If your kid isn't ready for a phone, a smartwatch might be a better fit

Get your kid excited about chores, exercise, and keeping in touch.
By Leah Stodart  on 
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Overview

Best for healthy habits

Garmin Vívofit Jr. 2

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Best for location tracking

Xplora 5 Play

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Best for calling and texting

Apple Watch SE GPS + Cellular

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Best for kids who play sports

Fitbit Ace 3

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Best in-between fitness tracker and watch

Garmin Vívofit Jr. 3

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Budget pick

PlayZoom 2

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The percentage of kids who have a smartphone grows by the year: As of Oct. 2019, over half of kids have their own phones by age 11 (compared to ages 13 and 14 over the past few years). Kids seem to start begging for their own phone as soon as they can talk (or at least it probably feels that way to parents who are always handing their phone over to provide entertainment). In some ways, your child having a phone on them at all times can alleviate some serious worries about location and communication, and educational TV shows on a tablet are a handy distraction when parents need some peace and quiet.

But though parental control software exists for this exact purpose, a parent's worries about internet safety, cyberbullying, and screen time might outnumber the reasons for a young child to have a cell phone or tablet.

But just because your kiddo isn't ready for a phone or iPad doesn't mean they can't have any tech. Kid-friendly smartwatches let parents stay in touch with kids while they're away from home, and most are equipped with GPS to keep tabs on a kid's whereabouts without having to send a "Where are you?" message. Unlike smartwatches for adults, kids' smartwatches don't promote social media sharing and usually don't have the option to get on the internet at all, so screen time isn't as much of a concern.

For kids, the freedom that comes with having their very own connected device — and potentially more leniency when it comes to doing things unsupervised — is pretty priceless. The fact that they can flex their Apple Watch-like bling around their friends is an obvious bonus.

Some kid watches are also great tools for establishing a daily chore, homework, or bedtime routine. Parents can use the app to set daily reminders like "brush teeth for two minutes" or "read for 15 minutes before bedtime," then sprinkle in some leverage by scheduling a reward after. Kids can cross stuff off the list with the help of a built-in stopwatch or by setting their own alarms. Activities that are typically mundane are suddenly a lot more fun when an animated celebration, badges, or sibling leaderboard competition are involved (and when a parent isn't doing the nagging). When healthy habits are established early, they can carry over into adulthood (when deep-rooted bad habits are typically harder to kick).

What to look for in a smartwatch for a kid

GPS will be the biggest deciding factor for parents looking into smartwatches specifically to keep track of kids with busy schedules. True smartwatches (like the Verizon Gizmo) act more like a cell phone in the sense that parents have a live tab of a kid's location and the ability to text and call. Wearables focused more on fitness tracking (like the Fitbit Ace 2) may skip location services altogether, as well as the option for any two-way communication. Don't feel like messing with an app at all? There are standalone smartwatches that are ready to go without any invested setup.

Letting kids know that you can see their location can foster mutual respect and help with parental boundaries.

Watches focused on physical activity do have their advantages, though. Parents worried about screen time will appreciate the way that smart fitness trackers are not only a less web-based device than a smartphone, but that they actually encourage kids to get up and moving. Kids can check their step count for the day or get a reminder to stand up for a few minutes, but the most fun part is easily the on-screen celebration when a daily activity or sleep goal is met. Settings can be tweaked in the parent app, but having a kid set their own alarms or follow their own activity rules could be a great way to assume some responsibility.

A smartwatch might be replacing the need for a whole phone or tablet, but that doesn't mean entertainment is completely off the table. Some watches geared toward younger children have games from math and numbers challenges to augmented reality mysteries, and a camera with funny face filters might pop up, too. For such a small screen, the resolution is surprisingly clear and more than enough to keep kids busy in line at the store, in the waiting room, or in the car.

Things will go a lot smoother when your kid is in on the plan. If you do end up opting for a watch with location tracking or GPS boundaries, letting them know that you can see their location can foster mutual respect — even if that respect is unspoken and initially met with opposition.

Here are the best smartwatches for kids in 2022:

Most kid smartwatches have some kind of celebration for reaching goals, and it's always more fun for a device to nag about a chore than your parents. That's a given. But Garmin partnered with Disney to add some extra motivation magic to its reward system: Frozen II, Star Wars, Spider-Man, and Mickey and Minnie are available not only as band decor, but as the theme for an interactive Disney adventure. 

Parents can assign tasks for each child like chores or homework, then allot a certain number of coins to each task. The Vívofit sends reminders throughout the day — though kids will probably be too psyched on the rewards to require a heads up. Once a task (or daily 60-minute activity goal) is completed, kids unlock a prize specified by the parents as well as an animated chapter of their Disney story on the app.

Customizable watch faces, timers, and more are all easily accessible with a few presses of the button. Large letters and simple animations make it intuitive enough for kids as young as four to grasp. Parents can even add themselves to the kid account to rev up the competition in the step count leaderboard.

