Yes, activities recorded on a Forerunner 55 can upload to Strava on their own once Strava is linked inside Garmin Connect.
You finish a run, save it on your watch, and a few minutes later it pops up on Strava. That’s the experience most people want from a Garmin–Strava setup, and the Forerunner 55 can do it.
The trick is knowing where the “link” actually lives. It’s not on the watch. The watch sends workouts to Garmin Connect, then Garmin Connect sends them to Strava. Set that chain up once and you’re done.
This article walks you through the clean setup, what data usually transfers, what can block an upload, and a fast way to fix it when things get stuck.
How The Forerunner 55 Gets A Workout Into Strava
Think in three hops:
- Watch → Phone: the Forerunner 55 syncs to the Garmin Connect mobile app over Bluetooth.
- Phone → Garmin Connect: the app sends the activity to your Garmin account using your phone’s internet connection.
- Garmin Connect → Strava: once accounts are linked, Garmin passes the activity to Strava.
If any hop breaks, Strava looks “down” even when your watch recorded everything perfectly. That’s why a fix usually means checking the chain, not redoing your whole watch setup.
Does Garmin Forerunner 55 Sync With Strava? Setup Steps
Linking is easiest from Garmin Connect. You’ll sign in to Strava during the process, then allow Garmin to send activity data over.
Link Strava From Garmin Connect
- Open the Garmin Connect app on your phone.
- Open Settings, then find the area for connected apps.
- Select Strava, then choose the option to connect.
- Log in to Strava when prompted and accept the permission screen.
- Wait a few minutes for the first transfer to finish.
Garmin keeps an official step-by-step page for this flow here: Steps to link your Garmin Connect account with Strava.
What To Do On The Watch
On the Forerunner 55 itself, you don’t need a Strava app. Just make sure:
- Bluetooth is on.
- Your phone is paired and syncing reliably.
- You save the activity at the end (discarded activities won’t transfer).
First Sync Timing And The “Where Did It Go?” Moment
After you link accounts, a fresh activity can show up quickly, or it can take a bit. A slow first upload is common if your phone has weak data, the app is sleeping in the background, or the watch hasn’t fully synced.
A simple check: open Garmin Connect, pull down on the home screen to force a sync, then open Strava and refresh your feed.
What Data Usually Transfers From Garmin To Strava
Most Forerunner 55 workouts arrive on Strava with the basics intact: time, distance, pace, heart rate (if recorded), elevation, and GPS track for outdoor activities. Strava builds its own view from the file Garmin provides.
A few details can differ between the two apps because they may calculate things in their own way. Elevation, moving time, and pace smoothing are common spots where you’ll see small mismatches. That’s normal and doesn’t mean the upload failed.
Maps, Privacy, And Who Sees What
If your activity includes GPS, Strava can show a map. Visibility still depends on your Strava privacy settings. If you hide maps, use a privacy zone, or set uploads to “Only You,” the activity may look “missing” to friends while it’s actually there.
Activity Type Mapping
Garmin labels a workout (run, walk, bike, treadmill, cardio). Strava may map that type into its own categories. Most common types map cleanly, and you can change the activity type inside Strava if it lands in the wrong bucket.
Common Reasons Uploads Fail Or Arrive Late
When uploads stall, it’s usually one of these:
- Phone app paused: battery saver settings can stop Garmin Connect from sending data in the background.
- Bluetooth hiccup: the watch shows a saved activity, but it never fully reached the phone.
- Account link expired: Strava logins can time out, so Garmin can’t pass data over until you reconnect.
- Duplicate handling: if you manually uploaded the same workout once, later transfers may be blocked to avoid duplicates.
- Strava delay: Strava can have brief backlogs where uploads queue up.
If you want Strava’s own explanation of how the Garmin connection works, their help page lays it out here: Garmin and Strava.
What You Can Expect To See On Strava From A Forerunner 55
The Forerunner 55 records solid running data, and Strava tends to show most of it. Still, it helps to know what’s “normal” so you don’t chase a problem that isn’t real.
