Your Expert Guide to Luxury Watches, Swiss Timepieces and Smart Watch Buying in Australia
Watches are more than timekeeping tools. They represent craftsmanship, heritage and long-term investment value that few other accessories can match. At Chase Maven, we cover everything from the world's most prestigious Swiss watch brands and investment-grade timepieces through to the best affordable watches under AUD $1,000 for Australian buyers who want genuine quality without overpaying.
Whether you are buying your first automatic watch, researching pre-owned luxury timepieces, or building a serious watch portfolio, our guides break down what matters most: brand heritage, movement quality, secondary market performance and where to buy in Australia with confidence.

Luxury Watches
Luxury watches from brands including Rolex, Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Omega and IWC represent the pinnacle of Swiss watchmaking, combining centuries of craft heritage with mechanical complexity that no digital device can replicate. At this tier, the right watch is not just a status symbol but a tangible asset with a documented secondary market and a collector community that spans generations.
Chase Maven covers luxury watches from every angle relevant to Australian buyers. Our guides cover which brands hold value best, which references are worth the waitlist, and how to access the secondary market for watches that authorised dealers cannot supply. From the Patek Philippe Nautilus to the Omega Seamaster No Time To Die, we break down what drives value and what every serious collector needs to know.
The most important luxury watch brands for Australian collectors right now include Patek Philippe, Rolex, Audemars Piguet, Omega, IWC Schaffhausen, Tudor and Vacheron Constantin. Each occupies a distinct position in the market and serves a different collector profile, from the accessible Swiss quality of Tudor under AUD $6,000 through to the grand complications of Patek Philippe at the absolute pinnacle of watchmaking.
Investment Watches
Not every luxury watch is an investment watch. The references that consistently appreciate in value share a specific cluster of characteristics: limited production from manufacturers with strong archival records, a design that has remained relevant across decades, and a secondary market with genuine global liquidity. Understanding which watches meet these criteria before buying is the single most valuable piece of knowledge any collector can have.
The strongest investment watches for Australian buyers right now span multiple price points. At the accessible end, the Tudor Black Bay 58 and Seiko Prospex Alpinist deliver genuine secondary market credibility under AUD $6,000 and AUD $1,000 respectively. At the serious collector tier, the Rolex Daytona, Patek Philippe Nautilus and Audemars Piguet Royal Oak have demonstrated the most consistent long-term appreciation of any wristwatches ever produced.
Understanding watch investment also means understanding the secondary market platforms that give you price transparency before you buy. Chrono24 and WatchCharts Marketplace are the most reliable tools for Australian buyers researching secondary market pricing on any reference before committing to a purchase, whether new through an authorised dealer or pre-owned through a private seller.
Watch Buying Guides
Buying a watch involves more decisions than most first-time buyers expect. The choice between automatic and quartz movements, the right case size for your wrist, the difference between Swiss Made and Japanese manufacture, and how to evaluate pre-owned pieces are all questions that Chase Maven's buying guides address in practical, plain-English terms for Australian buyers.
Our watch buying guides cover the full price spectrum. For buyers entering the market for the first time, we cover the best men's watches under AUD $1,000, the best options between AUD $1,000 and $2,000, and the strongest Swiss and Japanese references under AUD $10,000. Each guide is built around confirmed Australian retail pricing and honest secondary market assessments rather than international price comparisons that do not reflect what Australian buyers actually pay.
Key buying decisions our guides help you navigate include whether to buy new or pre-owned, how to authenticate a pre-owned watch before purchase, which authorised dealers in Sydney and Melbourne carry the brands you are researching, and how to use platforms like Chrono24 to cross-reference pricing before committing to any purchase above AUD $1,000.
Affordable Watches
The under-$1,000 watch market has never offered better value for Australian buyers than it does right now. Brands including Seiko, Citizen, Tissot, Hamilton and Certina are producing references with sapphire crystals, ceramic bezels, in-house automatic movements and genuine tool watch credentials at price points that Swiss brands at two to three times the price struggled to match a decade ago.
