Qualcomm has unveiled the Snapdragon Wear Elite Platform at MWC 2026, featuring a 3nm architecture and a dedicated NPU for on-device AI.
At MWC 2026, Qualcomm announced the new Snapdragon Wear Elite Platform for next-generation wearable computing devices. Qualcomm already offers several wearable SoCs, including the W5+ Gen 1 and Gen 2, but Snapdragon Wear Elite is positioned as a major step up with significant upgrades over the current lineup.
The Snapdragon Wear Elite Platform will support Wear OS by Google, Android, and Linux. Qualcomm is also bringing on-device AI to wearables with a dedicated NPU. Powered by the Qualcomm Hexagon NPU, the platform can run up to billion-parameter models for real-time, agentic experiences. Qualcomm claims 5x higher single-core CPU performance and up to 7x faster GPU performance, which should translate into faster app launches, smoother performance, and improved responsiveness.
Despite the big performance jump, Qualcomm says Snapdragon Wear Elite can deliver 30% longer battery life compared to the previous generation. With fast charging, wearables based on the platform can reach a 50% charge in about 10 minutes.
On connectivity, Snapdragon Wear Elite introduces a “multi-mode” architecture that includes 5G RedCap, Micro-Power Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 6.0, UWB, GNSS, and NB-NTN:
- 5G RedCap: low-power cellular connectivity
- Micro-Power Wi-Fi: always-on Wi-Fi at significantly lower power
- Bluetooth 6.0: improved proximity-aware interactions
- UWB: precise short-range proximity interactions
- GNSS: accurate location context
- NB-NTN: satellite-based two-way messaging
“By integrating a cutting-edge 3nm architecture with an industry-leading suite of connectivity solutions—including the first-of-its-kind hexa-connectivity system—this platform provides the raw horsepower and persistent reliability required to drive next-generation intelligent devices for both consumers and enterprises,” Qualcomm said in the product brief.
The first wearables powered by Snapdragon Wear Elite are expected to be revealed in the coming months. Until now, Samsung’s recent Galaxy Watch models have not used Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Wear platforms. They’ve mostly relied on Samsung’s own Exynos wearable chips. But today, Samsung announced that this new Snapdragon Wear Elite platform will be powering the next-generation Galaxy Watch.

