Wear Radar

Polar Vantage VvsSuunto Race

16d vs 8d
battery life
Suunto Race lasts longer
$100
price gap
Suunto Race cheaper
21g
lighter
Polar Vantage V
2
more health sensors
Polar Vantage V
Polar Vantage V
Buy/Wait:bad

Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming

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Suunto Race
Buy/Wait:good

Early in release cycle

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Polar Vantage VSuunto Race
Pricing
Starting price$599$499
Subscription✓ None✓ None
Hardware
Weight39g60g
Water resistance5ATM100m
Battery8 days16 days
Always-on display
GPS
Cellular
PlatformiOS & AndroidiOS & Android
TierSports GPSSports GPS
Buy timing
ReleasedOct 4, 2023Aug 27, 2025
Cycle advicebadgood
Deals advicegoodneutral
Next modelPolar Vantage V4 (2026)

Health Sensors

Polar Vantage V only
3 exclusive sensors
ECGDetects irregular heart rhythms (AFib)
Running PowerWrist-based watt output — tracks effort independent of terrain
Skin TempOvernight changes linked to illness or cycle tracking
Both
3 shared
Heart RateContinuous or on-demand pulse tracking
SpO2Blood oxygen saturation, tracked during sleep
HRVHeart rate variability — stress & recovery scores
Suunto Race only
1 exclusive sensor
Training LoadCumulative workout stress over time

Why buy each?

Polar Vantage V

ECG on a sports GPS watch

Polar Vantage V3 is one of the few sports GPS watches with on-demand ECG — usually only found on lifestyle smartwatches.

Wrist-based running power

Running power measurement without a foot pod or chest strap — a significant training metric for pacing effort on hills and varied terrain.

Polar Training Load Pro

The most detailed training load analysis in any sports watch: muscle groups targeted per session, recovery status per muscle, and long-term load trends.

Suunto Race

Significantly improved heart rate accuracy

The redesigned optical HR sensor on Race 2 delivers far more reliable readings during high-intensity sessions — a notable weak point of the original Race that has been addressed.

Dual-frequency GPS at 55h

Dual-frequency L1+L5 multi-constellation GPS for sub-meter precision in urban areas and dense forests, with 55 continuous GPS hours on a single charge.

1.5" AMOLED, thinner and lighter

The display grows to 1.5" at 2000 nits while the case slims to 12.5mm and drops to 76g — more readable in sunlight and easier to wear day-to-day than its predecessor.

Quick Winner

The right pick depends on what you optimize for.

For the budget
Suunto Race wins

$499 vs $599 over 3 years · no required subscription.

For battery life
Suunto Race wins

16 days vs 8 days battery.

For health depth
Polar Vantage V wins

6 sensors.

For daily comfort
Polar Vantage V wins

39g · no required subscription.

Bottom Line

Technical gaps
  1. Vantage V-only sensors: ECG, Running Power, Skin Temp.
  2. Race-only sensors: Training Load.
  3. Weight. Vantage V is 21g lighter — relevant for all-day comfort and sleep.
  4. Water resistance. Race rates 100m vs 5ATM on Vantage V.
Commercial gaps
  1. Hardware cost. Race is $100 cheaper upfront ($499 vs $599).
Pick the Polar Vantage V if…

Serious endurance athletes — particularly runners and triathletes — who want Polar's unmatched training load science and recovery guidance, combined with ECG health monitoring and running power in a premium package.

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Pick the Suunto Race if…

Competitive road and trail runners who want Suunto's precise multi-band GPS tracking and a vivid AMOLED display in a lighter, thinner package. A strong alternative to Garmin for athletes who prefer Suunto's clean interface and ecosystem.

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