The Apple combo: About 30% of iPhone users also have an Apple Watch

Shawn Knight

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Staff member
Why it matters: The Apple Watch has reached an attach rate of 30 percent, the highest recorded rate for any half-year period since the wearable launched in 2015. Attach rate is a term used in business and marketing to describe the number of units sold that complement another device – in this instance, the iPhone. Put another way, you could say 30 percent of North American iPhone users also own an Apple Watch.

When the Apple Watch launched, Apple was selling an average of one smartwatch for every 10 iPhones. The attach rate has steadily grown over the years, reflecting its evolution in consumers' eyes from a neat fashion accessory that did not add a ton of value to an addition with utility that truly serves a purpose.

Indeed, the early Apple Watch struggled to serve a purpose or meet a need. While it did allow users to pay for items with Apple Pay and message / place calls, it would be another few years before Apple truly tapped into the synergy between the Apple Watch and the iPhone. The latest iteration of the Apple Watch is a feature-rich wearable that can track sleep, take an ECG, detect falls, check blood oxygen saturation, measure body temperature for ovulation tracking, call for help if you have been in a crash and more.

The future looks bright as well. In 2021, Apple Watch shipments were just 18 percent of global iPhone shipments. If Apple sees every iPhone user as a potential Apple Watch user, the revenue opportunity is huge. And with average selling prices on the rise and the emergence of premium devices like the Apple Watch Ultra, the potential to drive revenue is even greater.

More watches on users' wrists also correlates to the potential to sell additional services like Apple Music and Apple Care. Sucking users deeper into the ecosystem also makes it less likely that they will switch to Android and abandon their purchases in Apple's walled garden.

Image credit: Daniel Korpai

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Nearly one in three North American iPhone users also have an Apple Watch
So nearly three in three North American iPhone users don't have an Apple Watch.
 
The few people at my work that have an iPhone and their precious watch, they've been complaining about the recent update for the watchs/phones over the past few of weeks. Randomly Siri will just start talking to them about random stuff and ask if they're interested to hear more. Airpods continuously losing sync, siri constantly trying to text people via voice to text when she's not prompted...

Glad I choose not to support their products.
 
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I have the iPhone and AW Ultra. With Apple, no other watch will work seamlessly with the OS. It's basically everything that you would do on the phone, on the watch.

ALL other brand watches are just about completely shut out aside from their own app. Can't imessage or do any other Apple related.

To call people Morons for wanting to stick with what works for them is utterly assinine. For the most part Apple products just work.
 
Keep the cellphone addiction coming Apple! I'll bet 95% of those iWatch users don't need it!
 
I have the iPhone and AW Ultra. With Apple, no other watch will work seamlessly with the OS. It's basically everything that you would do on the phone, on the watch.

ALL other brand watches are just about completely shut out aside from their own app. Can't imessage or do any other Apple related.

To call people Morons for wanting to stick with what works for them is utterly assinine. For the most part Apple products just work.
Every other smartwatch is blocked and does not have full access to iOS.
That is a reason why every smartwatch works ... on Android.
My friend has the latest AW, and he is constantly dealing with some software bugs, not to mention he has to charge it every ... single ... day.

What AW does best is heart rate monitoring, the accuracy is seriously impressive, but any other feature feels just half-baked.
 
Don't own any apple products, but I do have a smartwatch. Galaxy 4 classic.
Started with the 3 frontier. Wasn't going to keep it, but after NOT having to pop out my phone multiple times a day to see who is calling, texting, emailing it was well worth it. I've worn a watch since the 70's, so it goes without saying not having a watch would "feel weird". Then after wearing it to sleep, I noticed my heart rate spiked at night while I was sleeping into the 90 beats per minute. Told my doctor on a routine visit and now I'm using a CPAP for the sleep apnea. Kind of nice when new technology gadgets can have a useful purpose.
 
Keep the cellphone addiction coming Apple! I'll bet 95% of those iWatch users don't need it!

Not sure where you get your info and your bet challenge is ludicrous

But every single person who I saw wearing a smart watch is in the medical feed, and they say they need them.

Go and convince them otherwise!
 
Does this mean that Apple's herd of sheeple are starting to think for themselves?
 
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