What you need to know
- Wear OS 6.1 adds location-based time zone detection, letting watches update time without a paired phone.
- The update is based on Android 16 QPR2 and doesn’t bring any major visible UI changes.
- Other new features include kids account “graduation” and improved re-authentication without factory reset.
Google today quietly announced Wear OS 6.1, bringing a small but useful location-based time feature that arguably should’ve arrived much earlier.
Visually, Google hasn’t revealed any UI changes with Wear OS 6.1, but it has confirmed that the update is based on Android 16’s Quarterly Platform Release (QPR) at API level 36.1. This isn’t the latest March Android 16 QPR3 update, but rather the Android 16 QPR2 build from December 2025.
That said, Wear OS 6.1 does bring some new features. One of the key additions, as detailed in Google’s Android Developers blog post, is location-based time zone detection. Google says smartwatches running Wear OS 6.1 and above can now automatically set their time zone based on their physical location.
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Currently, Wear OS smartwatches rely on their paired Android phone to determine the time zone. With Wear OS 6.1, that changes, as watches can now update their time zone independently. Google notes that this helps keep time accurate when traveling between regions, even without a network connection.
Users will be able to set this feature by heading to Settings > Date & Time > Use location.

In addition, Wear OS 6.1 introduces some improvements for kids’ accounts. There’s a new “Kids graduation” feature, which allows supervised accounts to transition into regular accounts once the user reaches the appropriate age.
Google has also improved re-authentication support. If a user’s credentials become invalid, for example, if they change their password, they can now re-verify their Google account directly on the watch or through the companion app, without needing to factory reset the device.
For now, Google hasn’t rolled out Wear OS 6.1 to any smartwatches yet. It’s expected to arrive first on the Pixel Watch 4 and then expand to older Pixel Watch models in a future update. Samsung is also likely to adopt Wear OS 6.1 for its Galaxy Watch lineup soon. We’ll update this as and when the rollout begins.
Android Central’s Take
After reading Google’s post, I wondered why this wasn’t already a thing on Wear OS. It feels so basic, but I’m just glad Google’s finally fixing it, especially for anyone who travels frequently.
