Use the table below as a quick reality check for what typically transfers and what can vary by settings, sensors, and activity type.
| Item In Strava | What Usually Happens | What Can Change It |
|---|---|---|
| Distance + elapsed time | Transfers cleanly | Manual edits after upload |
| Pace splits | Shows per-mile or per-km splits | Auto-pause and split settings |
| Heart rate | Transfers if recorded | Wrist HR off, sensor dropouts |
| GPS map | Outdoor runs show a route map | Indoor mode, GPS off, privacy zones |
| Elevation gain | Usually present | Strava elevation correction toggle |
| Calories | Often included | User profile data differences |
| Cadence | Often present for runs | Recording settings, sensor type |
| Workout name | May show a default title | Renaming inside Garmin or Strava |
Fixing A Sync Problem Without Rebuilding Everything
If your Forerunner 55 activity shows up in Garmin Connect but not in Strava, that points to the final hop: Garmin Connect → Strava. The fastest fix is usually reconnecting the Strava link, then pushing a fresh sync.
Step 1: Make Sure The Activity Is In Garmin Connect First
Open Garmin Connect and confirm the activity is listed. If it’s not there, Strava can’t receive it yet. In that case, focus on syncing the watch to the phone: Bluetooth on, app open, then a manual sync pull-down.
Step 2: Refresh The Garmin–Strava Link
If the activity is in Garmin Connect, refresh the connection:
- Open Garmin Connect settings for connected apps.
- Select Strava.
- Disconnect, then connect again.
- Log in to Strava and accept permissions.
After reconnecting, give it a few minutes and refresh your Strava feed.
Step 3: Check For A Quiet Blocker On Your Phone
Phones can be aggressive about stopping background activity. If uploads only work when the app is open, review these spots:
- Battery saver mode
- Background app refresh
- App permissions for data and Bluetooth
Small changes here can turn “sometimes uploads” into “always uploads.”
| Symptom | Fast Check | Likely Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Nothing new reaches Strava | Is Strava still linked in Garmin Connect? | Reconnect Strava inside Garmin Connect |
| Activity not in Garmin Connect | Does the watch show the activity saved? | Open Garmin Connect and force a sync |
| Uploads only work with the app open | Is battery saver enabled? | Allow background refresh for Garmin Connect |
| Strava shows an activity with no map | Was the workout recorded outdoors? | Use an outdoor profile with GPS on |
| Duplicate entry appears | Did you upload a file manually? | Delete the duplicate and avoid re-upload |
| Only some workouts upload | Do uploads fail after long gaps? | Open Garmin Connect after each workout |
| Data missing (HR, cadence) | Did sensors record during the workout? | Check sensor pairing and wrist HR settings |
| Strava feed is delayed for many users | Do manual uploads work? | Wait, then refresh; try later if queued |
Manual Upload Options When You Need A Workout On Strava Right Now
Sometimes you want that run posted the same day and the auto-transfer is stuck. You can still get the activity into Strava manually by exporting the original file from Garmin Connect and uploading it to Strava on the web.
Manual upload is best as a one-off. If you do it often, you risk duplicates once the auto-transfer catches up.
Small Tweaks That Make Syncing Feel Reliable
Sync Right After You Save
Open Garmin Connect right after you finish. Let it complete the sync while you’re still in good signal. This single habit prevents most “why is yesterday missing?” problems.
Keep One Source Of Truth
Record on the watch, then let Garmin Connect pass it to Strava. If you track some workouts directly in Strava and some on the watch, your history can get messy fast.
Review Privacy Once, Then Forget About It
If you share your workouts, set visibility once inside Strava and stick with it. If you prefer keeping things private, set uploads to “Only You.” Either way, it stops the confusion of “it uploaded, but nobody can see it.”
One-Page Setup Checklist
- Pair the Forerunner 55 to your phone in Garmin Connect.
- Link Strava inside Garmin Connect.
- Record and save an outdoor test run with GPS on.
- Open Garmin Connect and pull down to sync.
- Refresh Strava and confirm the activity appears.
- If it doesn’t appear, reconnect Strava inside Garmin Connect and retry.
Once you’ve checked those boxes, syncing becomes a background task. Your watch does the recording, Garmin Connect does the transfer, and Strava gets the workout with no extra taps.
References & Sources
- Garmin.“Steps to Link Your Garmin Connect Account with Strava.”Walkthrough for linking Strava inside Garmin Connect and letting activities transfer.
- Strava.“Garmin and Strava.”Explains Garmin–Strava connection behavior and manual upload options.