3 Wear OS features you're probably not using, but should be

Google Pixel Watch 3 on a wrist
(Image credit: Google)

Wear OS in the best Android smartwatches is packed with useful tools, yet most people only scratch the surface – sticking to notifications, fitness tracking, and the occasional Google Pay tap.

Still, the platform has matured quickly over the years, especially as watches like the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8, Google Pixel Watch 3, and OnePlus Watch 3 have pushed battery life, app support, and on-device intelligence forward.

In this guide, we’ll explore three Wear OS abilities you’re probably not using – and explain why they’re worth enabling today.

Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 run coach

(Image credit: Future)

1. Power-optimised hybrid mode

One of the biggest Wear OS upgrades came with the introduction of a power-optimised hybrid mode. This approach lets your smartwatch intelligently switch between its main processor and a low-power co-processor.

The idea is simple: let the efficient secondary chip handle lightweight jobs such as step counting, basic watch-face refreshes, and sensor sampling, so the main processor only wakes when you genuinely need it.

Despite being widely supported, many Wear OS users don’t actively take advantage of hybrid mode because most of its benefits sit quietly in the background.

You can, however, maximise its impact by tweaking a few settings. Choosing a watch face built using Google’s newer Watch Face Format, reducing the number of live complications, and disabling features you rarely use helps the low-power chip work smarter.

The result is noticeably better battery performance. In our recent Wear OS watch reviews, such as the OnePlus Watch 3, we saw how hybrid processing can stretch usage over several days rather than just one or two.

Google Pixel Watch 3, 41mm and 45mm

(Image credit: Future/Lance Ulanoff)

2. Google Assistant routines on your wrist

Google Assistant on Wear OS has steadily grown more capable, and an overlooked feature is the ability to trigger routines directly from your watch.

These routines – sequences of actions you typically run through the Google Home or Assistant apps – can bundle everyday tasks into a single command.

For example, you might set up a morning routine that switches on the lights, adjusts the heating, shares a quick weather update, and starts a playlist.

With a Wear OS watch, you can launch all of this from your wrist with a simple voice prompt or a tap.

Setting them up is straightforward: build or adjust your routine in the Google Home app on your phone, then ensure Google Assistant is enabled.

Assigning a hardware button or quick tile to Assistant makes it even easier, letting you fire off a routine without digging through menus.

Once everything is linked, saying “Hey Google” followed by your routine name – or tapping the dedicated routine tile – triggers the entire sequence instantly.

While some older Wear OS versions may lack the latest routine support, most modern models handle it smoothly, making this a simple quality-of-life upgrade that many users still overlook.

OnePlus Watch 3 43mm

(Image credit: Peter Hoffmann)

3. Offline music (YouTube Music / Spotify)

One of the most practical yet underused Wear OS features is offline music playback, a genuinely phone-free way to listen to your favourite albums, playlists, podcasts, and audiobooks.

Most current Wear OS watches support downloading tracks directly to the device through apps like YouTube Music and Spotify.

As long as you have a compatible subscription – YouTube Music Premium or Spotify Premium – you can store audio on the watch, pair Bluetooth headphones, and head out without your phone.

Despite its usefulness, many Wear OS users never configure offline playback. Some still think their watch can only act as a remote for their phone’s music apps, while others simply forget to download tracks in advance.

Setup is easy: open YouTube Music or Spotify on your watch, choose a playlist or album, and tap the download icon.

Most watches complete the process faster when connected to Wi-Fi and placed on a charger, and once the tracks are stored locally, playback runs smoothly even with your phone switched off or left at home.

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Max Slater-Robins has been writing about technology for nearly a decade at various outlets, covering the rise of the technology giants, trends in enterprise and SaaS companies, and much more besides. Originally from Suffolk, he currently lives in London and likes a good night out and walks in the countryside.

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