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frontpageScarletField5751 posted Yesterday 03:53 AM
frontpageScarletField5751 posted Yesterday 03:53 AM

Garmin inReach Mini 2 Compact Satellite Communicator (Various Colors)

+ Free Shipping

$250

$400

37% off
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Deal Details
Various Retailers have Garmin inReach Mini 2 Compact Satellite Communicator (Various Colors) on sale for $249.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member ScarletField5751 for sharing this deal.

Available from:Features:
  • Compact, lightweight satellite communicator enables two-way messaging and interactive SOS globally (Active satellite subscription required. Some jurisdictions regulate or prohibit the use of satellite communication devices)
  • Bluetooth
  • Water Resistant
  • Navigate back to where you started by using TracBack routing
  • Share your location with loved ones back home at any time (active satellite subscription required) by using your MapShare page or with your coordinates embedded in your messages
  • Get accurate heading information using the digital compass — even when you're not moving
  • Sync with the Garmin Explore app and website on your compatible smartphone for trip planning and topographical mapping, and create waypoints, courses, activities and collections you can sync to your device
  • Pair with Garmin devices, such as wearables and handhelds, and use them to send and receive messages and trigger an SOS (active satellite subscription required)
  • Battery life: up to 14 days in 10-minute tracking mode

Editor's Notes

Written by Neo45 | Staff

Original Post

Written by ScarletField5751
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Various Retailers have Garmin inReach Mini 2 Compact Satellite Communicator (Various Colors) on sale for $249.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member ScarletField5751 for sharing this deal.

Available from:Features:
  • Compact, lightweight satellite communicator enables two-way messaging and interactive SOS globally (Active satellite subscription required. Some jurisdictions regulate or prohibit the use of satellite communication devices)
  • Bluetooth
  • Water Resistant
  • Navigate back to where you started by using TracBack routing
  • Share your location with loved ones back home at any time (active satellite subscription required) by using your MapShare page or with your coordinates embedded in your messages
  • Get accurate heading information using the digital compass — even when you're not moving
  • Sync with the Garmin Explore app and website on your compatible smartphone for trip planning and topographical mapping, and create waypoints, courses, activities and collections you can sync to your device
  • Pair with Garmin devices, such as wearables and handhelds, and use them to send and receive messages and trigger an SOS (active satellite subscription required)
  • Battery life: up to 14 days in 10-minute tracking mode

Editor's Notes

Written by Neo45 | Staff

Original Post

Written by ScarletField5751

Community Voting

Deal Score
+45
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Get Deal at Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Garmin inReach Mini 2 in Flame Red

Deal History 

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 12/15/2025, 11:51 PM
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Top Comments

BluegrassPicker
22241 Posts
3873 Reputation
inReach® Consumer Plans

Monthly Enabled Plan

Price per month:
$7.99 USD

https://www.garmin.com/en-US/p/837461/

This is the plan I'm on and it's the one I was on when I had to punch the SOS button last summer.

Priceless if you need it to save your life or someone else's.....

Edit: A good resource describing various plans: https://hikingguy.com/hiking-gear...breakdown/
PriceTheory
1446 Posts
333 Reputation
You're both right and wrong.

It is 100% true that things like satellite SOS/texting on iPhone has made these unnecessary for a lot of uses. That's why my inreach subscription is not currently active (well, also some farkery around their subscription plans). I spend a lot of time recreating outside of cell service, but mostly things that last for a few hours and aren't that far out. Service is pretty spotty here, so I'm probably doing something mildly dangerous outside of service a couple times a week.

