How Do You Use Hand Gestures on Samsung Galaxy Watch 4?

Galaxy Watch 4 supports gestures, but it doesn’t use the same gestures you may be used to from previous entries in the Galaxy Watch series. Your Galaxy Watch 4 also comes with most of the gestures disabled, so most of them don’t work at all unless you expressly turn them on. The exception is the raise to wake gesture, which automatically turns on the watch display whenever you raise your hand to look at the watch. That gesture can be disabled if you don’t like it, though. After you’ve enabled a gesture, you can use it by moving your arm or wrist in the specified manner. Here’s how to turn on and use gestures on Galaxy Watch 4:

Which Hand Gestures Does Galaxy Watch 4 Recognize?

Galaxy Watch 4 supports three gesture controls: answering phone calls, dismissing alerts and calls, and waking the display. The answering calls and dismissing alerts gestures are off by default, so you have to turn them on manually, while the waking the display gesture is on by default, and you have to switch it off if you don’t like it. Here are the gestures that the Galaxy Watch 4 recognizes and a description of what each does:

Raise arm: Turns on the watch display. This gesture turns the watch on when you raise your arm to look at it. It isn’t necessary if you set the watch face to stay on at all times but leaving the display on continuously drains the battery quickly.Shake arm twice, bent at the elbow: Answers calls. This gesture lets you answer phone calls without touching your watch or phone. It works with calls going to the watch itself if you have the LTE version and calls placed to your connected phone.Rotate wrist twice: Dismisses calls, notifications, and other alerts. This gesture lets you reject phone calls without touching your watch or phone. The same motion dismisses alerts and alarms.