home. It matches up almost perfectly with my Apple Watch Ultra, which is my main tracker of choice. You can download maps for offline usage, too, something Garmin’s Instinct line doesn’t have.
There are over 115 sport modes included, too, running from the usual suspects like running and cycling, to strength training and more bespoke workouts like mountain trail runs.
Battery life is great, too. In smartwatch mode you can expect 16 days, while GPS mode reaches 55 hours – five hours more than the Suunto Run 1.
As you’d expect, it ties into the Suunto Coach app to offer detailed workout metrics beyond what’s available on the watch, and this data can be imported directly into the likes of Strava for ease of tracking and sharing with friends (and rivals).
Suunto Race 2: Performance
- Brighter display
- Faster processor
- Improved heart
We’ve already noted the improved display brightness, and that means it’s much easier to read the Suunto Race 2’s Always-On panel in direct sunlight.
Another of our issues with the last model was its clunky UI, and there’s not a whole host that’s different here aside from the fact that performance is improved thanks to a processor that Suunto reckons is twice as fast as the last generation. That makes moving through widgets much slicker on the device.
While some sleep tracking often feels binary, requiring you to trigger a specific mode (see the Apple Watch lineup), Suunto has done a great job of picking up on the occasional afternoon nap when I was feeling under the weather, as well as offering sleep stages and phase breakdowns.
Still, the elephant in the room is heart rate. Could Suunto fix the biggest issue with the Race 1? As it happens, yes, yes it could, offering similar results to those found on the Apple Watch Ultra 2, which we’ve tested against a highly accurate Polar H10 heart rate monitor and finding it the current gold standard for wrist-based heart rate measurement.
Not only that, but the Race 2 tracks heart rate variability while you’re sleeping. As someone with a heart condition, which means overnight tracking is particularly important, that’s a huge boon. Still, it only provides an average, rather than ad hoc information about your HRV.
Scorecard
Attribute |
Comments |
Score |
---|---|---|
Value |
Great value at the low-end, but the stainless steel version is a little too pricey |
4 |
Design |
Great, stylish design that’s comfortable to wear all day |
4.5 |
Features |
No music storage is a shame but everything else is great |
4.5 |
Performance |
Major heart rate improvements |
4.5 |
How we tested the Suunto Race 2
When testing the Suunto Race 2, I took it on some very light running exercises and on rucking excursions in a local, rural area.
To test its GPS, I visited London to assess its accuracy amidst larger buildings and more signal noise, and wore it regularly during the day and at night to judge the heart rate and sleep tracking.
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Also consider
First reviewed: October 2025