The Seiko Prospex Alpinist at approximately AUD $850 is currently the most actively traded watch on Chrono24 in its price bracket, combining a 70-hour power reserve, internal compass bezel and genuine secondary market collector credentials that no Swiss reference at the same price can approach. The Tissot PRX Powermatic 80 delivers an integrated bracelet sports watch aesthetic directly inspired by the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak at under AUD $1,000. The Citizen Promaster Diver delivers ISO-certified dive credentials and solar charging at approximately AUD $300.
For Australian buyers making their first watch purchase, the most important principle is to buy from an authorised retailer with warranty coverage rather than grey market or unverified pre-owned sources. Authorised retailers including Watch Depot, Watches Galore and Watches of Switzerland carry the full range of brands covered in our affordable watch guides with full manufacturer warranty protection.
Latest Watch Guides and Reviews
Browse our complete library of luxury watch guides, investment watch analysis and brand-by-brand buying advice for Australian collectors. Our watch coverage spans every price point from the best men's watches under AUD $1,000 through to the world's most expensive timepieces, covering Swiss manufacture brands including Rolex, Omega, Patek Philippe, Tudor and IWC alongside Japanese watchmaking from Seiko and Grand Seiko. Whether you are researching your first automatic watch, comparing pre-owned references on Chrono24, or building a serious watch portfolio, every guide is written with Australian buyers and Australian pricing in mind.

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General Watch Questions
The strongest luxury watch brands for Australian collectors are Rolex, Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Omega, IWC Schaffhausen, Tudor and Vacheron Constantin. Each occupies a distinct position in the market. Rolex and Patek Philippe lead on secondary market liquidity and long-term value appreciation. Omega and Tudor offer the most accessible entry points into genuine Swiss manufacture quality. Vacheron Constantin is the oldest continuously operating watch manufacturer in history, founded in 1755, and is currently posting some of the strongest secondary market growth of any Holy Trinity brand.
Certain watches from specific brands are genuinely strong investments. Rolex Daytona, Patek Philippe Nautilus, Audemars Piguet Royal Oak and Tudor Black Bay references have all demonstrated consistent secondary market appreciation over sustained periods. The most reliable investment watches share three characteristics: limited production from manufacturers with strong archival records, a design with genuine collector heritage, and a secondary market with global liquidity on platforms like Chrono24 and WatchCharts Marketplace.
Most watches, including fashion brands and standard production references, depreciate like other consumer goods. The difference between an investment watch and a fashion watch is measurable and specific, and Chase Maven's guides cover which references in each price bracket offer the strongest investment credentials for Australian buyers.
Automatic watches are powered by the movement of the wearer's wrist, which winds a mainspring through a rotor mechanism. They require no battery and are valued by collectors for their mechanical complexity and craft heritage. Most serious Swiss and Japanese collector watches use automatic movements.
Quartz watches use a battery to send an electrical current through a quartz crystal, producing a highly accurate and consistent timekeeping frequency. They are more accurate than most automatic movements in daily use and require minimal maintenance. Citizen's Eco-Drive technology and Seiko's solar quartz movements eliminate battery replacement entirely, combining quartz accuracy with solar charging convenience for Australian buyers who prioritise practicality.
For a first watch that delivers genuine quality and some secondary market credibility, AUD $500 to $1,000 is the most practical starting range for Australian buyers. At AUD $300 to $500, the Citizen Promaster Diver and Seiko Prospex Samurai offer ISO-certified dive credentials and Japanese automatic movements that outperform fashion watch alternatives at the same price.
At AUD $700 to $1,000, the Seiko Prospex Alpinist, Tissot Seastar 1000 and Tissot PRX deliver Swiss or Japanese manufacture quality with genuine secondary market demand. These references hold their value significantly better than fashion watches at the same price and are worth considering as a first serious watch purchase.
Case diameter is only part of the sizing equation. Lug-to-lug measurement, case thickness and bracelet or strap width all affect how a watch wears on different wrist sizes. As a starting point, wrists under 17cm typically suit 36mm to 39mm cases best. Wrists between 17cm and 19cm wear 38mm to 42mm comfortably. Larger wrists above 19cm can carry 42mm to 44mm without the watch appearing oversized.