But for more serious applications, a phone is NOT a substitute.
-These things are built *rugged*--I've seen multiple stories of people crashing on bikes or similar and breaking their phones. The inreach will survive a ton of abuse.
-The batteries last forever--you can get WEEKs out of an inreach while running 10-minute tracking pings (and like a year if you leave it off). My phone is good for about a day. Can extend that with airplane mode, powering it off, etc., but odds are good I want to use my phone for other things like photos or maps...If I get stuck outside overnight in the cold, odds are good the phone doesn't make it to the morning.
-It is harder for the phone to get a good signal as it uses a smaller antenna and an inferior satellite network--if you crash in a ditch with thick tree cover...I'd rather have a Garmin. Maybe TMobile + Starlink improves on this.
-Last I checked, iphone can't even do continuous 10-minute/1-hour style tracking...part of that is because the antenna is so small that you have to be manually holding and pointing at the sky to get enough service for a text to go through.

Also this is a solvable problem, but I 100% would rather my SOS ping be connected to Garmin's dedicated rescue operations center. iPhone SOS usually routes to local emergency services which may not be appropriate. Garmin has a team that is experienced at contacting and coordinating between Search & Rescue, 911, etc.

I won't hesitate to reactivate my inreach subscription next time I need it (longer or more remote trips). I almost did earlier this year, but the guy I was skiing with had one that was already active.

edit: also, the list of countries where inreach works is WAY longer than iphone SOS...and T-mobile+starlink is US only so it won't even help you in Canada. You 100% don't need one of these things to go for a day hike in a national park or something...but that's not the market (and people who do that are probably the same people who think kids should wear helmets on the playground).
sarcasmogratis
14570 Posts
2330 Reputation
Activation fee $39.99

You can cancel service for up to a year without paying the activation again.

18 Comments

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Yesterday 04:22 AM
82 Posts
Joined Oct 2021

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Pro
Yesterday 04:54 AM
22,241 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
BluegrassPicker
Pro
Yesterday 04:54 AM
22,241 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank BluegrassPicker

Quote from LivelyWallaby1957 :
Looks like around $99 a month for an irridium subscription to use this. Couple of cheap lesser known at 50.
inReach® Consumer Plans

Monthly Enabled Plan

Price per month:
$7.99 USD

https://www.garmin.com/en-US/p/837461/

This is the plan I'm on and it's the one I was on when I had to punch the SOS button last summer.

Priceless if you need it to save your life or someone else's.....

Edit: A good resource describing various plans: https://hikingguy.com/hiking-gear...breakdown/
Last edited by BluegrassPicker December 14, 2025 at 09:56 PM.
11
Pro
Yesterday 05:43 AM
14,570 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
sarcasmogratis
Pro
Yesterday 05:43 AM
14,570 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank sarcasmogratis

Activation fee $39.99

You can cancel service for up to a year without paying the activation again.
4
Yesterday 05:50 AM
1,897 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
BigbanksYesterday 05:50 AM
1,897 Posts
Quote from BluegrassPicker :
inReach® Consumer Plans

Monthly Enabled Plan

Price per month:
$7.99 USD

https://www.garmin.com/en-US/p/837461/

This is the plan I'm on and it's the one I was on when I had to punch the SOS button last summer.

Priceless if you need it to save your life or someone else's.....

Edit: A good resource describing various plans: https://hikingguy.com/hiking-gear...breakdown/
More details on your experience with the SOS feature. I use a spot x and may use it for a very long time. And I love it. I love that I don't have to pair it with the cell phone and it has amazing battery life. I pay for all the rescue features and stuff.
Yesterday 02:12 PM
153 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
misgnomerwaYesterday 02:12 PM
153 Posts
Next year at this time major carriers should be offering direct to device satellite 5g good enough for video calling through AST, I'm stoked.
1
Yesterday 02:25 PM
562 Posts
Joined Jan 2017
televisionarchivesYesterday 02:25 PM
562 Posts
Not sure when this is going to happen but pretty soon you're going to be able to use walkie talkies via satellite. That's where this is all headed. Good deal on this service though
Yesterday 02:32 PM
5,154 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
dcmanryanYesterday 02:32 PM
5,154 Posts
Ridiculous service fees and a last ditch effort as they know cell phones will soon work anywhere. If you have T-Mobile just pay the $15/month for Starlink and you can text anywhere and it works as well as this and you'll soon be able to make calls. At this point in the game I would not recommend buying this has been technology.
2