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The fact that Fitbit and Garmin have carved out a space in the kid wearable market was expected. But what may surprise you is how VTech managed to give both big names a run for their money by honing in on the stuff kids really want: games and videos.

If the smartwatch for your child is meant to be a true source of entertainment — as in something that'll keep them busy enough to stop asking for an iPad — the VTech Kidizoom DX2 will be your kid's new favorite toy. He or she can use the touchscreen to swipe through over 50 analog and digital watch faces and silly selfie filters, take videos, or play one of the five games (including an augmented reality monster hunt that encourages problem solving and getting up and moving). The 256MB storage can hold 1,600 photos or 11 one-minute videos.

Both the screen resolution and dual camera resolutions have been majorly improved since the original Kidizoom watch. The actual watch unit has also been de-clunkified compared to the last version and makes for more aerobic movement of little arms.

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Xplora smartwatch on green and purple design

Xplora 5 Play

Best for location tracking

Many kids are involved in extracurriculars that make for a hectic schedule. Parents may feel better if their kid's wearable can be used to confirm that they've safely made it from school to practice. The Xplora X5 Play makes that possible with built-in GPS, as well as calling or texting parent-approved contacts and an SOS feature. 

The Xplora X5 Play is considered a kids' smartwatch rather than just a fitness tracker, but its step count reward system is super cool and tangible. Kids earn an Xcoin for every 1,000 steps, which can be put toward actual prizes (from headphones and Fire tablets to movies) on Xplora's GoPlay store.

The Xplora X5 Play requires a T-Mobile or AT&T cellular contract. For Verizon users, the GizmoWatch 2 is very similar to the X5 Play.

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If you're looking for a smartwatch that antes up the independence as your child goes from middle to high school, an Apple Watch is a solid investment — one that your kid probably has on their list, anyway. At $169 on sale (which it usually is), the Series 3 isn't that far out of the price realm in which more basic kid-specific watches fall, though it's more robust than most. Kids can call or reply to texts from their wrist, set alarms or timers, check the weather, track their workouts, and a lot more.

Parents can mitigate the threat of distractions (present with any device that's not designed for youngsters) through Family Setup: Apple's watchOS parental controls that can be set through a parent's iPhone. Here, parents can prevent certain apps from being downloaded, watch screen time, or disable the watch during school or bedtime hours.

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Fitbit Ace on orange and yellow design

Fitbit Ace 3

Best for kids who play sports

The Fitbit Ace 3 is more of a fitness or activity tracker with goal setting capabilities than a full-fledged smart watch, which is exactly the level of connectivity some kids need.

But once you add a phone to the mix, it becomes enough of a smartwatch to give kids a head's up that their parents are trying to get in touch. The Fitbit Ace 3 (a step up from its predecessor the Ace 2) has call alerts, parental controls, and Kid View within the Fitbit app. The tracker features challenges, activity tracking, and animated clock faces to get kids motivated to move.

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Marvel themed Garmin Vivofit Jr. on purple and red design

Garmin Vívofit Jr. 3

Best in-between fitness tracker and watch

The functions of the Garmin Vívofit Jr. 3 are nearly identical to its predecessor, but its square-shaped face gives it a smartwatch vibe that kids may care about.

That larger, higher-res display makes the Jr. 3 look more like a legit watch than a fitness tracker, setting it apart from the Jr. 2. Both count steps, monitor sleep patterns, and offer timed activities to track movement during playtime or sports practice. The Jr. 3 also introduces a "distance traveled" capability as well as a widget to store emergency contact information.

As kids get in their daily steps, they'll unlock cool interactive experiences that can correspond with the character on their watch, like Black Panther or The Little Mermaid. Parents can also use the app to  assign tasks, schedule alerts, and give their child an opportunity to earn rewards when they meet goals, like finishing homework or doing chores.

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Perhaps you'd feel more comfortable with the whole "my preschooler has a smartwatch" thing if a cracked screen wouldn't out you $100. The iTouch PlayZoom is a no-nonsense smartwatch that can act as a trial run or introduction to personal gadgets for your kids.

It might be on the basic side in the grand scheme of connected wearables, but there's a lot of content packed into this device. A few touchscreen games and a camera that swivels to the front and back are sure to keep kids busy. The stopwatch makes for fun challenges or properly-timed teeth brushing, too.

The official age rating is four and over, but reviewers say that kids as young as three had no problem navigating the cartoon icons. The side buttons mimic the intuitive design of the Apple Watch and no Bluetooth or app syncing is required. Aside from needing to be charged way too often, this little watch requires minimal upkeep. (Heads up: Reviews for other iTouch watches are mixed in with reviews for the PlayZoom. The kid version does not count steps or calories, track sleep, or connect to a smartphone.)

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Topics Smartwatches

Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

Leah graduated from Penn State University in 2016 with dual degrees in Sociology and Media Studies. When she's not writing about shopping (or shopping online for herself), she's almost definitely watching a horror movie, "RuPaul's Drag Race," or "The Office." You can follow her on X at @notleah or email her at [email protected].


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