The Polar Pacer Pro does one job, and it does it without apology. It is a mid-range running watch — 35 hours of GPS battery, a 41-gram body, a 1.2-inch MIP screen, HRV tracking, ₹26,995 in India. No music on the wrist. No payments. No maps. In a market drunk on AMOLED screens and smartwatch feature lists, that restraint is either the smartest thing about this watch or the reason you should buy something else. I have run four marathons across two continents, and I will tell you straight which it is for you.
Here is the founder's bias up front: I like a watch that knows what it is. The Pacer Pro is a training tool, not a wrist computer. It exists to record your runs accurately, read your recovery, and stay out of the way. Whether that is a feature or a flaw depends entirely on the runner reading this. So let me make the case both ways and let you decide.
The MIP screen is the whole argument
Start with the display, because it is the most misunderstood thing about this watch. The Pacer Pro uses a 1.2-inch MIP panel — memory-in-pixel — not the bright AMOLED everyone is chasing. On a shop shelf, MIP looks dull. On a road in Indian sun, it is the better screen. MIP is transflective: the harder the sun hits it, the clearer it gets, and it draws so little power that the always-on display costs you almost nothing. For the months when most of us train in brutal glare, that is the right trade. It also feeds the battery: 35 hours of GPS recording covers any marathon and most long days, and you charge it about once a week in regular use. The dull screen is the reason the battery is good. Read it that way and the Pacer Pro starts making sense.
At 41 grams it is genuinely light. You forget it is there on a long run, which is exactly what you want from a training watch. HRV tracking is on board, so the recovery and readiness picture that Polar built its name on is here in honest form — enough to tell you when a week is landing hard and when to back off.
What it does not do, said plainly
No music storage. No contactless payments. No on-watch maps. If you run with music from the wrist, tap to pay for a metro fare, or follow a route on the screen on the trail, this is not your watch — full stop. The Pacer Pro is for the runner who carries a phone or runs unplugged, who pays with the phone, and who runs known roads. Strip those expectations away and what is left is a focused, accurate, light training tool. Keep those expectations and you will resent it. Be honest with yourself about which runner you are.
The fight it has to win: Pacer Pro vs Coros Pace 3
Let us not pretend this comparison does not exist, because every Indian buyer in this price band runs into it. At ₹26,995, the Pacer Pro sits right next to the Coros Pace 3, which costs less and gives you dual-band L1+L5 GPS where the Pacer Pro runs single-band L1. That is a real gap. Dual-band tracks cleaner between tall buildings and under tree cover — in dense city running, it is the more accurate setup, and the Coros undercuts the Polar on price while offering it. On raw GPS hardware, the Coros wins this round. I am not going to spin that.
What the Pacer Pro counters with is Polar's recovery and training-load science and a clean, no-noise running experience from a brand that has done this longer than almost anyone. The single-band L1 GPS is perfectly accurate on open roads, parks and most Indian race routes — it is in the high-rise canyons that the limitation shows. So the decision is genuinely close: if you run mostly open roads and trust Polar's recovery brain, the Pacer Pro holds its ground; if you run dense cities and want the best GPS for the rupee, the Coros Pace 3 is the sharper buy. Put them head to head on the watch comparison tool before you spend, and if you are weighing the bigger ecosystem question, our Garmin vs Coros in India breakdown frames the two camps most Indian runners actually choose between. The other natural rival is the Garmin Forerunner 165, which costs more and brings the Garmin ecosystem; the Pacer Pro answers with battery and price.
Buying it and beating the weather in India
Buy it from Polar's official India store. Polar's footprint here is smaller than Garmin's, so brand-direct is the cleanest route to a genuine unit and a real warranty. ₹26,995 is the going price and Polar rarely slashes it, so plan around that number.
For Indian conditions, the Pacer Pro is well suited. Water resistance shrugs off monsoon rain and a humid summer's sweat, and the MIP screen — as established — only gets better the harder the sun is. There is no fragile AMOLED to wash out at noon. Optical wrist heart rate, here as on any watch, can wobble in the cold or with a loose band, so for sharp threshold sessions a chest strap still reads truer, and Polar's straps pair cleanly with this watch. Rinse the band after salty runs and it will go the distance. For where it sits in the field, browse our wearables hub and the full Polar lineup.
The verdict, in one breath
The Polar Pacer Pro is the right watch for the focused runner who wants accurate recording, real recovery data and a week of battery, who runs mostly open roads, and who does not need music, payments or maps from the wrist. At ₹26,995, light at 41 grams, with a sun-proof MIP screen and Polar's training science, it is a clean, honest training tool that knows exactly what it is.
It is the wrong watch if you run dense high-rise cities and want the best GPS for the money — the cheaper, dual-band Coros Pace 3 takes that crown — or if you want music, tap-to-pay or maps on your wrist. No shame in wanting those things; just buy the watch that has them. Match the tool to the runner you actually are, then go put it to work. And whatever you strap on, the plan underneath has to earn its keep — build it free with the STRIDD plan generator, and let the Pacer Pro keep the honest record.