Senior Tech

GPS Watches for Seniors: Features to Look For Before Buying

Updated June 18, 2026

Editorial illustration for GPS watches for seniors

GPS watches can help some seniors and caregivers, but they are not all the same. This guide focuses on features to compare before buying.

Editorial note

Senior & Health articles are prepared for clear, practical education. Draft health content should be reviewed against current official sources before publication.

Medical disclaimer

The information on Senior & Health is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always speak with a qualified healthcare provider about personal health concerns.

Key takeaways

  • The best device depends on the person, not only the feature list.
  • Emergency alerts, battery life, comfort and privacy should be reviewed carefully.
  • Fall detection and GPS are helpful but not perfect.

Who may benefit

GPS watches may help older adults who walk outside, live alone, have mild memory concerns or want an easy way to contact help.

They may not be appropriate if the person will not wear or charge the device.

GPS location sharing

Location sharing can help caregivers find a person, but accuracy depends on signal, device quality and settings.

Families should discuss consent and who can see location data.

Emergency button

An SOS button should be easy to press intentionally but not so easy that false alarms happen constantly.

Check whether alerts go to family, a monitoring center or emergency services.

Fall detection limitations

Fall detection can miss some falls or trigger false alarms. It should not be the only safety plan.

Ask how alerts work and whether monthly monitoring is required.

Battery life and comfort

A device is useful only if it is worn and charged. Look for clear charging routines, comfortable bands, readable screens and water resistance if needed.

Large buttons and simple menus matter for older users.

Fees and privacy

Some devices require monthly fees, cellular plans or app subscriptions. Review cancellation rules and data practices.

Families should choose technology that respects dignity and independence.

When to contact a healthcare professional

A GPS watch should not replace emergency planning, medication review, fall prevention or medical evaluation for wandering, fainting or repeated falls.

Frequently asked questions

Do GPS watches work indoors?

Accuracy can be weaker indoors depending on the device and signal.

Is fall detection guaranteed?

No. Fall detection can miss events or create false alerts.

Do all watches need monthly fees?

No, but many safety-focused devices do. Check fees before buying.

Sources and further reading

  • FTC consumer guidance (ftc.gov)
  • Consumer product safety resources to verify
  • Device manufacturer documentation to verify before recommendation

Source labels are included for editorial verification before publication.