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Apr 12, 2001
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The Apple Watch Series 9 replaces the Apple Watch Series 8 in Apple's smartwatch lineup, so how different are the two successive smartwatch generations?

Apple-Watch-Series-8-vs-Series-9-Buyers-Guide.jpg

In 2022, Apple unveiled the Apple Watch Series 8, introducing features like body temperature sensing and Crash Detection. The Apple Watch Series 8 has now been discontinued by Apple, and as year-old models, prices at third-party resellers are falling. As such, some customers may be weighing up whether to upgrade to a discounted Series 8‌ or the latest Series 9‌.

The Apple Watch Series 8 and Series 9 share the overwhelming majority of their features, so should you consider buying or sticking with the Series 8 to save money? This breakdown also serves as a way to see all the differences that the new Apple Watch brings to the table.

Apple Watch Series 8Apple Watch Series 9
Retina display with up to 1,000 nits of brightnessRetina display with up to 2,000 nits of brightness
Display can get dimmer in dark rooms and at night (down to 1 nit of brightness)
Double Tap gesture to stop a timer, play and pause music, snooze an alarm, answer and end a phone call, take a photo with the Camera Remote, open the Smart Stack, and scroll through widgets in the stack, all without touching the display
S8 chip (based on A13 Bionic chip)S9 chip (based on A15 Bionic chip: 60% more transistors, 30% faster)
Neural Engine4-core Neural Engine (up to twice as fast)
Siri processed in the cloud via internet connectionSiri processed on-device for requests that do not need information from the internet, resulting in quicker and more reliable responses
Siri can access health and fitness data
Dictation25% more accurate dictation
First-generation Ultra Wideband chipSecond-generation Ultra Wideband chip
Precision Finding for iPhone 15 models, providing distance and direction, as well as visual, haptic, and audio guidance to a misplaced iPhone
HomePod integration: When a user gets within four meters of a playing HomePod, the Apple Watch launches Now Playing to control playback. If nothing is playing, media suggestions appear at the top of the Smart Stack.
32GB storage64GB storage
Aluminum models available in Starlight, Midnight, Silver, and (PRODUCT)REDAluminum models available in Starlight, Midnight, Silver, (PRODUCT)RED, and Pink


Overall, the Apple Watch Series 9 is a very minor upgrade over the Series 8, with the S9 chip, Double Tap, and Precision Finding for iPhone 15 models being the most significant changes. As a result, it is very difficult to recommend upgrading.

Most Apple Watch Series 8 users will not be able to justify upgrading to the Series 9, but some customers coming from an older device could still have good reason to preference the latest model, namely those who heavily use a HomePod, plan to buy an iPhone 15 model and can take advantage of Precision Finding, need additional storage for downloaded media, or think one-handed use with the Double Tap gesture would be useful.

The Apple Watch Series 9 is very similar to the Series 8, so most customers who have an older Apple Watch model and are looking for an upgrade may prefer to look for a discounted Apple Watch Series 8. If the Series 8 can be found for a substantially lower price, it remains a solid buy for most users with an older model. To understand how the Series 8 stacks up against its predecessor, see our other buyer's guide from last year.

Article Link: Apple Watch Series 8 vs. Series 9 Buyer's Guide: 10+ Upgrades Compared
 
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orev

macrumors 6502a
Apr 22, 2015
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Double tap has been available as an accessibility feature for a long time, however it maybe operates a little differently than the newly announced feature. It would be nice if someone could explain how Double Tap is different from the accessibility feature.
 

surfzen21

macrumors 65816
May 31, 2019
1,151
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New York
The double tap gesture is definitely a feature I'd upgrade for... something that would be incredibly useful in day to day life

Double tap has been available as an accessibility feature for a long time, however it maybe operates a little differently than the newly announced feature. It would be nice if someone could explain how Double Tap is different from the accessibility feature.
This is the comparison video I am waiting for.

A comparison between the new system wide double tap gesture and the previously available accessibility gestures.
 

kc9hzn

macrumors 68000
Jun 18, 2020
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I’m not in the market to upgrade since I just upgraded to the Series 8, but there are a couple features that, while not headline features, are a solid upgrade.

That display brightness is solid, 2000 nits all the way down to 1 nit, that’s honestly pretty useful. The bump up to 64GB of storage is great, one of those “about time” upgrades, I reckon (not that I’ve filled up 32GB on my Series 8, but the Apple Watch has been at the same capacity since the Series 5). A processor two generations newer, offline Siri requests. All great features that I’ll appreciate in some future model when it’s time to upgrade again.
 

fourfudds

macrumors newbie
Sep 13, 2023
1
0
Double tap has been available as an accessibility feature for a long time, however it maybe operates a little differently than the newly announced feature. It would be nice if someone could explain how Double Tap is different from the accessibility feature.
It does seem to work a little different than before. One of the main requirements before was lifting the watch to use the feature. Hopefully no you won't have to lift the watch. Also there was a closed fist to select in certain apps.
 

nutmac

macrumors 603
Mar 30, 2004
6,152
7,635
While we can guess that Series 9 will deliver a longer battery life, with more efficient processor and screen that can dim to 1 nits, I am frankly disappointed by lack of meaningful battery life increase.

