Can You Shower With a Smart Ring? (2026 Answer)
Yes - every major smart ring handles showers and swimming at 10 ATM. The real cautions are saunas, soap build-up and salt water. Care tips inside.

Smart rings are designed for 24/7 wear, and the shower is the first test of that promise. The short answer is yes for every mainstream ring in 2026 - but the details (hot tubs, saunas, soap, sea water) are where the useful advice lives.
How waterproof are smart rings really?
What 10 ATM actually covers
The major rings are rated to 10 ATM - pressure equivalent to roughly 100 m of water. In practice that covers showers, baths, washing up, swimming in pools and open water, and surface watersports without a second thought. Rings hold these ratings more easily than watches because they have no buttons, crowns, speakers or ports - a sealed unibody with no moving parts is inherently easier to waterproof. Sustained deep diving is the only aquatic activity genuinely outside scope for most models.
What should you actually be careful of?
Heat, chemistry and grime - not water
Heat: water resistance is rated at normal temperatures. Long stints in a very hot tub or sauna push devices toward their storage-temperature limits; some manufacturers advise taking the ring off for saunas specifically. Brief hot showers are a non-issue.
Chemistry: chlorinated pools are fine with a fresh-water rinse afterwards; the same goes for sea salt, which is abrasive when it dries. Harsh cleaning chemicals (bleach, strong solvents) are worth avoiding on the ring - wear washing-up gloves anyway and the problem disappears.
Grime: the practical issue is not water getting in but soap and skin oils building up on the inner sensor windows. A film over the LEDs degrades readings quietly. Rinse the ring, dry it, and give the inner surface a soft-cloth wipe once a week or so - and dry the skin under it, since a permanently damp band is how irritation starts.
Should you ever take it off around water?
Two edge cases
Two situations justify removal. Serious lifting and rough grip work - not a water issue, but wet hands plus knurled bars is where rings get crushed and fingers get hurt; racket sports players face similar questions, which is why gyms and climbers often move the ring to a chain or pocket. And saunas or repeated hot-tub sessions, per the heat guidance above. For everything else - showering, swimming, washing the dog - the whole point of a ring over a watch is that you stop thinking about it. If long-term wear is the worry, our resting heart rate accuracy guide shows why a clean, snug ring keeps reading well for years.
What do the ATM and IP water ratings mean?
Most smart rings quote a water resistance of 10 ATM, and it helps to know what that number really means. ATM stands for atmospheres of pressure: a 10 ATM rating means the ring survived a lab test equivalent to the static pressure at 100 metres depth. It does not mean you can scuba dive to 100 metres, because real diving adds movement and rapid pressure changes that a static lab test does not replicate.
In practice, 10 ATM comfortably covers everything most people do: showering, hand-washing, swimming lengths and splashing about at the beach. Some rings also carry an IP rating (an ingress protection code for dust and water), but for water the ATM figure is the one that matters. The takeaway is simple: your ring is built for everyday water, not for deep-sea diving.
Does chlorine or salt water damage a smart ring?
Not immediately, but both deserve a rinse. Chlorine from swimming pools and salt from the sea are harsher on materials than plain tap water, and over months they can dull a ring's finish or leave residue around the sensor window. The water resistance itself is rarely affected, but the cosmetic finish and the seals can be, especially on coated rings.
The fix is easy, and the same one divers use for their watches: rinse the ring under fresh water after a swim in the pool or sea, then dry it. A few seconds under the tap removes the chlorine or salt before it has a chance to sit on the ring. Do that and a smart ring will happily keep swimming with you for years.
Can soap and shampoo build up under the ring?
This is the most common real-world issue, and it has nothing to do with water resistance. Because a ring sits snug against your skin, soap, shampoo and shower gel can get trapped underneath and dry there. That build-up can irritate the skin under the ring and, more of a problem for the tech, can coat the optical sensors on the inner face, making your heart-rate and blood-oxygen readings less reliable.
The habit that prevents it is to slide the ring around, or briefly take it off, while you lather up, then rinse thoroughly so no residue stays trapped. Every week or so, give the inner surface a proper clean; our guide to cleaning a smart ring covers the simple routine. Keep it clean and the sensors keep working as they should.