
Key Features
Clinical-Grade Sleep Tracking
Tracks sleep stages, breathing disturbances, heart rate, and SpO2 overnight. Withings’ Sleep Diary view is one of the cleaner-looking dashboards we’ve used.
Sleep Apnea Screening
The respiratory scan can flag breathing disturbance patterns — a real screening signal, not just a marketing line. Useful for people who suspect untreated apnea.
30-Day Battery Life
You charge it once a month. No nightly routine of remembering to plug a wearable in before bed.
Looks Like a Real Watch
Hybrid analog face with a small digital sub-display. You can wear it to a dinner without anyone asking why you’re wearing fitness tech.
Our Experience
We wore the ScanWatch Nova every night for three weeks. Setup pairs through the Withings Health Mate app in about three minutes, and the morning sleep summary popped up on the phone before we’d even gotten out of bed. The sleep-stage data matched what we’d seen on an Oura Ring run in parallel for two of those weeks — REM and deep-sleep numbers were within about 8 percent of each other, which is close enough that you’d act on either one the same way.
Where the Nova actually pulls ahead is the respiratory screening. We ran the overnight breathing scan on three different nights, including one after a heavy meal and late wine. The watch flagged a “high” disturbance index on that night and a normal one on the others. Whether you’d want to take that to a doctor is your call — but as a heads-up that “something’s off tonight,” it’s the kind of signal a Fitbit or basic Garmin doesn’t give you.
Comfort overnight is the real test for any wrist-worn tracker, and the Nova did fine. The steel link bracelet swaps out for a rubber strap if you’re a stomach sleeper or you hate metal touching your wrist at night. We slept through, didn’t notice it, and that’s the highest praise you can give a sleep wearable.
Pros & Cons
What We Liked
- Respiratory disturbance index is a genuinely useful screening tool
- 30-day battery is a sleep-tracker game changer
- Sleep-stage data lines up well with rings and bands
- Looks like a watch, not a wearable
Worth Knowing
- Premium price — well above most sleep wearables
- App is fine but not as polished as Oura’s
- The small sub-display is hard to read in bright sun
Full Specifications
| Display | Hybrid analog + 0.63-inch PMOLED sub-display |
| Battery Life | Up to 30 days |
| Water Resistance | 10 ATM (swim-rated) |
| Sleep Tracking | Stages, HR, SpO2, respiratory rate |
| ECG | Yes (medical-grade) |
| Materials | Stainless steel case, sapphire glass |
| Compatibility | iOS 15+ and Android 8+ |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the sleep apnea screening accurate?
How is it different from the ScanWatch 2?
Does it need a Withings subscription?
Can I wear it in the shower or pool?
Final Verdict
The Withings ScanWatch Nova is the sleep watch for people who don’t want to wear a sleep watch. It looks like an analog timepiece, lasts a month per charge, and the respiratory-disturbance screening is a feature that matters. It costs more than most rings or bands — but for the right buyer, it’s the only one that does all three of those things at once.
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