CMF by Nothing Watch 3 Pro drops to $69 at Amazon
Amazon has CMF by Nothing’s Watch 3 Pro at $69 in every color, undercutting Nothing’s own $79 U.S. price. The deal pushes a 13-day AMOLED smartwatch deeper into budget territory.

Amazon has the CMF by Nothing Watch 3 Pro for $69 in every color, cutting below Nothing’s own $79 U.S. price and below the watch’s usual $79 to $99 range. For a budget smartwatch market where screen size and battery life are often sacrificed first, that turns the Watch 3 Pro into a sharper value test than a routine discount.
The watch launched on July 22, 2025 as the successor to the CMF Watch Pro 2, and Nothing gave it a bigger 1.43-inch AMOLED display, built-in dual-band GPS, and a rated 13-day battery life. It also adds two MEMS microphones, a built-in speaker, and AI-based noise reduction trained on more than 100,000 voice samples. ChatGPT integration is built in, extending the watch beyond basic fitness tracking into voice and software features that many entry-level wearables leave out.

That matters because the CMF Watch Pro 2 was already positioned as an affordable Android smartwatch with Bluetooth calling, built-in GPS, an AMOLED display, and an 11-day battery. The new model moves the line forward on the features buyers actually notice in daily use: a larger screen, better positioning with dual-band GPS, and longer battery life. Nothing also lists the Watch 3 Pro as HSA/FSA eligible in the United States, which gives the purchase an extra hook for buyers using those accounts.
The tradeoff is the same one that follows most low-cost wearables. The Watch 3 Pro is designed as a design-forward CMF product, not a stripped-down flagship substitute, and reviewers have treated it that way, calling it a strong value play in the sub-$100 category while noting that it still lacks some of the advanced smart features found on pricier watches. At $69, the question is not whether the Watch 3 Pro is cheap. It is whether the 1.43-inch AMOLED screen, dual-band GPS, 13-day battery, call hardware, and ChatGPT support are enough to make the compromises feel deliberate rather than cosmetic.
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