Apple Watch remained king of the smartwatch market in 2021
The Apple Watch is still the dominant wearable device in the global smartwatch market, with it maintaining its lead over competitors by a wide margin.

Apple Watch Series 7 and Apple Watch Series 6
Apple has enjoyed its position at the top of the smartwatch market for a few years, and in 2021, it continued to hold onto that commanding lead. According to analysis from Counterpoint Research, Apple is still the dominant player in the market, with the most shipments among smartwatch vendors.
In 2021, Apple held on to its pole position in Counterpoint's list of the top nine smartwatch brands by shipment share, a report released on Monday states. Its 30.1% share is far in front of its competitors, with the nearest rival being Samsung with 10.2%, followed by Huawei with 7.7%.

via Counterpoint Research
However, the share is a minor reduction from the 2020 results, when Counterpoint said Apple held a 32.9% share of the market. It is believed that, while the global smartwatch market grew 24% between 2020 and 2021, intensified competition led to Apple dropping by just under 3%.
Despite the slight loss of market share, Apple's average selling price for the Apple Watch rose 3% year-on-year without a release of an Apple Watch SE update in 2021. Because of this increase, Counterpoint says Apple accounted for half of the total market revenue in 2021.
One of the reasons the smartwatch market grew in 2021 is thought to be an expansion of the Indian market. While India accounted for just 3% of the market in 2020, it now has close to a 10% share overall.
A strong demand for sub-$100 smartwatches is also cited as a growth factor.
"The global smartwatch market's good growth in 2021 is meaningful in itself, but it is more meaningful in that it makes us look forward to future growth," said associate director Suejeong Lim. "With their ability to monitor health parameters like blood pressure, ECG, and SPO2, these devices are becoming more popular."
Lim further offers "the attractiveness of smartwatches as independent wearable devices will increase if more of them start supporting cellular connectivity." The Apple Watch is already available with a cellular option, so it seems the comment is directed mainly to Apple's market rivals.
Read on AppleInsider

Apple Watch Series 7 and Apple Watch Series 6
Apple has enjoyed its position at the top of the smartwatch market for a few years, and in 2021, it continued to hold onto that commanding lead. According to analysis from Counterpoint Research, Apple is still the dominant player in the market, with the most shipments among smartwatch vendors.
In 2021, Apple held on to its pole position in Counterpoint's list of the top nine smartwatch brands by shipment share, a report released on Monday states. Its 30.1% share is far in front of its competitors, with the nearest rival being Samsung with 10.2%, followed by Huawei with 7.7%.

via Counterpoint Research
However, the share is a minor reduction from the 2020 results, when Counterpoint said Apple held a 32.9% share of the market. It is believed that, while the global smartwatch market grew 24% between 2020 and 2021, intensified competition led to Apple dropping by just under 3%.
Despite the slight loss of market share, Apple's average selling price for the Apple Watch rose 3% year-on-year without a release of an Apple Watch SE update in 2021. Because of this increase, Counterpoint says Apple accounted for half of the total market revenue in 2021.
One of the reasons the smartwatch market grew in 2021 is thought to be an expansion of the Indian market. While India accounted for just 3% of the market in 2020, it now has close to a 10% share overall.
A strong demand for sub-$100 smartwatches is also cited as a growth factor.
"The global smartwatch market's good growth in 2021 is meaningful in itself, but it is more meaningful in that it makes us look forward to future growth," said associate director Suejeong Lim. "With their ability to monitor health parameters like blood pressure, ECG, and SPO2, these devices are becoming more popular."
Lim further offers "the attractiveness of smartwatches as independent wearable devices will increase if more of them start supporting cellular connectivity." The Apple Watch is already available with a cellular option, so it seems the comment is directed mainly to Apple's market rivals.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Nonsense like this is why so many people root against Apple. They have no problem with the products or the company - indeed they may actually love both - but can't stand its consumers who have this amazing combination of superiority complex AND victim complex that can't be found anyplace outside of a woke political convention and a Russian government cabinet meeting.
1. You think that 30% is little for Apple when:
A. they didn't invent this category (Google and Samsung were there first)
B. their share in phones is 15%
C. their share in computers - can't call them PCs anymore I guess - is 8% and has actually fallen behind ChromeOS
D. their share in TV boxes (Apple TV), streaming subscriptions (Apple TV+) and smart speakers (HomePod) is so low that most analysts don't even listed
E. the only areas where their market share is bigger is wireless headphones (declining) and tablets (barely)
2. Wear OS has had its name since 2018. But you are one to talk since Apple changes the name of its platforms all the time too (iPhone OS, iOS, iPadOS, tvOS, watchOS, OS X, macOS) etc. But OK when you guys do it right?
3. Market share is unlikely to decline. It went up because Samsung and Google finally signed a truce resulting in Samsung ditching Tizen and their Galaxy Fit RTOS trackers in order to be Wear OS exclusive. Also, Google is FINALLY going to come out with a Pixel Watch this year. https://www.royalsblue.com/pixel-watch-could-be-controlled-without-touching-the-screen/
There are some Android/Google enthusiasts who will never buy a Samsung product (don't ask why but they have a host of reasons) so yes it will sell.
I always found the Verge editor's criticism of the original Milanese loop as tacky quite amusing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartwatch#History
The AW was long rumored by the time Samsung released their hockey pucks - they were obvious rushed products looking for first-mover advantage. Apple had been rumored to be working on a FitBit-like like wearable. Apple in fact can be credited for earlier creations -- in 2010 it included watch faces on the iPod Nano for wrist-wear, and had fitness tracking with Nike and other footfall trackers. They very clearly knew where they were going -- it's not like Samsung's junkware suddenly inspired them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPod_Nano#6th_generation