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Yesterday 02:49 PM
42 Posts
Joined Nov 2022
ScubaDoYesterday 02:49 PM
42 Posts
If you live outside of Texas, no sales tax and free shipping, but only one left in stock - https://gulfcoastscuba.com/produc..._flame_red
Yesterday 02:55 PM
929 Posts
Joined Oct 2022
SaverDaddyYesterday 02:55 PM
929 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SaverDaddy

Quote from misgnomerwa :
Next year at this time major carriers should be offering direct to device satellite 5g good enough for video calling through AST, I'm stoked.
People have been saying this for the last 5 years
2
1
Yesterday 03:06 PM
5 Posts
Joined Apr 2016
PulloutYesterday 03:06 PM
5 Posts
Quote from dcmanryan :
Ridiculous service fees and a last ditch effort as they know cell phones will soon work anywhere. If you have T-Mobile just pay the $15/month for Starlink and you can text anywhere and it works as well as this and you'll soon be able to make calls. At this point in the game I would not recommend buying this has been technology.
This is not for people who go on a days hike, this is for people who spend days off grid. The battery life is great and lasts weeks not hours. So, as every Garmin products, these are for the niche users who want the best that works throughout their trip.
Yesterday 04:00 PM
1,446 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
PriceTheoryYesterday 04:00 PM
1,446 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank PriceTheory

Quote from dcmanryan :
Ridiculous service fees and a last ditch effort as they know cell phones will soon work anywhere. If you have T-Mobile just pay the $15/month for Starlink and you can text anywhere and it works as well as this and you'll soon be able to make calls. At this point in the game I would not recommend buying this has been technology.
You're both right and wrong.

It is 100% true that things like satellite SOS/texting on iPhone has made these unnecessary for a lot of uses. That's why my inreach subscription is not currently active (well, also some farkery around their subscription plans). I spend a lot of time recreating outside of cell service, but mostly things that last for a few hours and aren't that far out. Service is pretty spotty here, so I'm probably doing something mildly dangerous outside of service a couple times a week.

But for more serious applications, a phone is NOT a substitute.
-These things are built *rugged*--I've seen multiple stories of people crashing on bikes or similar and breaking their phones. The inreach will survive a ton of abuse.
-The batteries last forever--you can get WEEKs out of an inreach while running 10-minute tracking pings (and like a year if you leave it off). My phone is good for about a day. Can extend that with airplane mode, powering it off, etc., but odds are good I want to use my phone for other things like photos or maps...If I get stuck outside overnight in the cold, odds are good the phone doesn't make it to the morning.
-It is harder for the phone to get a good signal as it uses a smaller antenna and an inferior satellite network--if you crash in a ditch with thick tree cover...I'd rather have a Garmin. Maybe TMobile + Starlink improves on this.
-Last I checked, iphone can't even do continuous 10-minute/1-hour style tracking...part of that is because the antenna is so small that you have to be manually holding and pointing at the sky to get enough service for a text to go through.

Also this is a solvable problem, but I 100% would rather my SOS ping be connected to Garmin's dedicated rescue operations center. iPhone SOS usually routes to local emergency services which may not be appropriate. Garmin has a team that is experienced at contacting and coordinating between Search & Rescue, 911, etc.

I won't hesitate to reactivate my inreach subscription next time I need it (longer or more remote trips). I almost did earlier this year, but the guy I was skiing with had one that was already active.

edit: also, the list of countries where inreach works is WAY longer than iphone SOS...and T-mobile+starlink is US only so it won't even help you in Canada. You 100% don't need one of these things to go for a day hike in a national park or something...but that's not the market (and people who do that are probably the same people who think kids should wear helmets on the playground).
Last edited by PriceTheory December 15, 2025 at 09:05 AM.
10
Yesterday 04:07 PM
414 Posts
Joined Apr 2017
Mr_SnoopYesterday 04:07 PM
414 Posts

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Quote from Pullout :
This is not for people who go on a days hike, this is for people who spend days off grid. The battery life is great and lasts weeks not hours. So, as every Garmin products, these are for the niche users who want the best that works throughout their trip.
I have one that I use for day hikes. If you're hiking somewhere with no cell reception and there are dangers with the weather conditions, trail conditions, animals (bears, etc) or if you want your family to be able to reach you, it can still make sense. Last year when I was at Glacier NP, some guy broke his ankle on a trail and another hiker ran to the nearest boat dock where there was luckily someone with a radio.

