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Garmin dropped its Q1 2026 software update on February 24th. Not a quiet maintenance releaseâthis is the biggest single software push theyâve done in years. Five major feature additions, affects everything from the Venu X1 to the Fenix 8 to the Edge computers. Some of it is genuinely new ground. Some is a catch-up play thatâs overdue.
Iâve been running the update on a Fenix 8 and Forerunner 970 since Tuesday. Hereâs what each feature actually does, what the limitations are, and whether any of it is worth caring about.
Quick Verdict
Feature Usefulness Gear Tracking (all Connect users) â â â â â Sleep Alignment / Circadian Tracking â â â â â AI Coaching Integration â â â ââ Course Planner (ultra cut-offs + aid stations) â â â â â On-Watch Gear Progress Bar â â â â â Best for: Garmin owners who run ultras, have multiple pairs of shoes, or have been fighting poor sleep for years without actionable data. Skip if: You only have one pair of shoes and donât race. Most of this update is irrelevant noise for casual users. Devices: Venu X1, Fenix 8, Forerunner 570/970, Edge computers. Partial rollout to older hardware.
Gear Tracking existed before February 24th, but only on certain devices and only if you knew to enable it in the app. The Q1 update rolls it out to every Garmin Connect account and adds the on-watch progress bar.
The core function hasnât changed: log your equipment (shoes, bike components, wetsuit, whatever) and Garmin automatically adds distance and time to each item every time you record an activity with it assigned. You set a retirement thresholdâsay, 500 miles on a pair of training shoesâand the app notifies you when youâre approaching it.
The new addition is the on-watch display. On the Fenix 8 and Forerunner 970, thereâs now a gear progress glance that shows active items with a visual progress bar and a mileage remaining countdown. Before this update, that data lived only in the Connect app on your phone. Now itâs on your wrist.
Why this matters more than it sounds: The research on running injury from shoe wear is clearâmost runners keep shoes 50-100 miles past where they should retire them, largely because they donât track. Seeing â287 miles remainingâ on your wrist before a run is different from checking an app on your phone after the fact. The friction of checking matters.
Iâve been tracking four pairs of shoes: two training, one race, one trail. The Fenix 8 gear glance cycles through all four with a swipe. Set it up once in Connect, and it just works. No manual logging per run once youâve assigned your default gear.
The limit: Gear tracking still requires you to assign equipment correctly in Connect. Garmin canât tell if you grabbed your carbon plated race shoes instead of your daily trainers. If youâre sloppy about assignment, the data degrades fast. Build the habit or donât bother.
The sleep tracking in Garminâs previous software gave you a score. That score told you âgood,â âfair,â or âpoorâ and showed your sleep stages. What it didnât tell you: whether your sleep is biologically aligned with your bodyâs actual circadian rhythm.
Sleep Alignment changes that.
The feature tracks two things most sleep apps donât: your sleep midpoint (literally the midpoint in time between when you fell asleep and when you woke) and your social jetlag (the difference between your sleep timing on workdays versus rest days). Circadian science has been using these metrics for years. Seeing them on a consumer device is new.
On the Fenix 8, Sleep Alignment shows as a timeline view: your sleep window plotted against an estimated circadian phase, color-coded by how aligned your sleep timing is with your underlying biology. Green means your sleep is well-aligned. Orange means youâre sleeping at times your body isnât primed for. Red is working against your circadian clock.
The underlying logic: Your circadian rhythm governs when you produce melatonin, when core body temperature drops, and when cortisol rises. If youâre consistently asleep at the wrong phaseâlate on weekends, early on workdaysâyouâre accumulating a debt that sleep duration alone canât fix. Social jetlag as low as 1-2 hours is linked to worse metabolic outcomes and slower athletic recovery.
Practical use on real data: After five days of wear, my Sleep Alignment graph showed exactly what I already suspected: my weekend sleep midpoint is 1.8 hours later than my weekday midpoint. The app labeled this âmoderate social jetlagâ and suggested shifting my weekend wake time 30 minutes earlier each Saturday for two weeks to gradually sync the two.
Thatâs actionable advice, not just a number. Itâs more useful than a sleep score.
The caveat: All of this is built on optical HR-based sleep staging, which isnât EEG-accurate. Garminâs sleep staging is better than average for consumer hardware, but it still gets REM and light sleep confused more than anyone would like. The circadian timing data is more reliable than the stage breakdownâitâs based on consistent patterns over time, which are easier to identify than precise staging.
For anyone whoâs taken sleep seriously as a recovery tool, the existing Garmin sleep data was always a useful direction-pointer. Sleep Alignment makes it more specific. See our breakdown of the best sleep tracking apps for fitness recovery to understand how Garminâs approach compares to dedicated sleep platforms like Oura.
The Course Planner update is the most specialized feature in the Q1 release, and probably the most practically useful for anyone who actually races.
Garminâs previous course tools let you load a route and navigate it on-watch. Fine. What they couldnât do: factor in cutoff times, locate aid stations, or tell you whether your current pace puts you at risk of a DNF at mile 47.
The Q1 update adds all of this.
What the new Course Planner includes:
On the Fenix 8 and Forerunner 970, the on-wrist display shows the next aid station, distance to it, and a cutoff countdown if one is set. No phone needed during the race.
