The Google Pixel Watch 5 has cleared the FCC, and the regulatory filing that usually tells us very little is telling us quite a lot this time. According to Chrome Unboxed, four distinct model variants of the watch have passed through the FCC registration pipeline, and every single one of them carries LTE certification alongside Wi-Fi. Not one Wi-Fi-only model appears in the filing.
That detail sounds small, but it could signal a meaningful shift in how Google prices and positions its wearables going forward. For years, smartwatch buyers have had a straightforward choice: pay less and stay tethered to your phone, or pay a premium for a cellular model that works independently. Google has followed that same playbook with every Pixel Watch to date. This filing suggests that formula may be changing.
FCC clearance at this stage, typically a couple of months before Google’s usual fall hardware window, is a strong sign that mass production is locked in. A reveal as early as August is plausible if Google keeps to the accelerated summer launch schedule it has used in recent hardware cycles.
The four model variants registered are listed under the codes G25QD, G1XJ6, G0F3Y, and GFW3R. Four models, all cellular. That raises an obvious question: what exactly is Google planning here? There are two realistic explanations.
- Some Wi-Fi-only models are still pending FCC approval and simply have not appeared yet.
- Google is moving to an all-LTE lineup structured around two tiers rather than two connectivity options.
The second possibility is the more interesting one. Four cellular models filed at the same time lines up with a strategy that Samsung has already tested with the Galaxy Watch Ultra. Instead of offering a standard watch in small and large sizes with Wi-Fi or LTE versions of each, Google could be releasing two sizes of a base Pixel Watch 5 and two corresponding sizes of a higher-end variant, something along the lines of a “Pro” or “Ultra” tier. That structure alone would account for four separate models needing independent carrier clearance at once.
This kind of lineup shift matters beyond just the Pixel Watch. The broader wearable market has been moving toward premium segmentation for a while. Apple has its Apple Watch Ultra. Samsung now has the Galaxy Watch Ultra. If Google is building toward a similar two-tier approach, it would be catching up to a pattern its main competitors have already established rather than setting a new one.
What it means for price is the real question most buyers will care about. Eliminating the Wi-Fi-only option removes the traditional entry point for people who want a Pixel Watch without the added cost of LTE hardware. Google could offset that by keeping the base Pixel Watch 5 price competitive despite the cellular inclusion, but there is no pricing information in regulatory filings. That part will have to wait for an official announcement.
For now, the FCC documentation confirms the watch is real, close to launch, and structured in a way that does not match what Google has done before. Whether that turns out to be a meaningful upgrade for buyers or just a pricing headache will become clear once Google makes the whole thing official.