Garmin removes fresh CIRQA reference from support page
Garmin CIRQA has briefly resurfaced on Garmin’s support site as a Health Status-compatible smart band, only for the reference to disappear again. The short-lived listing offers another clue about how the unannounced wearable could work inside Garmin Connect.
Another CIRQA page slips out early
The reference appeared on Garmin’s Romanian support page explaining the Health Status feature. Garmin Rumors spotted CIRQA in the compatibility section, where the device was named as the “CIRQA smart band.”
By the time we checked the page, Garmin had removed CIRQA from the list. The underlying Health Status support article remains available, but the unannounced band is no longer among the compatible devices.
This is not the first time Garmin has cleaned up a CIRQA reference after it reached the public. At the start of the year, official Garmin pages briefly identified a CIRQA Smart Band with two sizes and black or French gray colour options.
Those pages also disappeared. Since then, CIRQA has continued to surface through trademark databases.
Health Status offers a clue about CIRQA
Health Status builds personal ranges for selected overnight measurements. Garmin says the feature needs around three to four weeks of sleep data before it can establish what is normal for the individual user.
Depending on the device, those ranges can cover measurements such as heart rate, heart rate variability, respiration, Pulse Ox and skin temperature. Garmin Connect can then flag readings that move outside the user’s established range.
That does not confirm that CIRQA includes every sensor needed for all of those measurements. Garmin adapts the Health Status information to the capabilities of each compatible wearable, so the CIRQA listing only confirms that the band should contribute at least some relevant overnight data.
That fits the wider expectation that CIRQA will lack a conventional screen. It also lines up with the smart band wording that Garmin itself has now exposed more than once.
A screenless design would leave Garmin Connect responsible for showing trends, unusual readings and longer-term health changes. The band itself could concentrate on collecting data throughout the day and night without duplicating the interface of a Garmin watch.
The launch trail keeps getting harder to dismiss
Garmin still has not announced CIRQA, so there is room for caution. Support pages can contain placeholders, internal test entries or compatibility information prepared well before a product reaches shops.
Even so, the overall pattern now looks fairly consistent. Garmin has exposed the CIRQA Smart Band name on product pages, registered the trademark across several major regions and briefly added the device to a live health feature compatibility list.
The trademark trail currently covers the US, Canada, Europe and the UK. Our latest CIRQA trademark report showed that the UK application uses the same body-worn sensor language as Garmin’s earlier filings.
The latest removal does not tell us when CIRQA will arrive. But it does suggest that product information has already entered Garmin’s support system, which usually happens for a reason.
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