Amazfit T-Rex Ultra vs T-Rex 3 Pro: Which Outdoor Watch Is Worth Your Money

Amazfit has two serious outdoor watches right now and the naming makes it confusing. The T-Rex Ultra runs about $400, the T-Rex 3 Pro sits around $300. Both are built for hiking, trail running, and general outdoor abuse. But they’re aimed at slightly different people, and picking the wrong one means either overpaying or missing features you actually need.
We’ve worn both. Here’s what separates them beyond the spec sheet.
Amazfit T-Rex Ultra
Amazfit T-Rex 3 Pro
| Feature | T-Rex Ultra | T-Rex 3 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Case Material | Titanium alloy | Titanium alloy |
| Display | 1.39″ AMOLED | 1.45″ AMOLED |
| Battery Life | ~20 days typical | ~25 days typical |
| Offline Maps | No | Yes |
| Water Rating | 100m + freediving | 50m (swimming) |
| GPS | Dual-band | Dual-band |
| Navigation | Breadcrumb trails | Full topo maps |
| Weight | 89g | 68g |
| Freediving Mode | Yes (up to 30m) | No |
| Price | ~$400 | ~$300 |

When the Ultra Makes Sense
The T-Rex Ultra is really built for one specific use case: water. If you freedive, do open water swimming, or just want a watch rated to 100 meters, the Ultra is the only choice here. It has a dedicated freediving mode that tracks depth up to 30 meters with real time data on screen. The 3 Pro tops out at 50 meter water resistance with no dive features.
The Ultra also has a slightly more rugged feel in the hand. Its heavier at 89 grams versus 68 for the 3 Pro, but that weight comes from a thicker case and better impact resistance. If your outdoor activities involve rocks, salt water, or general punishment, the Ultra takes it better.

Why the T-Rex 3 Pro Wins for Most People
Offline maps change everything. Being able to download topo maps and navigate trails without your phone is the single biggest upgrade the 3 Pro has over the Ultra. The Ultra only does breadcrumb trail tracking, which is useful but not the same thing.
Then theres battery. 25 days versus roughly 20 on the Ultra. That extra week matters on longer backpacking trips. The screen is slightly larger too at 1.45 inches versus 1.39, which makes the map feature actually usable on your wrist. And at $100 less, the 3 Pro gives you more practical features for less money. Unless you specifically need deep water capabilities, the 3 Pro is the better deal.
T-Rex Ultra: Pros & Cons
What We Liked
- 100m water rating with freediving mode
- Titanium build that can take serious abuse
- Dual band GPS is accurate in heavy tree cover
Worth Knowing
- No offline maps is a big miss in 2026
- Heavier than most outdoor watches
- $400 is steep when the 3 Pro exists
T-Rex 3 Pro: Pros & Cons
What We Liked
- Offline topo maps are genuinely useful on trails
- 25 day battery is among the best at this price
- Lighter and more comfortable for daily wear
- $100 cheaper than the Ultra
Worth Knowing
- Only 50m water resistance, no diving
- Zepp app can be clunky at times
The Verdict
The T-Rex 3 Pro wins this one for most buyers. Offline maps, longer battery, lighter weight, and a lower price tag. The Ultra only makes sense if you specifically need deep water features like freediving tracking. For hiking, trail running, and everyday outdoor use, save the $100 and go with the 3 Pro. Read our full T-Rex 3 Pro review and T-Rex Ultra review for the deep dives. Also check out our Outdoors & Sports picks for more gear.
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- Amazfit T-Rex 3 Pro Review: Offline Maps and 25-Day Battery in a Titanium Outdoor Watch
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