Testing at race pace: I loaded a 100-mile course file with 15 checkpoints and cutoff times from last yearâs Cascade Crest registration materials. The import worked on the first try. The checkpoint display on the Fenix 8 updated every 30 seconds. The cutoff alert triggered exactly when Iâd expected based on the pace Iâd set.
For ultras, this isnât a convenienceâitâs race management. The athletes who get cut are often the ones who misjudged early pacing and arrived at a checkpoint three minutes after close. Having a watch that tells you âslow down, youâre burning too muchâ in mile 8 versus waiting until youâre behind in mile 60 is a different sport.
What it doesnât do: It doesnât auto-calculate your required pace to hit each cutoff from your current position. You see projected arrival times at current pace. If you need to know âwhat pace do I need now to make CP4,â youâre still doing mental math. That feature would be genuinely useful and isnât there yet.
Garminâs AI coaching integration is the feature Iâm most skeptical of in the Q1 release, which puts it in good company with most âAI coachingâ features on fitness devices.
What it actually does: the AI coaching layer analyzes your trailing 8-12 weeks of training load, VO2 max estimate, HRV trends, and sleep data, then generates a suggested training week. Not a rigid planâa weekly suggestion that adjusts based on how your most recent data looks. Big training block last week, sub-par sleep all week, HRV trending down? The suggestion pulls back the intensity for the next 5-7 days.
The honest review: The adaptive load management is sound. Garmin has always had decent training load calculations, and building a recommendation layer on top of them is a logical extension. The suggestions Iâve seen on my Fenix 8 have been reasonableânot prescient, but not stupid.
The limitation is specificity. The AI coaching suggestions donât yet specify workout type beyond âeasy runâ or âmoderate effort.â Thereâs no interval prescription, no strength training integration, no pace targets. Itâs load management advice with a brand name on it, not a coach.
If youâre an intermediate runner who needs someone to tell them to back off when theyâre overreaching, this is useful. If youâre an experienced athlete who already reads your own data, youâll find the AI suggestions lag behind what you already know. For genuine AI-driven coaching depth, compare with apps built specifically around itâwe reviewed the best AI fitness coach apps for 2026 if you want to see where the ceiling actually is.
Not all features land on all hardware. Hereâs the device matrix based on Garminâs rollout notes:
Gear Tracking (Connect app): Fenix 8 â / Forerunner 970 â / Forerunner 570 â / Venu X1 â / Edge computers â
On-Watch Gear Progress Bar: Fenix 8 â / Forerunner 970 â / Forerunner 570 â / Venu X1 â / Edge computers N/A
Sleep Alignment: Fenix 8 â / Forerunner 970 â / Forerunner 570 â / Venu X1 â / Edge computers N/A
Course Planner (cutoffs + aid stations): Fenix 8 â / Forerunner 970 â / Forerunner 570 â / Venu X1 â / Edge computers â
AI Coaching: Fenix 8 â / Forerunner 970 â / Forerunner 570 â / Venu X1 â / Edge computers N/A
The Forerunner 570 and Venu X1 miss out on the two most hardware-dependent features: the on-watch gear bar and Course Planner. The Gear Tracking expansion in Connect still benefits those usersâthey just see the progress in the app, not on the watch face.
Edge computers get Course Planner, which makes sense. Cycling ultras and gravel races have the same cutoff and aid station logistics as trail running. The implementation on Edge is identical to the Fenix 8: load the route file, set your checkpoints, get projected arrival alerts on the head unit.
Garmin isnât the only platform adding features this quarter.
The Oura Ring 4 app redesign went live in January with circadian rhythm tracking thatâs functionally similar to Garminâs Sleep Alignmentâsame midpoint and social jetlag metrics, slightly different visualization. Ouraâs sleep staging hardware (three optical sensors, skin temperature, accelerometer) is more accurate than Garminâs optical-only approach. If sleep is your primary focus, Oura still edges out Garmin on data quality. The difference is ecosystem: Oura doesnât track runs, rides, or gear.
The WHOOP 5 vs. MG comparison is the other data point here. WHOOPâs recovery coaching has been doing adaptive load suggestions for longer than Garmin. The AI coaching Garmin added is newer but less sophisticated than what WHOOP has built. Again: different tradeoffs. WHOOP doesnât have GPS, gear tracking, or Course Planner.
The pattern: Garmin is the platform that does everything adequately. Specialists do individual things better. If your training life exists inside one ecosystem and youâre on Garmin, the Q1 update improves your experience without requiring you to add another app.
Yes, and the update is free. What you should do right now:
The Q1 2026 release is Garminâs best software update in at least two years. Gear Tracking going universal with on-watch display is a genuine quality-of-life improvement for any runner managing multiple pairs. Course Planner with cutoff tracking is a real advancement for ultra athletes whoâve been managing this on paper or in their heads. Sleep Alignment adds a layer to sleep data that was previously missing from all but the most specialized tools.
The AI coaching is the weakest additionâuseful for some, irrelevant for experienced athletes. Donât base your device decision on that feature alone.
If youâve been comparing Garmin to alternatives, the gap in software depth between Garmin and most competitors just widened. The hardware on a Fenix 8 or Forerunner 970 has always been strong. The software is catching up to it.
Tested on Fenix 8 and Forerunner 970 from February 24-27, 2026. Course Planner tested with 100-mile route file. Sleep Alignment data based on five nights of wear post-update. Gear Tracking tested with four assigned shoe profiles.