Every review of the Garmin Epix Pro Gen 2 leads with the same line: it is the do-everything Garmin, the watch that finally has it all. That framing sells watches and helps almost no one. The honest question, the one I had to learn to ask after years away from the sport and a gear cupboard rebuilt from zero, is narrower. At ₹89,990, is a 70-gram ultra and triathlon watch with on-watch maps the right tool for the running you actually do, or are you buying capability to feel serious? For a small, specific group of runners the answer is a confident yes. For most people reading this, including the runner I was two years ago, it is no — and I would rather say that plainly than talk you into ninety thousand rupees of watch.
I am the comeback writer on this team. I stopped running for years, came back heavier and slower, and I buy every category fresh now with no loyalty to any logo. That is the lens I am pointing at the Epix Pro Gen 2.
What you are actually paying for
Garmin slots this into the ultra, triathlon and multi-day tier, and that placement is honest. This is not a city watch with a premium price tag. It is the top of the multisport range, and two numbers explain the cost: the battery and the feature list.
The GPS battery runs for 42 hours of full satellite tracking. In smartwatch mode it lasts about 16 days between charges. Read those together and the watch is built for people whose runs are measured in hours, not minutes. A 42-hour GPS window covers a long mountain ultra, a full Ironman day, or a multi-stage event without the watch dying on the course. That is the entire reason this tier exists, and the Epix Pro delivers it.
The weight is 70 grams. I will not soften that. Plenty of capable running watches sit around 40 grams, so the Epix Pro is meaningfully heavier on the wrist. On a 40-minute easy run you notice it. Across a 12-hour ultra you stop noticing, because by hour nine your whole body has joined the conversation. For a comeback runner doing short, frequent rebuilding sessions, 70 grams is a real factor, not a rounding error.
The screen, the GPS, the extras
The display is a 1.3-inch AMOLED. It is bright and sharp, easy to read mid-stride and in the flat overhead glare you get on an exposed Indian road in May, the light that turns dull screens into mirrors. The GPS is dual-band L1+L5, the accurate kind. It listens on two frequencies and corrects for the signal bounce you get among glass towers, under flyovers, in tree cover and down the narrow lane to the lake. On a tangled tech-park loop in Bengaluru or a high-rise seafront in Mumbai, that is the difference between a track you trust and a squiggle you delete.
The Epix Pro stores music, so you can leave the phone at home on an easy run. It reads HRV, your heart-rate variability, a useful if imperfect signal of whether your body absorbed yesterday's work. And it does two things the cheaper Garmins skip: contactless payments, so a wallet-free coconut water after a long run is genuinely possible, and full on-watch maps, which on a new road or an unfamiliar trail stop being a gimmick and start being navigation.
The maps question, honestly
On-watch maps are the headline feature, so let me be straight about who they serve. If you run trails, travel for races, or explore unfamiliar cities on foot, maps on the wrist are a real convenience. You glance down, you know where the turn is, you keep moving. If your running is the same three road loops near home, you already know every turn, and the map is a feature you will admire in the shop and ignore on the road. Be honest with yourself about which runner you are before the maps talk you into the price.
Who should actually buy this
Three runners, and I want to be strict. First, the genuine ultra or trail runner training for 50K, 100K or multi-day efforts in the Himalaya, the Sahyadris or the Western Ghats, who needs a 42-hour battery and on-watch navigation on terrain where a wrong turn costs an hour. Second, the triathlete or aspiring Ironman who wants one watch to carry a full multisport day. Third, the data-serious runner who genuinely uses maps, music and payments and wants the lot in one premium device without owning three.
Who should walk away
If you are a road runner, a half-marathoner, or a returning runner like me, this is more watch than your training justifies, and more weight. You would be paying ₹89,990 for a 42-hour battery and a map you use twice a year, if at all. A lighter mid-range watch gives you the same dual-band accuracy in a package you actually want to wear daily. I cover that whole spread in our tech and wearables coverage, and the uncomfortable truth is that the most loaded watch talks a lot of runners into hardware their training never touches. Do not be that runner. I nearly was.
Buying it in India
Garmin sells directly here, which keeps this simple. Buy it from the official Garmin India site, where you get the genuine unit and the real warranty. On a ₹89,990 watch you intend to trust in remote terrain, verified product and working support are not optional extras — they are the point. See where the Epix Pro sits beside its stablemates in the full Garmin watch range before you commit, because Garmin makes lighter, cheaper watches that suit most runners better.
How it copes with Indian conditions
Heat and sweat are the real test here, not rain. An Indian summer run means an hour of salt-soaked wrist, and the build handles that without complaint — rinse the strap weekly and it stays comfortable. The AMOLED screen beats the harsh afternoon glare, as I said. Monsoon rain on the road is no drama for the watch itself. The thing that ages first on any watch in this climate is the strap, not the electronics, and Garmin straps are straightforward to replace. The 70 grams, though, is the same 70 grams in every season — the heft that disappears on a 12-hour mountain day is the heft you carry on every easy 5K too.
Is it worth ₹89,990
For a real ultra runner, trail navigator or triathlete, yes. The 42-hour GPS battery, the dual-band accuracy, the on-watch maps and the 16-day smart battery add up to a tool that earns its price across the long, remote days it was built for. For everyone else, and that is most of us, it is a no — you would be buying a map and a battery you rarely deploy, and wearing 70 grams of it on every run in between.
Here is the disruption I will leave you with: the watch with the longest spec sheet is not automatically the most serious watch for you. Match the hardware to the distance you genuinely run, not the distance you picture on a hard Monday. Pit the Epix Pro against lighter rivals on the watch comparison tool, read our Garmin-versus-Coros breakdown to see how the dedicated ecosystems stack up, and then point whatever watch you choose at a real goal with a free training plan. The plan decides your race. The wrist hardware never did.