Apple Watch users in Australia can soon start taking advantage of hypertension notifications

This has the potential of being a life-saving feature

· TechRadar

News By Sharmishta Sarkar published 20 December 2025

(Image credit: Future / Apple) Share Share by:

Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google


  • TGA has approved the Apple Watch's hypertension notification feature
  • Apple can now legally enable the feature on its smartwatch
  • This could be a life-saving feature as it alerts you if your watch thinks you have chronic high blood pressure

The one feature that I was waiting for on the Apple Watch Series 11 has finally been approved. According to a report published by the Australian Computer Society (ACS) earlier this month, the TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) has finally approved hypertension notifications on compatible Apple Watches.

This, however, does not mean users can immediately start using the feature; it just allows Apple to legally enable blood pressure monitoring on its popular smartwatch. There's no update yet from Apple when the feature will be rolled out in Australia, but the tech giant usually pushes out an update as soon as possible when local authorities approve a health-tracking feature.

This was a relatively quick turnaround for the TGA, considering it took the government body over a year to approve ECG monitoring and sleep apnoea detection previously. That said, we are a little late to the party as the feature already works in 150 other countries, including Canada and New Zealand.

Is hypertension monitoring important?

You don't necessarily need the latest Apple Watch to take advantage of hypertension notifications – Apple Watch Series 9 or later, or an Apple Watch Ultra 2 or newer would be able to monitor blood pressure as the hardware is already installed. You will, however, have to be running watchOS 26 on the smartwatch.

None of the SE series watches have this ability though.

(Image credit: Apple)

If you suffer from chronic high blood pressure, you're hopefully already under your doctor's care, but having something on your wrist at all times means you could be alerted to possible spikes and can take early action if necessary. It can also help you build a record to take to your doctor.

The Apple Watch does this by using data from the wearable's optical heart sensor, reviewing it over a 30-day period to look out for consistent signs of high blood pressure.

Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.

Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors