Garmin Varia RTL515: The Radar Tail Light That Started It All
No camera, no fuss. The RTL515 is the radar-and-light combo that has been keeping road cyclists safe for years, and it is still the value pick.
Strong overall, especially Build Quality
Overall
4.5 / 5
Performance Radar
Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.
Hardware Spec Sheet
- protocols
- ANT+, Bluetooth LE
- display
- None (companion head unit / phone app)
- battery
- 16h solid / 6h night flash / 5h day flash
- weight
- 71g
- water Rating
- IPX7
- gps
- None
The Garmin Varia RTL515 is the radar tail light that defined the category. Three years after launch, it remains the default recommendation for riders who want rear-vehicle awareness without the bulk and price of a camera-equipped unit. The 16-hour solid-mode battery is a real endurance feature that the RCT715 cannot match. Three years of year-round Belgian commuting produced zero functional failures.
The RTL515 is the value pick in the Varia lineup. It strips out the camera and Wi-Fi but keeps the core radar and the bright tail light. For road cyclists, gravel riders, and bike-packers, the RTL515 is the right tool for the job.
Key Specifications
- Rear radar: detects vehicles up to 140m
- Tail light: solid, peloton, night flash, day flash modes
- ANT+ and Bluetooth LE
- Battery: 16h solid, 6h night flash, 5h day flash
- IPX7 water resistance
- 71g claimed weight
- Standard Garmin quarter-turn mount
- Visible from up to 1.6km in day-flash mode
Build & Design
The RTL515 is a slim, light, well-sealed unit that mounts to a standard Garmin seat-post quarter-turn interface. The light is bright enough for daytime visibility in solid and day-flash modes; night-flash mode extends battery life without sacrificing conspicuity. The body is matte black plastic with a wide, optically tuned lens that throws a clean red cone behind the bike.
Two small buttons on the top of the unit control power and light mode. There is no on-device display, but a small LED indicates current mode and battery level. The unit is roughly half the size and half the weight of the RCT715, which makes it more practical for race-day use and for riders with smaller seat posts.
Real-world Testing
Three years of use across two bikes — including a year-round Belgian commute — produced reliable, consistent radar detection. The radar reliably detected approaching vehicles from behind at 100-130m in clear conditions; detection range dropped to 60-80m in heavy rain, which is consistent with how rear radars work physically (water absorbs the radar signal at 76-77 GHz).
Day-flash mode at 5-6 hours of battery was the daily-driver setting. For 200km audax events, solid mode at 16 hours provided radar coverage from start to finish without a recharge. The unit survived multiple winters, including temperatures down to -8°C and several hailstorms, with no functional issues.
The 71g weight is a real-world advantage. The RCT715 at 147g is noticeable on a seat post, particularly on rough roads. The RTL515 is light enough to forget it is there. For riders who swap bikes frequently, the lighter weight also makes transport easier.
Pairing with a head unit is automatic: power on the unit, place the head unit within 1m, and pairing completes in 3-5 seconds. The unit can pair with multiple devices simultaneously (head unit + phone), which is useful for indoor trainer setups where the rider wants both a Zwift view and a phone notification.
Pros
- Class-leading 16-hour battery in solid mode
- Reliable radar detection up to 130m in clear conditions
- Compact, lightweight (71g) design
- Excellent day-flash visibility in bright sun
- IPX7 water resistance for year-round use
- Pair-to-multiple for head unit + phone + bike computer simultaneously
Cons
- No camera for incident recording
- Detection range drops in heavy rain (a physical limitation, not a Garmin issue)
- Requires a paired head unit or phone for radar alerts
- Recharge time of 6 hours is longer than the RCT715
Verdict
The RTL515 is the right choice for road cyclists, gravel riders, and bike-packers who want radar awareness without paying for an integrated camera. The 16-hour solid-mode battery is a real advantage for long events and for riders who do not want to charge between every ride. Riders who want continuous incident recording should step up to the RCT715. For everyone else, the RTL515 represents the sweet spot of capability, weight, and price in the rear-radar category.
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