A Ukrainian retailer has posted what appears to be one of the first public prices tied to the unannounced Garmin Cirqa, a screen-free wearable that has yet to be formally introduced by [Garmin](https://www.garmin.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com). The figure attached to the device is considerably higher than many observers would expect for a product positioned against simpler health-tracking bands.

Stylus Store, an online retailer in Ukraine, currently lists the Garmin Cirqa at 19,999 hryvnia, which converts to roughly $450 at current exchange rates. The product page describes the wearable as available for pre-order and includes a note stating that the final launch price could change.
The listing also contains what appears to be a leaked image of the band. Garmin has not publicly announced the Cirqa, and no official U.S. pricing has been confirmed.
Even within the retailer’s own catalogue, the listed price raises doubts about whether the number reflects Garmin’s eventual global pricing strategy. Stylus Store is not regarded as one of Garmin’s major retail partners, and some of the pricing on other Garmin products already appears higher than typical U.S. retail levels.
The store lists the Garmin Vivosmart 5 at 7,622 hryvnia, equivalent to about $173. When the wearable launched in the United States in 2022, it carried a retail price of $149.99. Another older device, the Vivofit 3, is listed at 2,459 hryvnia.
That context has led to questions about whether the Cirqa figure reflects local pricing conditions, placeholder pricing ahead of launch, or a simple estimate rather than a finalized retail cost.
If the Cirqa were to launch near the equivalent of $450, it would sit well above much of the current market for screen-free or passive health-tracking wearables.
Whoop, one of the category’s better-known competitors, focuses on subscription-based access rather than upfront hardware pricing. Its entry-level Whoop One membership starts at $199 annually. Google’s Fitbit Air, meanwhile, is priced at $99.99, with optional premium health features available through a separate monthly subscription.
The Cirqa is expected to fit into a category of devices designed for passive health monitoring, where users review activity and wellness data primarily through a smartphone app instead of on-device screens. That approach has gained traction among users seeking less intrusive fitness tracking during daily life.
Any premium pricing would also invite comparisons with Garmin’s own existing lineup. The Vivosmart 5, which includes a display and tracks many core health metrics, remains available at a substantially lower price point.
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For now, the Stylus Store listing offers an early glimpse at how the Garmin Cirqa may be positioned, but it stops short of providing reliable confirmation of what consumers in the United States or other markets should expect to pay once the wearable is officially announced.



