Fair Vintage  /  Sell Your Watch  /  Sell My Omega Watch
Omega · Seamaster · Speedmaster · Constellation · Vintage · Any condition

Sell my Omega —
valued as a collector's piece, not scrap.

Omega is the world's second-largest luxury watch brand and one of the most actively traded in the secondary market. Whether you have a modern Seamaster, a vintage pie-pan Constellation, or a pre-moon Speedmaster, the value is in the specific reference — not a catch-all price list. Written individual valuations. Free insured postage. 72-hour payment.

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Omega models we regularly buy

Speedmaster Professional

The Moonwatch. Modern references in full set condition. Pre-moon references (2915, CK2998, 105 series) assessed individually — these are among the most collectible Omega made.

Seamaster 300 & 300M

Modern and vintage. The 1960s Seamaster 300 (ref. 2913, 165.014) with original dials and unpolished cases are particularly sought after by collectors.

Seamaster Aqua Terra

Modern sport-elegance in steel and precious metals. 150m Co-Axial references commonly traded. Good condition with box and papers adds meaningful premium.

Constellation

The pie-pan dial Constellations of the 1950s–60s are highly collectable. Original dials with intact sector finishing, correct hands, and unpolished cases make these significantly valuable.

De Ville

Dress watches in steel and precious metals. Ladymatic and Co-Axial references. Value depends strongly on condition and presence of box and papers.

Railmaster

Anti-magnetic tool watch with dedicated following. CK 2914 and early references with original dials are collectible. Modern Railmaster also traded.

Planet Ocean

Deep diving Seamaster. 600m and 1200m references. Ceramic bezels and modern Co-Axial movements. Bond editions and anniversary pieces attract premiums.

Vintage Omega (pre-1970)

Any Omega made before 1970 considered. Original movements, unpolished cases, and untouched dials determine value. We assess individually against current collector market.

Seamaster Diver 300M

The 'James Bond' Seamaster. 2531.80 and later references widely collected. First-generation examples with wave dial and laser-engraved bezel particularly popular.

What makes an Omega valuable in today's market

The Speedmaster premium — pre-moon vs modern

The Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch has been in continuous production since 1957 — making it one of the longest-running watch references in history. The modern Moonwatch Professional (references 3570.50 and 310.30.42.50.01.002) is widely available and trades at a moderate premium over retail. The pre-moon references — particularly the CK 2915 (1957–1959), CK 2998 (1959–1963), and the 105 series worn during the Mercury and early Apollo programmes — command prices that can be multiples of the modern watch, depending on specific calibre, dial variant, and condition.

For the pre-moon Speedmaster, what is on the dial matters enormously. A 'broad arrow' 2915 with intact original luminous plots and an unpolished case is a fundamentally different object — and a fundamentally different price — from a later 1968 example in polished condition.

The pie-pan Constellation

The Omega Constellation with the pie-pan (or 'melon' sector) dial is one of the defining luxury watch designs of the late 1950s. The sector finishing on the dial, the faceted edges, and the crosshair above the 6 are all period-specific. These watches are increasingly sought after by a generation of collectors who have grown tired of the dominant aesthetic of heavy sports watches. Original, unrestored pie-pan dials in good condition are the key to value here — a re-dialled or refinished Constellation loses most of its collector premium.

Tropical dials and the condition premium

Like Rolex, certain Omega dials develop a warm, tropical patina over decades — the black lacquer or matte finish shifting to warm brown. This is not deterioration; it is a highly sought-after characteristic that adds value rather than detracting from it. Tropical dials on vintage Seamaster and Constellation models can add 50–200% to value compared with standard examples of the same reference.

A note on polishing: An unpolished Omega case with original brushed and polished surfaces tells a true story about the watch's life. Heavy re-polishing rounds the edges, removes metal, and destroys the original surface that collectors prize. Always present the watch as it is — do not attempt to clean or polish before sending.

How to sell your Omega with Fair Vintage

1

Request a free label

Tell us the model and approximate era. We send a free insured postage label by email.

2

Post your Omega to us

Pack carefully, photograph before posting. Covered to £5,000 during transit to us.

3

Receive written valuation

We identify the exact reference, assess condition, compare current sales, send you a full written explanation.

4

Accept or return free

Accept and receive payment in 72 hours. Decline and we return your Omega insured, free of charge.

Sell your Omega — written valuation, fast payment

Any reference, any condition. Speedmaster, Seamaster, Constellation, vintage and modern. Free insured postage both ways. Written explanation of every figure. 72-hour payment guarantee.

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Frequently asked questions

How much is my Omega Seamaster worth?

Omega Seamaster values vary widely by reference and condition. The modern Seamaster Planet Ocean and Seamaster 300 Master Co-Axial typically fetch £1,200–£3,500 in good condition. Earlier Seamaster Automatics from the 1960s and 70s range from £300–£1,200 depending on the calibre, dial condition, and case. The Seamaster 300 reference 2913 and its variants can exceed £2,000 in original unpolished condition.

How much is my Omega Speedmaster worth?

The modern Speedmaster Professional in good condition with box and papers typically sells for £2,800–£4,500. The pre-moon references — 2915, 2998, 105.002, 105.003, 145.012 — command significant premiums, ranging from £3,000 to over £15,000 for the earliest and rarest examples. Calibre, dial condition, and correct pushers and crown are critical for vintage Speedmaster valuations.

Do vintage Omega watches have collector value?

Yes — substantially. Vintage Omega is among the most actively collected categories in the watch market. Pre-1970 Seamasters, Constellations with pie-pan dials, Railmasters, and early Speedmasters all command collector premiums. The key factors are originality of the dial, case condition (unpolished is worth more), correct hands and indices, and movement condition.

Do I need box and papers for my Omega?

No. Most Omega watches we buy are sold without original box and papers. For modern Speedmaster and Seamaster models from 2000 onwards, a full set adds a meaningful premium. For vintage Omega, the absence of box and papers is normal and not penalised.

Do you buy Omega watches that don't work?

Yes. A non-working Omega still has value — the movement condition is factored into the offer, not used as a reason to decline. For vintage Omega, an original non-working movement is often preferable to one repaired with incorrect parts.

What is the most valuable Omega to sell right now?

Pre-moon Speedmaster references (especially the 2915, CK 2998, and early 105 references) command the highest prices. Among vintage Omega, the early Seamaster 300 with original tropical dials and the Constellation pie-pan models are particularly sought after. Among modern Omega, limited editions and collaboration pieces with box and papers tend to hold value best.


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