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By Road Cycling Training Team

Is AI Coaching Worth It? Garmin Connect Plus for Cyclists


Garmin just made their training platform subscription-based. That sentence alone will annoy a lot of people who already spent $500+ on a head unit. But before you write it off, the Connect Plus feature set is worth actually looking at—especially the AI layer they’re calling Active Intelligence.

The short version: some of this is genuinely useful for time-crunched riders. Some of it you’ll check twice and then forget. And a couple of the new hardware integrations are either clever or pointless depending on how you ride.

Quick Verdict

FeatureRating
Active Intelligence AI★★★★☆
Cycling Coach Guidance★★★☆☆
vs. Free Connect Features★★★☆☆
vs. TrainingPeaks/SYSTM★★★☆☆
Value for Time-Crunched Riders★★★★☆

Worth it if: You already use a Garmin watch and want smarter recovery guidance without switching platforms. Skip it if: You’re already paying for TrainingPeaks or Wahoo SYSTM. The overlap is significant. Monthly cost: ~$6.99/month or ~$69.99/year


What Active Intelligence Actually Does

The headline feature is Active Intelligence. Garmin’s term for an AI layer that personalizes training recommendations based on three inputs: sleep data from your connected watch, recent riding load, and recovery metrics.

This is the piece that actually matters for how most of us train. You ride Tuesday evening. Sleep poorly. Active Intelligence flags that Wednesday’s planned threshold session should be dialed back, and suggests extending easy spinning before adding intensity again. Nothing new about the concept: Wahoo SYSTM and TrainingPeaks have had similar logic for years. But Garmin’s implementation is tighter because your watch data feeds directly into the same ecosystem.

The practical difference: the recommendations feel less like generic coaching advice and more like someone actually reading your last 72 hours. If you’ve been doing load-heavy work weeks alongside your riding, it picks that up from HRV trends and pushes recovery harder.

What it doesn’t do is build you a full training plan from scratch. Active Intelligence nudges you. It doesn’t replace structured programming. If you need week-by-week periodization built around a specific event, you still need a proper platform or coach.


Cycling Coach: Structured Guidance Inside Connect

Connect Plus also unlocks Garmin’s Cycling Coach feature: structured training blocks with educational video content and expert commentary explaining the “why” behind each session.

The videos are actually decent. Short, specific, not padded with motivation fluff. If you’re newer to structured training and want to understand why Zone 2 work matters before you commit four months to it, this is a solid resource. Experienced riders will watch two videos and stop.

The guided workouts themselves sync directly to your head unit. That’s the useful part. No exporting files, no third-party sync. The workout loads, your device pings the targets, you do the work. For riders who don’t want to think about the logistics of training plan management, it’s clean.

Where Cycling Coach falls short is customization. You can’t dial these sessions to your specific FTP bands or adjust recovery ratios. It’s a fixed curriculum. Good for getting started, limiting if you’ve been doing structured work for a season or two.


How It Stacks Up Against TrainingPeaks and Wahoo SYSTM

This is the question that actually matters. If you’re deciding where to put your $70/year, here’s the honest comparison.

Connect Plus vs. TrainingPeaks

TrainingPeaks is an analytics and plan delivery platform. Connect Plus is a platform with some AI coaching layered on. They’re solving different problems.

If your coach sends you workouts through TrainingPeaks, there’s no reason to switch. That ecosystem works because your coach is the intelligence layer. Connect Plus without a coach is trying to do what TrainingPeaks does only when paired with a coach.

Where Connect Plus wins: it’s already where your Garmin data lives. No sync, no export, no waiting for data to appear. If you hate managing multiple apps, that integration has real value.

Connect Plus vs. Wahoo SYSTM

SYSTM has more workouts (600+), better structured plans for time-crunched riders specifically, and its 4DP testing protocol gives you a more complete fitness picture than FTP alone. Connect Plus doesn’t have anything comparable to SYSTM’s workout library or plan quality.

But SYSTM requires a Wahoo-ecosystem head unit to get full functionality on-device. If you’re riding with a Garmin 1050 or Edge 840, Connect Plus keeps everything in one place. That counts for something when you’re trying to simplify your setup.