Next year's Series 10 (Series X?) is rumored to receive a major update, so here's hoping non Ultra will get some battery life improvements.
 

azentropy

macrumors 601
Jul 19, 2002
4,118
5,623
Surprise
Disappointed that Apple doesn’t offer the sapphire crystal display option in the Aluminum case. Don’t really want to spend $300 or more (since SS isn't discounted the way Aluminum models are at retailers) for SS which has cellular that I don’t need, is heavier, is a fingerprint magnet, and has it’s own scratching issues (although easier to buff out) in order to get a screen that doesn’t get scratches on it if you look at it funny.

I'd take that over any other new S9 feature.
 

cocky jeremy

macrumors 603
Jul 12, 2008
6,436
6,990
Apple Watch doesn't excite me. My next upgrade will be an Ultra model, but I'm in no rush. I had to search my SN to even know which model I had. lol. Maybe next year will add something that makes me want to upgrade.
 
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TigerWoodsIV

macrumors 6502a
Apr 3, 2010
593
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So almost nothing, essentially. Still waiting for a legitimate upgrade to get a new watch to replace my Series 4. Hopefully the rumors for next year are true.
 
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kc9hzn

macrumors 68000
Jun 18, 2020
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Disappointed that Apple doesn’t offer the sapphire crystal display option in the Aluminum case. Don’t really want to spend $300 or more (since SS isn't discounted the way Aluminum models are at retailers) for SS which has cellular that I don’t need, is heavier, is a fingerprint magnet, and has it’s own scratching issues (although easier to buff out) in order to get a screen that doesn’t get scratches on it if you look at it funny.

I'd take that over any other new S9 feature.
I had a SS Series 3. I bought a Series 5 to replace it (and technically also my Series 0 at the same time). When I bought the Series 3, I used my OG watch as a sleep watch. Fast forward to the start of 2020, the battery on my OG watch started to bulge. Simultaneously, I accidentally dropped my Series 3. The screen cracked in such a way that it no longer reliably accepted touch input. I managed to put a similar gash into my Series 5 not long after buying it, but I only just replaced it last month. The X-Ion glass definitely scratches more than the sapphire glass, but I feel like it’s less prone to catastrophic failure like that. If I were to go back to an SS watch (I don’t plan on it, I definitely notice the weight difference), I’d put a screen protector on it, just to be sure.
 

Crow_Servo

macrumors 6502a
Feb 17, 2018
961
1,256
America
If it’s the first time Apple has upgraded the processor since the Series 6, then the Series 9 is definitely worth the upgrade for anyone coming from an older Watch.

If you want a processor that is new to the Apple Watch that will help it run future Watch OS updates for years, this Watch is recommended.
 

Crowbot

macrumors 68000
May 29, 2018
1,809
4,092
NYC
Disappointed that Apple doesn’t offer the sapphire crystal display option in the Aluminum case. Don’t really want to spend $300 or more (since SS isn't discounted the way Aluminum models are at retailers) for SS which has cellular that I don’t need, is heavier, is a fingerprint magnet, and has it’s own scratching issues (although easier to buff out) in order to get a screen that doesn’t get scratches on it if you look at it funny.

I'd take that over any other new S9 feature.
Yeah I don't understand it either but that is Apple's way. I guess they can make only so many combinations.

I'm trading up from an Series 5 SS and haven't noticed any scratches on the case (Black enamel).
 

Rychiar

macrumors 68030
May 16, 2006
2,896
6,167
Waterbury, CT
whyyyyy is there no black Apple Watch... I'll wind up getting silver as its the only neutral color but watches are where neutrality matters as its something ya wear. In the past I compromised with space gray but now they even took that away from us for years. At least ya used to be able to spend extra to get a back stainless one but now they don't even have that...
 

kc9hzn

macrumors 68000
Jun 18, 2020
1,824
2,193
So almost nothing, essentially. Still waiting for a legitimate upgrade to get a new watch to replace my Series 4. Hopefully the rumors for next year are true.
Well, you’re missing the always on display (not that useful on the phone perhaps, but definitely useful on a watch), blood oxygen, ECG, fall detection, etc. and the slightly larger display of the Series 7 and 8. Not to mention things like newer generation processors, more internal RAM and storage, newer Bluetooth chips. If that’s not enough to drive an update for you, what would a redesigned case do for you that the Series 9 doesn’t? Just look different?

I guess I don’t understand, probably because I don’t really think about the Apple Watch the same way I would a luxury watch or a fashion watch. It’s more about the things it lets me do instead of the way it looks or the tech specs of the mechanism (which would be a primary driver for me in buying a mechanical watch).
 
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