Suunto Race S — India price, specs & where to buy

There is a moment, somewhere around the eighteenth kilometre of a long run, when a watch stops being a gadget and becomes a companion. It is the thing on your wrist that knows how far you have come when your own legs have stopped keeping count. The Suunto Race S is built for that moment. It costs ₹37,990, holds 30 hours of GPS battery, reads dual-band L1+L5, and shows you a map on a 1.32-inch AMOLED when the road turns unfamiliar. This is the smaller, lighter Race, and the smaller is the point.

I started running at 34. Late, by some accounts; right on time by mine. I have learned that the gear which lasts is the gear that fits a real life, not a catalogue. So this is less a spec recital than an honest account of what the Race S is, who it is for, and where it asks you to compromise.

Lighter, on purpose

Sixty grams. That number is the whole reason the Race S exists. Its bigger sibling, the Suunto Race, weighs 83 grams — substantial, and on a smaller wrist, you feel every one of them. The Race S strips that down to 60. For runners with smaller wrists, and that includes a great many women I run with in Delhi, the difference is the difference between a watch you tolerate and a watch you forget you are wearing. After the first kilometre, it disappears. That is the highest compliment a long-run watch can earn.

The display is a 1.32-inch AMOLED, slightly smaller than the Race's 1.43-inch screen — a deliberate trade for the lighter, more compact build. AMOLED is what matters in Indian light. We run in a sun that bleaches dim screens to nothing. AMOLED pushes brightness, so a glance at your pace at noon in Delhi still reads clean. The same screen carries the on-watch maps, clear enough to follow when you are somewhere new.

The accuracy you do not see

Underneath the smaller frame sits the same serious heart: dual-band L1+L5 GPS. This is the quiet feature that earns trust over months. Single-band watches lose their footing under flyovers, between glass towers, beneath a heavy canopy — and that is the texture of most Indian running routes. Dual-band listens to two satellite frequencies and reconciles them, so your track stays true and your pace number stops misleading you mid-interval. The Race S does not skimp here. It carries the full-fat GPS in a lighter body, which is exactly the combination a long-run runner wants. Our wearables hub sets out where this navigation tier sits.

The battery that lets you forget

Thirty hours of GPS. Read it as freedom, with one honest footnote. A first marathon, run at a gentle five or six hours, fits comfortably inside it. A full training week of long runs and sessions fits inside one charge. It is ten hours short of the standard Race's 40, which is a fair trade for the lighter body — unless your ambitions run past the marathon into ultra distance, where that gap starts to matter. For everyone training up to and through a marathon, 30 hours is plenty. Twelve days of smartwatch standby means the Race S lives on your wrist, not on the charger. You charge it and you forget it, which in India, with its power cuts and its travel to races in small towns where you cannot count on a socket, is not a luxury. It is peace of mind.

What it holds, and what it lets go

HRV is here, tracked overnight. Heart rate variability is one of the few numbers I have come to trust: a quiet, steady drop tells you the body is tired before the legs will admit it, which for anyone building distance is information worth having early. The maps are here, a real strength at this tier.

And then the honest absences. No music storage — your songs stay on your phone, and the phone comes with you or the run goes silent. No contactless payments — no tapping your wrist for chai at the end of a loop. For some runners these are nothing; for others they are daily friction. Only you know which you are. Name it before you buy, not after. The full Suunto lineup shows how the Race S relates to its heavier sibling.

Who the Race S is for

The Race S is for the marathon and long-run runner who wants the Race's navigation and accuracy in a body that suits a smaller or more comfort-sensitive wrist. If you have ever taken off a heavy watch halfway through a long run because it bothered you, the Race S was made with you in mind. It is, in practice, the more wearable of the two Races for a large share of runners, women very much included.

It is also for the runner who travels to her races and explores new routes, who values maps and dual-band accuracy, and who is willing to spend premium money on a watch that earns it across long, repeated efforts.

Who should look elsewhere

Look elsewhere if you want music on your wrist or contactless payments — those gaps are real and software will not close them. Look elsewhere if you specifically want the largest possible screen and the longer feel of the 1.43-inch display; the standard Race gives you that. And if you are firmly settled inside Garmin's or Coros's training ecosystem, the cost of switching may outweigh what you gain — our Garmin vs Coros in India piece is the place to think that through.

