SamMobile’s June 23 guide says Galaxy Watch buyers should choose LTE only if they want phone-free use and are willing to pay for a carrier eSIM plan.
Bluetooth remains the watch’s main connection method, the guide says, letting non-LTE models handle calls, messages, app syncing and other daily functions through a paired smartphone.
Wi-Fi mainly speeds downloads and updates, while health and fitness tracking works offline on both versions and syncs later, leaving little functional gap for many users.
LTE turns the watch into a standalone communications device when needed, but the guide says it does not improve fitness features and can shorten battery life.
Samsung’s Watch 8 series is often discounted, and the company is expected to launch the Watch 9 later this summer.