There is a kind of runner who checks her watch before she has even sat up in bed. Not for the time. For the verdict — did the body recover, is today a hard day or a soft one, has the long run from Sunday finally let go of the legs. The Polar Vantage V3 is built for that runner. It is an ultra-tier watch with 61 hours of GPS battery, dual-band L1+L5 positioning, on-watch maps and a 1.39-inch AMOLED, and at ₹62,995 in India it is a serious amount of money. But the battery and the bands are not really the point of this watch. The point is the morning ritual, and whether you are the person who lives by it.
I came to running at 34, late by most reckonings, and the thing that kept me in it was not speed. It was learning to listen — to a tired calf, to a heavy week, to the difference between can't and shouldn't. The Vantage V3 is the most fluent translator of that signal I have used. It is also, for a lot of Indian runners, more watch than the running asks for. Both things are true. Let me walk you through which one is true for you.
What this watch is actually for
Polar has spent its whole life inside the science of recovery and training load, and the V3 is the clearest expression of that history. The headline metrics are heart-rate variability, readiness and the slow-built picture of how your training is landing on your body over weeks, not only the run you finished this morning. HRV tracking is here and it is good. If you have ever finished a block feeling inexplicably flat, or pushed through a week you should have backed off, this is the watch that would have told you. It speaks the language of the cautious, the comeback-minded, the runner who has been hurt once and does not want to be hurt again.
That orientation matters more than the spec sheet, so sit with it. A watch that prizes readiness is a watch for the person who trains for years, not weeks — who wants the long arc to bend the right way and is willing to read a chart every morning to make it happen. If that is not you, if you want a number on your wrist and nothing more, the V3 is paying for a conversation you will never have.
The hardware, briefly, because it is excellent
The numbers are quietly outstanding. Sixty-one hours of GPS recording is enormous — it swallows any marathon, any long trail day, multi-day adventures, without a thought for the charger. Eight days in smartwatch use. And it does all this at 57 grams, which is light for a watch carrying this much battery and this much screen. The 1.39-inch AMOLED is bright and legible in the midday sun we train under for months at a stretch. Dual-band L1+L5 keeps the GPS line honest between buildings and under tree cover, which is the spec that separates a clean track from a wandering one in any Indian metro. On-watch maps mean you can follow a route on the wrist on the trail. As a piece of hardware, very little is missing.
Where it asks something of you
Two honest gaps. First, no contactless payments. You will not tap this watch for a metro fare or a coffee, so it does not replace the phone or the card on a run. For most runners that changes nothing. For the watch-only crowd it is a real subtraction at this price.
Second, and this is the bigger one in India: the V3 lives in a market that mostly speaks Garmin and Coros. Your run club's group rides on Strava and Garmin Connect. The shared routes, the segment leaderboards, the easy comparison of paces over chai afterward — much of that social-running fabric is woven in those two apps. Polar's ecosystem is excellent on its own terms, deep and serious about the science, but it is quieter here. Going in, know that you are choosing the better recovery brain and a smaller social circle. If you want to see the split most Indian runners actually weigh, our Garmin vs Coros in India piece lays out the two ecosystems the V3 is sitting beside.
Against the obvious rivals
At ₹62,995 the V3 sits squarely against the Garmin Forerunner 965, the watch most serious Indian marathoners reach for, and a tier above the long-battery Coros options. The Garmin is the deeper all-round running platform with the ecosystem advantage. The Coros watches push battery even further for less money. What the Vantage V3 offers that neither quite matches is Polar's recovery and readiness science as the centre of gravity — the watch is organised around the question of whether you are ready, where the others organise around the run itself. Put them side by side on the watch comparison tool and the trade is clear: you are buying a philosophy as much as a feature set.
Buying it, and living with it in India
Buy it from Polar's official India store. Polar's India footprint is smaller than Garmin's, so going brand-direct is the cleanest path to a genuine unit and a proper warranty rather than chasing a grey-market listing. There is rarely much discounting on Polar here, so treat ₹62,995 as the real cost of entry and decide on that basis.
On weather, the V3 is built for the conditions we run in. Water resistance handles monsoon downpours and the sweat of a humid Mumbai July without complaint, and the AMOLED stays readable in hard sun. Wrist-based heart rate, like on every optical watch, can stumble in the cold or when a strap is worn loose, so for your most important threshold sessions a chest strap still tells the truer story, and Polar's own straps pair without fuss, which is one more sign of where this brand's heart lies. Rinse the band after salty summer runs and it will outlast the seasons. For where the V3 sits in the wider field, browse our wearables hub and the full Polar watch lineup.
Who should buy it, and who should walk past
Buy the Polar Vantage V3 if you are the runner who reads her body for a living — the comeback runner, the years-deep marathoner, the person training through a long arc who wants recovery and readiness at the centre of the watch, and who carries a phone on runs anyway. For her, the 61-hour battery, the dual-band accuracy, the light build and above all Polar's science make ₹62,995 a defensible spend.
Walk past it if your running life is stitched into Strava and Garmin Connect with your club, if you want tap-to-pay from the wrist, or if you simply want a watch that records a run and stays quiet. Those are good reasons, and a different watch serves them better. The V3 rewards the listener. If that is not how you run, let it go. And whichever watch you choose, the training underneath it still has to be sound — our free plan generator will build the weeks; the V3 will tell you, each morning, whether the body agreed.