There are a lot of nice touches in watchOS 11, Live Activities being among them. These are cards that show up in yourSmart Stack, keeping you up-to-date on things like music control, Uber rides, or the weather. They’re on by default however, which canrisk draining battery life. If that’s not a concern, you might still be upset about the Smart Stack hijacking your watchface. Many of us have a song, video, or podcast going at any given time after all, and it doesn’t make sense to set dials, complications, and wallpapers if you can’t see them.
Mercifully, Apple does make it easy to customize Live Activities, although you might still be confused. As of iOS 18.0.1 and watchOS 11.0.1 those options are no longer in the Watch app on your iPhone, which is often the easiest way to adjustApple Watchbehavior.

The Apple Watch Ultra 2 ‘update’ makes me question Apple’s commitment to fitness
Apple’s delay in updating the Watch Ultra 2 neglects performance on a device made for performance athletes.
How to toggle Live Activities in watchOS 11
No iPhone app required
To customize how Live Activities appear on your Apple Watch:
If you’re concerned with privacy, tapShow Live Activities on Wrist Downto choose whether to blur card data when you’re not looking at it.
How to configure your Apple Watch Ultra’s Action button in watchOS 11
No more rooting through the Settings app.
How to control Live Activities for individual apps in watchOS 11
Keep the timers, leave those playlists in the background
You’ll also see options to control Live Activities on a per-app basis. If you tap onMedia Apps, for example, you can choose to disable those Live Activities specifically, or select what launches when they’re triggered. The default is usuallySmart Stack, but if you chooseOff,you can keep an app in the Stack without your watchface being automatically displaced. A third option,App, opens the full watchOS app for whatever content is running.
Unless you’re experiencing rapid battery drain, I recommend leaving most settings at their defaults, but going into per-app options and customizing how each Live Activity triggers. Apple went this way for a reason –you may actually want a timer to take over if it’s mission-critical. It’s apps likeApple Musicthat probably don’t need to kill that Photos watchface with your significant other, or that Modular face with access to the weather and your favorite apps.
I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple changes how these things operate in future versions of watchOS, especially if it’s confirmed that Live Activities are impacting battery life. We’ll update this guide if and when anything happens.
