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GarminTech

Garmin debuts the Approach J1, a GPS golf watch made just for kids

This isn’t a shrunk-down adult watch — it’s golf tech rebuilt for kids.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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- Editor-in-Chief
Jan 22, 2026, 12:58 AM EST
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Promotional image showing three people walking across a misty golf course at sunrise, carrying golf bags, alongside two Garmin Approach J1 junior GPS golf watches in the foreground displaying a colorful watch face and a hole guidance screen with distance and “move forward to tee” prompt.
Image: Garmin
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Garmin is taking a very specific swing at the next generation of golfers with the new Approach J1, a GPS golf watch built from the ground up for kids rather than being just a shrunken version of an adult device. It is pitched as a confidence-building tool as much as a gadget, blending course data, coaching-style prompts and kid-friendly visuals into a smartwatch that tries to make learning golf less intimidating and a lot more fun.

Instead of starting from fitness-tracker basics, Garmin treats the J1 like a digital caddie for juniors who are still figuring out how to get around a course. It has over 43,000 preloaded courses, just like Garmin’s grown-up golf watches, but the software layer on top is very clearly tuned for children: simplified screens, bold graphics, and celebratory animations when they hit personal milestones. The idea is that kids do not just see raw distances and scores; they see feedback that feels rewarding and understandable at a glance.

One of the standout tricks is tee‑off guidance, which uses GPS data and the player’s ability level to suggest where they should actually tee the ball up on each hole. Crucially, that guidance is not confined to the formal tee boxes; the watch can nudge a junior to a forward spot further down the fairway, effectively shortening the hole so it feels playable without turning the round into a slog. For parents and coaches used to improvising ad‑hoc junior tees with cones or “just hit from that tree,” this bakes that flexibility right into the wrist.

Garmin also leans into pace-of-play, which is often a pain point when kids are learning. The J1 includes a simple visual timer that shows whether a group is moving through a hole at roughly the recommended speed or taking too long. It is not a nagging stopwatch so much as a gentle reminder, giving juniors a feel for golf’s rhythm and helping them build habits that will make them easier to pair with adult groups later on. In junior programs where slow play can bottleneck the entire course, that subtle education could be as valuable as any swing tip.

Another learning‑centric feature is “personal par,” which lets kids set hole‑by‑hole targets that match their current scoring level instead of chasing the course’s official par from day one. If a child typically needs seven shots on a par‑4, the watch can treat seven as their par and then celebrate when they meet or beat it, reframing progress around improvement rather than failure to hit adult numbers. That change in psychology might be small on paper, but it is exactly the sort of thing coaches talk about when they try to keep kids engaged through the early, messy stages of learning.

Club selection advice is also built in: once the junior and parent or coach have mapped out rough distances for each club, the watch can recommend a club and show the distance to the green. It is essentially a nudge toward better course management, encouraging players to think in terms of “my 7‑iron goes about this far” instead of guessing randomly or copying what an adult hits. Over time, those prompts should help kids internalize their yardages and start making their own decisions rather than relying on constant sideline coaching.

Physically, the Approach J1 is designed to disappear on the wrist during a swing. It uses a slim, lightweight case with a 1.2‑inch AMOLED touchscreen, paired with a ComfortFit fabric strap that cinches securely on smaller wrists. Garmin offers versions with cloud blue or lilac metal bezels, which, along with the softer strap, make it look more like a kid’s wearable than a hand‑me‑down adult sports watch. The water‑resistant build and up to 15 hours of battery life in GPS mode mean it should comfortably handle multiple rounds between charges and shrug off light rain or a wet‑rough adventure.

Interestingly, Garmin has not tried to turn the J1 into a full‑blown health tracker. Reports note that it lacks a heart‑rate sensor and the deeper training metrics you see on mainstream Garmin wearables, instead focusing on golf, plus a small handful of basic activity modes like walking or running. That feels deliberate: this is a golf‑first watch, not another step counter competing with kids’ general smartwatches. The result is a cleaner interface with less clutter, which is arguably the right call when the target user is still figuring out yardages and etiquette.

On the business side, Garmin is launching the Approach J1 at a suggested price of $299.99. It is on sale now and is being showcased at the PGA Show in Orlando, one of the biggest stages for golf gear, where coaches, retailers and course operators shop for the coming season. Positioning it there underscores that Garmin sees this not just as a consumer toy but as a tool that teaching pros and junior programs could weave into structured coaching.

The timing aligns with a broader youth‑golf boom. Industry groups report that junior participation has climbed sharply since 2019, with overall youth golf engagement—on and off the course—up by around 60 percent as more kids take up the game and programs expand. Initiatives like Youth on Course, which recently celebrated five million subsidized rounds played by young members across thousands of courses, show how aggressively the industry is courting the next generation. In some regions, pilot projects have even led to 22 percent jumps in junior membership at participating clubs, far outpacing national averages.

In that context, a kid‑specific GPS watch feels like a natural piece of the ecosystem: courses and federations are working on access and affordability, while brands like Garmin try to make the on‑course experience more approachable and data‑rich. For parents already paying for lessons and junior memberships, the J1 will be a premium add‑on rather than an impulse buy, but its learning‑centric feature set will give coaches a reason to take it seriously rather than dismissing it as a distraction.

There is also an interesting cultural shift embedded here: golf tech has long skewed toward the hyper‑serious—launch monitors, rangefinders, and stats‑heavy wearables aimed at adults chasing marginal gains. With the Approach J1, Garmin is leaning into playfulness without abandoning data, letting kids see yardages, tee suggestions and pace cues wrapped in colorful animations and achievable goals. If it works, the watch could help normalize the idea that course management and etiquette are learned early, not retrofitted later when bad habits are already baked in.

Of course, no wearable can replace a good coach, patient parents or a well‑run junior program. But a kid who glances at their wrist to see where to tee off, which club to pull, and whether they are holding up the group is getting constant, low‑pressure prompts that reinforce what adults are teaching. For a sport that often struggles to feel welcoming to beginners—especially younger ones—the Approach J1 is an intriguing attempt to blend tech, teaching and a bit of on‑screen celebration into a package built for small wrists and big swings.


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