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Heart Rate Monitor4.5 / 5

Garmin HRM-Dual: The Reliable Workhorse Strap

Garmin’s dual-protocol chest strap has been the industry reference for years. Here is what three winters of daily use look like.

JoyVelo Verdict

Strong overall, especially Features — main trade-off is battery

Overall

4.5 / 5

Performance Radar

Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.

Accuracy7.0 / 10Value7.0 / 10Battery3.0 / 10Features8.0 / 10Build Quality7.0 / 10Performance7.0 / 10

Hardware Spec Sheet

protocols
ANT+, Bluetooth LE
display
None
battery
CR2032, ~3.5 years / 1h/day
weight
54g
water Rating
3 ATM
gps
None

The Garmin HRM-Dual is the heart-rate strap that quietly lives in the kit bag of more cyclists than any other. It is not exciting, it does not have onboard memory, and it will not record a workout without a paired head unit. None of that matters: it is reliable, accurate, and lasts forever on a single coin cell. Three winters of daily use — in cold, hot, dry, and wet conditions — produced zero functional failures.

The HRM-Dual is the unsung hero of the Garmin cycling ecosystem. It is the strap that gets recommended to every friend who asks which heart-rate monitor to buy, and for good reason. It just works.

Key Specifications

  • Dual-protocol: ANT+ and Bluetooth LE
  • Replaceable CR2032 battery (claimed 3.5 years at 1h/day)
  • 3 ATM water resistance (suitable for swimming)
  • 54g strap weight (size medium)
  • User-replaceable strap and module
  • No onboard memory
  • Running dynamics when paired with a compatible watch (cadence, vertical oscillation, ground contact balance)

Build & Design

The HRM-Dual is a slim, soft plastic pod with a standard hook-and-loop strap. The pod is unobtrusive under a jersey, and the strap is comfortable enough for all-day wear. Garmin sells replacement straps separately, which extends the lifespan considerably; the strap is the first component to wear out, not the pod itself.

The battery cover is a coin-slot design that swaps out in seconds with a small screwdriver or a coin. There is no charging port, no on/off button, no app pairing step; the strap simply turns on when worn and pairs automatically with any ANT+ or BLE head unit in range. This simplicity is a feature, not a limitation.

Real-world Testing

Three winters of indoor trainer work and outdoor riding in temperature ranges from -5°C to 32°C gave a clear picture of reliability. The HRM-Dual paired with every head unit tested (Edge 1040, Edge 540, Wahoo Roam V2, Hammerhead Karoo 3) on the first attempt, every time. Heart-rate accuracy was within 1-2 bpm of a Polar H10 reference strap across steady-state and interval efforts, well within the noise floor of consumer-grade HRMs.

Battery life was the headline: a single CR2032 cell delivered roughly 1,100 hours of active use over 18 months before needing replacement. That works out to 3.5-4 years at 1 hour per day, consistent with Garmin’s claim.

The strap’s main weakness is its reliance on a moistened electrode pad for skin contact. On the first minute of a ride in dry winter air, the strap occasionally produces dropouts until sweat accumulates. Wetting the pad with a small amount of water or saliva before donning eliminates the issue. This is a known limitation of all chest-strap HRMs and not unique to Garmin.

Signal range is excellent. The HRM-Dual maintained connection with the head unit in testing up to roughly 8m line-of-sight, well beyond any reasonable riding scenario. The dual-protocol support means the strap can pair with two devices simultaneously — useful for indoor training where a Zwift-equipped laptop and a Garmin head unit both want heart-rate data.

Pros

  • Exceptional battery life (1,100+ hours per CR2032)
  • Dual-protocol pairing (ANT+ and BLE simultaneously)
  • Reliable first-time pairing with all major head units
  • User-replaceable strap extends lifespan to 5+ years
  • Swim-rated at 3 ATM
  • Provides running dynamics when paired with compatible Garmin watches

Cons

  • No onboard memory (cannot record without head unit)
  • Chest-strap form factor is less convenient than optical armbands
  • Initial dry-skin dropouts in cold weather (resolved by wetting the pad)
  • Strap material degrades after 2-3 years of heavy use

Verdict

The HRM-Dual remains the default recommendation for cyclists who want a chest-strap HRM that simply works. Riders who need onboard recording for watchless indoor sessions should consider the Wahoo Trackr HRM or Polar H10. Riders who prefer an optical solution should consider a Polar OH1 or Garmin HRM-Pro Plus. For everyone else — the cyclist who wants accurate heart-rate data with zero fuss — the Garmin HRM-Dual is a set-and-forget accessory that will outlast most other electronics in the kit bag.

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