The honest call: if you need structured plan quality, SYSTM edges it. If you need sleep-aware load management and already live in the Garmin ecosystem, Connect Plus is worth the subscription.


The Hardware That Connects In

Two new device integrations dropped alongside Connect Plus.

Oakley Meta Vanguard Smart Glasses

These are sunglasses with a strip of LEDs built into the frame rim that pulse different colors to show your current training zone. Zone 2: steady green. Threshold: amber. VO2: red.

Does it work? Yes, technically. You can see your zone at a glance without looking at your head unit. Is it worth the price of smart sunglasses? That depends entirely on whether you’re the kind of rider who forgets to check power data mid-effort. If you’re already glancing at your Garmin every 30 seconds, this adds nothing. If you’re riding by feel and want a low-distraction zone cue, the idea is sound.

The integration with Garmin devices is smooth. Pairing is Bluetooth, and zone calibration pulls from your existing threshold settings in Connect.

4iiii Precision 3+ Power Meter

The 4iiii Precision 3+ now includes Apple Find My integration. This is straightforward: if someone grabs your bike or you leave it somewhere and forget which pub it ended up outside, you can locate it via the Find My network.

Useful? For some riders, absolutely. A good power meter is expensive and doesn’t look like a power meter to a thief. It just looks like a slightly chunky crank arm. Adding Find My without a subscription or extra device is a practical choice.

As a power meter itself, the Precision 3+ is already solid mid-range hardware. Accurate to ±1%, easy installation, works with every head unit. The Find My addition is a bonus, not a reason to switch if you’re already on something else.


What the Free Version of Connect Still Does

Before subscribing, be clear on what you’re already getting for free.

Free Connect gives you: full activity upload, Strava sync, VO2 max estimates, training load and recovery time, sleep tracking, race predictor, and all your historical data. That’s not nothing. For a rider doing their own training or following a plan from a coach, free Connect covers the basics.

Connect Plus adds: Active Intelligence recommendations, Cycling Coach content, expanded health snapshot data, and some additional insights on body battery trends over longer time windows.

The free-vs-paid comparison is tighter than Garmin’s marketing makes it sound. If you’re already making your own training decisions based on feel and power data, you’ll use the AI nudges occasionally and the Cycling Coach content rarely.


Who Gets Real Value Here

Connect Plus makes sense if you:

  • Already use a Garmin watch for sleep tracking and want that data driving training decisions
  • Are new enough to structured training that the Cycling Coach content actually adds knowledge
  • Want a single-platform solution and don’t need TrainingPeaks-level analytics
  • Are riding 6-10 hours a week and would benefit from someone (or something) telling you to back off when you’re digging a hole

Stick with free Connect or look elsewhere if you:

  • Already pay for TrainingPeaks or SYSTM (Connect Plus won’t add much)
  • Work with a coach who manages your load. You don’t need AI nudges on top of human judgment
  • Train by feel and aren’t tracking sleep seriously. Active Intelligence only delivers value when the inputs are good
  • Ride fewer than 5 hours a week. The recovery and load management features lose relevance at lower volumes

The Bottom Line

Connect Plus is Garmin making a reasonable subscription play on infrastructure they’ve been building for years. Active Intelligence is the best thing here: sleep-aware, load-sensitive recommendations that actually reflect how training should work when life intervenes. The Cycling Coach content is a nice extra for newer structured training riders.

But it’s not a replacement for TrainingPeaks or Wahoo SYSTM if those platforms are working for you. It sits between free Connect and a full training platform, useful for the middle tier of rider who wants more guidance than a watch but less overhead than managing a separate coaching app.

At $70/year, it costs less than a month of real coaching. If you’re in the Garmin ecosystem already and haven’t stepped up to a dedicated training platform, it’s worth trying. Garmin offers a free trial. Run it through a hard training block and see whether Active Intelligence actually adjusts your behavior, or whether you just ignore the notifications like every other push notification on your phone.

If it changes even one bad decision per week — a threshold session you back off when you should, a rest day you actually take — it’s paid for itself.


Tested with Garmin Edge 840 Solar and Forerunner 965. Training context: 8-10 hours/week, road racing focus with occasional gravel. No affiliate relationship with Garmin, 4iiii, or Oakley.