India, heat, monsoon

Two things tell you whether a watch belongs in India: the screen against the sun, and the build against the rain. The Race S's AMOLED meets the first, holding its brightness when the daylight is at its harshest. The build carries water resistance suitable for rain and sweat, so monsoon mornings pose no threat. As with any watch, confirm the rated depth before you swim in it — rain is not a pool, and the two ask different things of a seal.

The lighter build has a monsoon-season grace note too. A 60-gram watch sits more comfortably under a long-sleeve layer or a light jacket on a wet, cool morning than a heavier one does. Small thing. The small things are what you live with.

Price and where to buy

At ₹37,990, the Race S is premium, and a little cheaper than the standard Race. The value rests on three pillars: maps, dual-band accuracy and a 30-hour battery, all delivered in a lighter, more wearable body. If comfort on a smaller wrist matters to you and you want serious navigation, the Race S is arguably the better-judged of the two. If you want music and payments, your money belongs elsewhere.

Buy it from Suunto's official India store or its authorised retail partners. Brand-direct keeps your warranty intact and guarantees genuine hardware, which is no small matter on a premium watch where grey-market units carry real risk.

Set it beside its rivals on our watch comparison tool before you decide. And once the watch is yours, give it a reason to be on your wrist: build a free STRIDD training plan around your goal race. The watch keeps count of the kilometres. The plan is what makes them add up to something.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Suunto Race S worth it at ₹37,990?

If you want serious navigation in a lighter, more wearable body, yes. The price buys on-watch maps, dual-band L1+L5 GPS and a 30-hour GPS battery on a 1.32-inch AMOLED, in a 60-gram package that suits smaller and comfort-sensitive wrists. It is a little cheaper than the standard Suunto Race. The honest catch is no music storage and no contactless payments. If those gaps do not touch your running, the value holds.

Where do I buy the Suunto Race S in India?

Buy it from Suunto's official India store at suunto.com/en-in or through its authorised retail partners. Brand-direct keeps your warranty intact and guarantees genuine hardware, which matters on a premium watch at ₹37,990 where grey-market units carry real risk. Authorised retail also gives you proper after-sales support that an unofficial seller cannot.

Suunto Race S or Suunto Race — which should I choose?

The differences are size, weight and battery. The Race S is 60 grams with a 1.32-inch AMOLED and 30 hours of GPS battery; the standard Race is 83 grams with a larger 1.43-inch screen and a longer 40-hour GPS battery. Both share dual-band L1+L5 GPS, on-watch maps and HRV, and both lack music and payments. Choose the Race S if you have a smaller wrist or value comfort and lower weight. Choose the Race if you want the largest screen or the longest battery for ultra-distance ambitions.

Is the Suunto Race S good for smaller wrists and women runners?

Yes, that is where it shines. At 60 grams it is noticeably lighter than the 83-gram standard Race, and on a smaller wrist that is the difference between a watch you tolerate and one you forget you are wearing on a long run. Many women runners find the standard Race too heavy; the Race S keeps the same dual-band GPS and maps, in a 30-hour battery and a body that fits more comfortably.

Does the Suunto Race S have accurate GPS for interval and marathon training?

Yes. It carries dual-band L1+L5 GPS, which reads two satellite frequencies and reconciles them, so your track stays accurate and your live pace steadies where single-band watches drift under flyovers, between buildings and beneath tree cover. That accuracy matters for interval work, where an honest pace number decides your effort, and across a marathon where the 30-hour battery covers the full distance with room to spare.

How does the Suunto Race S cope with Indian heat and monsoon?

The 1.32-inch AMOLED stays readable in harsh summer daylight that washes out dimmer screens, and the build carries water resistance suitable for rain and sweat through monsoon training. Confirm the rated water-resistance depth before any swim use, since rain protection is not the same as pool-rated depth. The lighter 60-gram build also sits more comfortably under a layer on cool, wet mornings, and the 30-hour battery removes charging worries when you travel to races.