- Cloud Backup
Setting Up a Disaster Recovery Plan for Your New Office
12 Jan, 2026
£683.36 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you want a “proper” smartwatch built for people who actually use fitness and outdoor features, the Galaxy Watch Ultra is a sensible buy. The titanium look isn’t just for show — it feels more premium day-to-day, and the rugged positioning makes it less precious than a standard watch when you’re on site, travelling, or training in bad weather. LTE is the big divider here: if you’ll leave your phone behind (gym, deliveries, field work, meetings), having connectivity without juggling a handset is genuinely useful in the real world. For £569.47 ex-VAT, you’re paying for durability and autonomy, not just notifications.
That said, I wouldn’t recommend it to everyone. If your watch is mostly for calendar alerts, quick messages, and casual step tracking, you’re paying a premium you won’t feel — a cheaper Galaxy Watch will likely do the job. Also, if your team/users are already heavy Apple Watch or are deep in another ecosystem, adoption and comfort with Samsung’s software experience can be a factor. Buy it if your users want “one device that goes further,” and they’ll actually benefit from the rugged build and LTE; skip it if it’s a nice-to-have or you don’t plan to use connectivity away from the phone.