I Ditched My Apple Watch for a Smart Ring: Here’s What Happened

Is a smart ring enough to track your health in 2026? I swapped my smartwatch for an Oura and Galaxy Ring to see if screen-free tracking is the future

Apple Watch Ultra compared side-by-side with Oura Ring and Galaxy Ring on wooden desk surface
Picture this: It’s 11 PM. I’m trying to wind down, read a book (paper, not Kindle, because I’m trying to be better), and suddenly my wrist buzzes. It’s not an emergency. It’s not my mom. It’s my watch telling me to "Breathe."

The irony, right?

I realized then that my smartwatch—this miracle of modern engineering—was actually stressing me out more than it was helping me. So, about a month ago, I did something drastic. I took off the Apple Watch Ultra that has been fused to my wrist for two years, and I swapped it for a smart ring.

No screen. No vibrations. Just data.

If you’ve been debating between a smart ring vs. smart watch, or if you’re just tired of having a smartphone strapped to your arm, this is for you. I lived the "invisible tech" life, and honestly? It’s complicated.

The "Naked Wrist" Anxiety

First off, let’s address the elephant in the room. The first three days feel weird.

I kept glancing at my bare wrist to check the time, looking like a crazy person staring at my own skin. But once that phantom limb syndrome faded, something cool happened. I stopped "checking" things.

We talk a lot about Monk Mode and reclaiming focus on this blog, and moving to a smart ring is basically hardware-enforced Monk Mode. You literally can't doom-scroll on a ring.

Smart Ring vs. Smart Watch: The Breakdown

I tested the latest Samsung Galaxy Ring and the newest Oura iteration against my trusty Apple Watch. Here is the nitty-gritty comparison.

FeatureSmart Watch (Apple/Samsung)Smart Ring (Oura/Ultrahuman)
Battery Life1-2 Days (Anxiety inducing)5-7 Days (Set and forget)
Sleep TrackingBulky, uncomfortableInvisible, barely feel it
Fitness AccuracyElite (GPS, HR zones)Good, but not "Pro" level
DistractionsHigh (Notifications, Apps)Zero (Passive tracking)
StyleIt's a gadgetIt's jewelry

1. Sleep Tracking: The Ring Wins, Hands Down

Look, sleeping with a watch on sucks. I’ve tried the soft bands, the loose fit—it doesn't matter. It feels like wearing a handcuff to bed.

The ring? I forgot I was wearing it. And because it measures pulse from the finger (where arteries are closer to the surface than the wrist), the heart rate variability (HRV) and sleep stage data actually felt more consistent. If you are obsessed with sleep data, get a ring. End of story.

2. Fitness: The Watch is Still King

Here’s where the ring struggled. I went for a run, and without built-in GPS on the ring, I had to bring my phone.

And weightlifting? Disaster. Metal bar + metal ring = pinched skin and scratched tech. I had to take the ring off to lift, which defeats the purpose of tracking your workout.

If you’re training for a marathon or you’re a gym rat, the smart watch is still the superior tool. It just gives you that real-time feedback—pace, heart rate zones, timers—that a ring simply can't.

3. The "Vibe" Factor

This reminds me of when I tested Smart Glasses last week. Tech is trying to disappear.

Wearing a massive Ultra watch to a nice dinner always felt a bit... "Tech Bro." The ring is subtle. It’s a conversation starter, but only if people notice it. It blends in.

Who Should Actually Buy A Smart Ring?

After 30 days, am I going back to the watch?

Sort of.

I’ve settled on a hybrid approach (expensive, I know). I wear the ring 24/7 for sleep and overall health trends. I slap the watch on only when I’m working out.

You should get a Smart Ring if:

  • You hate charging devices every night.
  • You want better sleep data without the bulk.
  • You are trying to reduce screen time and notifications.

Stick with the Smart Watch if:

  • You are a serious runner or cyclist.
  • You actually use the "smart" features (Siri, replying to texts, Apple Pay).
  • You lose small objects easily (seriously, don't drop the ring in the sink).

The Verdict

We are moving toward a world of "Ambient Computing." Whether it's the smart home energy tech adjusting your thermostat automatically, or a ring tracking your stress without you asking, technology is getting quieter.

And honestly? I like the quiet.

My wrist is naked right now, and for the first time in years, I don't feel like I'm missing out on anything.

(Side note: If you are looking for apps to pair with your new health data, check out my list of Best Android Apps for 2026 - there are some killer health dashboards in there).


What do you think? Team Ring or Team Watch? Let me know in the comments.

About the Author

Amila Udara — Developer, creator, and founder of Bachynski. I write about Flutter, Python, and AI tools that help developers and creators work smarter. I also explore how technology, marketing, and creativity intersect to shape the modern Creator Ec…

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