Watch shuts down during exercise


My Watch series 2 sporadically shuts down during exercise. I can be swimming, walking, or biking. It will start tracking the exercise and then at some point later during the workout I’ll look down at my watch and it will be totally off, requiring me to turn it back on. Never shuts down at any other time. only when the exercise is running. I noticed this began after it updated to watchOS 6.1.3. I’ve reset it, erased it and reinstalled from backup without improvement. It’s not the battery because once it restarts it’ll be fine the rest of the day(s) until I workout again. The workout power saving mode has been on for years and has not been a problem in the past. I have very few other apps on the watch, too. Pretty basic set up.


Anyone have this occur, too? Bug? Does Apple know?

Apple Watch

Posted on Mar 21, 2020 12:26 PM

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Posted on Sep 19, 2020 12:47 PM

To me, it sounds like the most likely cause is battery degradation. As batteries get older, they sometimes no longer discharge in a graceful way. In a “normal” battery discharge, the battery voltage declines gradually as the battery is being discharged. When a Li ion batteries get older, they sometimes experience sudden, large, unexpected voltage drops during discharge, especially if the discharge rate is high. The watch electronics need a certain minimum voltage to operate properly. When there is a sudden, unpredictable drop in the battery voltage below the minimum level, the watch cannot react fast enough to handle it gracefully, provide warnings, etc. It just dies or attempts to reboot as many people have described. The various solutions that people have offered such as turning off WiFi, background apps, etc. are all actions that reduce the load on the battery, i.e. the discharge rate. Under low/normal load conditions, the battery voltage may behavior ok and decline gradually, but under the higher load conditions, the sudden voltage drop may occur. When the watch is in exercise mode, it is continuously active, and also measuring heart rate, both of which add a lot to the rate of battery discharge, thereby setting up the conditions for the voltage crash and the watch shutdown. You can employ the “workaround” strategies of reducing load by turning off WiFi, etc., but this is likely only a stopgap as the battery performance will continue to decline and, eventually, even the reduced load will be too much. My suggestion is that you consider having the battery replaced. I think Apple will do it for $79, or you can take it to a variety of repair shops. I suppose there are kits to do-it-yourself, but I don’t recommend it, especially if you care about the water resistance.


I have a Watch 2 that is experiencing this issue. Turning off WiFi has helped, so I will use it this way for awhile, especially since it is an old watch that I only use for exercising. (I have a newer one for other times.). But I think the battery’s days are numbered...


I see that some people have sent their watches into Apple, and Apple has returned them saying the diagnostics check out ok. But unless their diagnostics test the watch under high discharge conditions, they may not detect the problem. The rate of battery discharge and voltage decline under low load conditions may look ok in their diagnostic test, so they may think that the battery still has adequate life left.

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242 replies

May 4, 2021 8:55 AM in response to Jd1399

JD1399, see my comment above yours .......it wont help you as Apple refuse to fix it or accept liability. Still waiting for anyone techy out there to confirm the fault.

Disappointed at Apples response to this so far....they do so much to please their customers but fail when it with comes to the preserving the bottom line and accepting any liability.

May 4, 2021 9:48 AM in response to Deano_b

I have seen your comment and I requested the logs they are capturing so I could see for myself what is causing the shutdown. Your idea seems much more realistic than any that apple have provided so far.

I have a background in Digital Forensics so analysing logs is a daily occurrence for me.

However apple become very cagey when it comes to allowing people access to the logs.

It seems you did well to get the £30 out of them. Albeit it is pittance to the cost of a replacement and that's your only option with a voucher.

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Watch shuts down during exercise

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