The most practical advice for Australian buyers who cannot try watches in person is to check the lug-to-lug measurement rather than the case diameter alone. A 45mm Seiko Turtle with short lugs wears closer to a 40mm watch than the diameter suggests, while some 40mm watches with long lugs extend well beyond the wrist.
Buying & Ownership
Both have genuine advantages depending on what you are buying and why. New watches from authorised Australian retailers include full manufacturer warranty, the certainty of authentic provenance and the assurance of full service history from day one. For brands with strong resale values like Rolex, Omega and Tudor, buying new and holding long-term has historically produced the strongest returns.
Pre-owned watches offer meaningful price advantages, typically 20 to 40 percent below new retail on platforms like Chrono24 for Swiss references, and access to discontinued models that authorised dealers cannot supply. For investment-grade purchases above AUD $5,000, always request original box, papers and service history and consider having the watch independently authenticated before committing.
Most Swiss and Japanese automatic watch manufacturers recommend full service intervals of five to seven years for standard movements. High-complication watches including perpetual calendars, minute repeaters and chronographs typically require more frequent attention every three to five years due to the increased number of components and their associated wear.
In practical terms, Australian buyers should have a watch serviced when it begins running significantly fast or slow relative to its rated accuracy, when the crown feels loose or the case back seal shows signs of wear, or following any impact or exposure to water beyond the rated depth. For investment-grade pieces, maintaining documented service history through the brand's authorised service centre adds measurable resale value.
Some luxury watches hold and appreciate in value significantly. The most consistent performers are Rolex Daytona, Patek Philippe Nautilus and Audemars Piguet Royal Oak references, which have traded at premiums above retail for sustained periods. Tudor Black Bay references and Grand Seiko pieces have also demonstrated meaningful secondary market stability relative to their purchase prices.
Most luxury watches outside the strongest references and brands depreciate below retail when pre-owned, as the new retail price includes dealer margins and marketing costs that the secondary market does not support. The difference between a watch that holds value and one that does not comes down to brand, reference, production volume and condition. Chase Maven's investment watch guides cover which specific references in each price bracket offer the strongest value retention for Australian buyers.
Australia Specific Watch Questions
Luxury watches are generally cheaper in Switzerland, the UK and Japan than in Australia when currency exchange rates and local VAT or tax refunds are factored in. The saving varies significantly by brand and reference. Swiss brands headquartered in Europe, including Rolex, Omega, IWC and Tudor, are typically 15 to 25 percent cheaper in Switzerland or the UK after VAT refunds compared to Australian authorised dealer pricing.
However, Australian buyers who purchase overseas face GST and customs duties of approximately 15 percent on goods above the AUD 900 duty-free threshold when returning to Australia. After accounting for these charges, the net saving is typically 5 to 15 percent against Australian retail for most references. For purchases above AUD $10,000, the absolute dollar saving can be significant even after duties are applied.
Yes. All watches purchased through Australian authorised retailers include GST at 10 percent in the stated retail price. For watches imported privately from overseas retailers or brought back from international travel, GST at 10 percent applies on goods above the AUD 900 duty-free threshold per person, along with customs duty of approximately 5 percent, bringing the combined effective rate to approximately 15 percent of the declared value.
Australian buyers who purchase from international online retailers may have GST collected at the point of sale by the retailer under Australia's low value import GST rules, depending on the retailer's registration status with the ATO. Reputable international watch dealers including Chrono24 sellers typically note GST applicability at checkout for Australian buyers.
Authorised retailers are the safest source for new watches in Australia. Watches of Switzerland operates in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Canberra carrying Rolex, Tudor, Omega, IWC, Breitling and TAG Heuer among others. Watch Depot and Watches Galore carry Seiko, Citizen, Tissot and Hamilton nationally with full manufacturer warranty. Zaeger in Sydney is the strongest independent retailer for Grand Seiko, Zenith and select European brands.
For pre-owned watches, Chrono24 offers the broadest international selection with shipping to Australia and seller verification. WatchCraze and Wristies are the most active Australian-based pre-owned dealers carrying authenticated references across multiple brands. Always request original box, warranty card and purchase documentation when buying pre-owned, regardless of platform.