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The Apple Watch Series 11 is now available for pre-order. The latest models feature just four changes over their predecessors–making them perhaps the smallest generational upgrade in the device's history. Here's everything that's new.

apple-watch-series-10-gold-titanium.jpg

Apple's latest Apple Watch models bring a very small selection of specific improvements following last year's design refresh. This guide lists all of the differences between the Series 10 and ‌Series 11 models to help you understand the changes.

Apple Watch Series 10Apple Watch Series 11
Ion-X glass (aluminum models only)2x more scratch-resistant Ion-X glass (aluminum models only)
LTE and UMTS (cellular models only)LTE and 5G (cellular models only)
1.118–1.266 watt-hour battery1.245–1.403 watt-hour battery (7–10% larger)
Silver aluminum optionSpace Gray aluminum option


Somewhat surprisingly, there are no other differences between the Apple Watch Series 10 and the Apple Watch Series 11. Notably, for users interested in the titanium model, the only differences are a slightly larger battery and 5G connectivity.

And if you don't enable a cellular plan on your Apple Watch, the 5G connectivity is also a redundant upgrade. In fact, in some countries, the Apple Watch Series 11 is still limited to 4G connectivity. 5G is not listed as a supported feature for the new Apple Watch models in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, and several other countries in Europe, South America, Africa, and Asia.

Apple claims that the Apple Watch Series 11 offers 24 hours of battery life, touting it as a significant improvement over the Series 10's 18 hours. However, this marketing tactic has drawn scrutiny as closer examination of Apple's own testing data reveals that the increase from the Series 10's 18-hour rating is largely attributable to changes in testing methodology rather than a major hardware improvement.

Before the Series 11, the smallest generational upgrade arrived with the Series 5. It introduced the always-on Retina display, S5 chip, compass, and 32GB of storage. It also saw the removal of Force Touch and the reintroduction of the Apple Watch Edition. Even this generation-over-generation upgrade was considerably more substantial than the Series 11.

Is It Worth Upgrading?

Normally our buyer's guides weigh up generational improvements and conclude that while most users should not upgrade every year, a minority of enthusiasts and power-users may be able to justify a purchase. With the Series 11, it is very clear that virtually no users should upgrade from a Series 10 – especially those with a titanium model, those who do not use cellular connectivity, and individuals in countries where the 5G upgrade isn't available.

Here's hoping for a bigger upgrade next year.

Article Link: Apple Watch Series 10 vs. Series 11 Buyer's Guide: Apple's Smallest Ever Upgrade?
 
With the watch, the better way to do this is to go back a few generations and give advice on which generation makes sense to upgrade. For me, Series 7/8 look like good upgrades to series 11, especially if you have an aluminum watch. But I guess Series 10 is also a good choice for those users - depending on how much more durable the front glass is.
 
I'm still wearing a Stainless Steele Series 8 and I don't plan to upgrade any time soon. The display is so much more scratch resistant on the stainless models it's amazing. I'm curious how the new glass compares to the older stainless glass in terms of durability.
 
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Upgrading this time around since I have a series 6. My sister is also upgrading she is on series 4.
 
I went from a Series 7 to a Series 10 and that was imo a huge upgrade. I always knew the Series 11 would be a small upgrade, obviously since its predecessor is the 10th anniversary model.

So anyone with a Series 8 and older will appreciate upgrading to an 11.
 
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I had a space gray Series 6 and it was a much darker color than the Space Gray Series 11. Is this correct and the photos are making it look lighter on the 11.
 
The Watch comparison page shows that the S10 doesn’t have Wrist Flick, but the WatchOS release notes show that it is compatible with S10 - no difference there.
There are a lot of "errors" on the comparison pages. I recall they had downgraded the peak brightness of the iPhone 11 Pro when the 13's launched, and I saw these kinds of "errors" again in the iPhone comparison pages.
 
Between this near non-update and the Ultra 2 going for 2 years before receiving an update, makes me wonder if the Watch really needs to be on an annual refresh cycle.
except, there are plenty of folks out there with a S5 or S6 (some even older) for whom the S11 would be a very meaningful upgrade, and next year it goes on.
Sure, the year-over-year Changs are not big changes but for those who keep their watches (or devices) for 4-5 years ...
 
With the watch, the better way to do this is to go back a few generations and give advice on which generation makes sense to upgrade. For me, Series 7/8 look like good upgrades to series 11, especially if you have an aluminum watch. But I guess Series 10 is also a good choice for those users - depending on how much more durable the front glass is.
agree, and actually the same holds true for iPhones ...
 
With the watch, the better way to do this is to go back a few generations and give advice on which generation makes sense to upgrade. For me, Series 7/8 look like good upgrades to series 11, especially if you have an aluminum watch. But I guess Series 10 is also a good choice for those users - depending on how much more durable the front glass is.
^This. Unless you've broken it or completely spent the battery, a four- to five-year interval on watch upgrades seems the sweet spot.
 
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