I used the enabled plan on my trip this year and just paid to upload tracking points to my mapshare page. It was only another $6 or 7 to do this for a week of hikes.

Protegear is another company you can get inreach service thru. They have an annual fee and minimum charges per year but they allow you to turn service on for a day, week, month, however long you want.

The Inreach 3's are out now. Here's a video comparing them to the 2: https://youtu.be/VUv2ew5S0_E?si=q3qi6pEwiYC2wZdO
3
Yesterday 04:27 PM
2 Posts
Joined Apr 2023
GreyPassenger355Yesterday 04:27 PM
2 Posts
Doesn't IPhone let you text with satellite when service not available.
Pro
Yesterday 04:46 PM
22,241 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
BluegrassPicker
Pro
Yesterday 04:46 PM
22,241 Posts
Quote from Bigbanks :
More details on your experience with the SOS feature.
Here's my post from a previous deal:

https://slickdeals.net/forums/showpost.php?p=179257114&postcount=6

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Yesterday 05:07 PM
2 Posts
Joined Sep 2017
GoosefredriksonYesterday 05:07 PM
2 Posts
Quote from PriceTheory :

You're both right and wrong.

It is 100% true that things like satellite SOS/texting on iPhone has made these unnecessary for a lot of uses. That's why my inreach subscription is not currently active (well, also some farkery around their subscription plans). I spend a lot of time recreating outside of cell service, but mostly things that last for a few hours and aren't that far out. Service is pretty spotty here, so I'm probably doing something mildly dangerous outside of service a couple times a week.

But for more serious applications, a phone is NOT a substitute.
-These things are built *rugged*--I've seen multiple stories of people crashing on bikes or similar and breaking their phones. The inreach will survive a ton of abuse.
-The batteries last forever--you can get WEEKs out of an inreach while running 10-minute tracking pings (and like a year if you leave it off). My phone is good for about a day. Can extend that with airplane mode, powering it off, etc., but odds are good I want to use my phone for other things like photos or maps...If I get stuck outside overnight in the cold, odds are good the phone doesn't make it to the morning.
-It is harder for the phone to get a good signal as it uses a smaller antenna and an inferior satellite network--if you crash in a ditch with thick tree cover...I'd rather have a Garmin. Maybe TMobile + Starlink improves on this.
-Last I checked, iphone can't even do continuous 10-minute/1-hour style tracking...part of that is because the antenna is so small that you have to be manually holding and pointing at the sky to get enough service for a text to go through.

Also this is a solvable problem, but I 100% would rather my SOS ping be connected to Garmin's dedicated rescue operations center. iPhone SOS usually routes to local emergency services which may not be appropriate. Garmin has a team that is experienced at contacting and coordinating between Search & Rescue, 911, etc.

I won't hesitate to reactivate my inreach subscription next time I need it (longer or more remote trips). I almost did earlier this year, but the guy I was skiing with had one that was already active.

edit: also, the list of countries where inreach works is WAY longer than iphone SOS...and T-mobile+starlink is US only so it won't even help you in Canada. You 100% don't need one of these things to go for a day hike in a national park or something...but that's not the market (and people who do that are probably the same people who think kids should wear helmets on the playground).
This is the best comment in this section. While other devices work this is top tier for it's use, theres a reason nearly all thru hikers carrier these around. I've used it everywhere from Nepal to just outside my backyard, the weather feature has saved me on a few way out there adventures.

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