Pre-owned watch buyers make their money on the gap between what they tell you it's worth and what they sell it for. We close that gap: every watch valued individually by a specialist, with the reasoning written down, the comparable auction results referenced, and the offer explained — not just stated. Free insured postage both ways. Paid within 72 hours.
High-street jewellers typically offer 30–40% of resale value — they need a margin because they don't specialise. Online instant-offer platforms use algorithms that deliberately undervalue to protect their own margins. Auction houses take 15–25% buyer's premium on top of seller's commission, meaning the gap between what the room pays and what you receive can exceed 35%.
The secondary watch market is one of the most researched collectables markets in the world. Chrono24 publishes sold prices. Antiquorum and Phillips publish auction results. Watchuseek, OmegaMuseum and dedicated forums track reference values obsessively. A specialist knows exactly what your watch sold for at auction last month — and so do we.
We open your parcel live on YouTube, in front of that same community. There is no information asymmetry when collectors who own the same reference are watching in the comments.
| Route | You receive | Time to payment |
|---|---|---|
| Fair Vintage | Full offer, no deductions | 72 hours |
| eBay (sold by you) | ~87% after 12.8% fees + PayPal | Days–weeks, chargeback risk |
| Chrono24 | ~93.5% after 6.5% commission | Weeks to months |
| Auction house | ~68% after seller + buyer fees | 6–10 weeks |
| High-street jeweller | 30–50% of resale value | Same day, but far less |
| Instant-offer platform | 40–60% of resale value | Fast, but lowest offers |
Estimates based on publicly available fee structures. Exact figures depend on watch category and platform tier.
We don't just buy Rolex and Patek. The micro brand market, the vintage Seiko market, and the British watchmaking revival are all categories our specialists follow closely. Send us anything you're unsure about.
Seamaster, Speedmaster, Constellation, De Ville, Railmaster, Genève. Pre-moon Speedmasters (cal. 321, 861), Constellation pie-pan dials, Seamaster 300 big-triangle are among the most sought-after references. Tropical dials, original bracelets and box-and-papers add substantial value.
Santos, Tank, Ballon Bleu, Pasha, Ronde, Roadster, Must de Cartier. French-made cases command a premium over later production. Cartier manual-wind movements in excellent condition are among the most wearable vintage pieces in the market. Solid gold cases, original bracelets and signed crowns are key value drivers.
Carrera, Monaco, Autavia, Silverstone, Monza, Professional. Pre-TAG Heuer pieces (branded simply 'Heuer') carry a significant collector premium — the vintage Heuer market is deep and knowledgeable. Autavia 2446 and Monaco 1133B in original condition command four figures. Modern references with box and papers hold value well.
Britain's fastest-growing independent watch brand has built a genuine secondary market. C60 Trident Pro, C65 Dune, C1 Bel Canto, C63 Sealander — especially limited editions and discontinued colourways — hold value well. In-house Calibre SH21 movements and the new C1 range with co-axial-style escapements are particularly sought after. Box and papers matter more here than with most brands.
Submariner, Datejust, Air-King, Explorer, GMT-Master. IWC Pilot's, Aquatimer, Portugieser. Breitling Navitimer, Superocean, Chronomat. All heavily documented markets — reference numbers, production years and service history are critical. We know the variants, the fakes and the value-inflating features in each generation.
Longines Heritage, Ultra-Chron, Conquest, 13ZN and early Calatrava-style pieces are undervalued and rising. Tissot Le Locle and T-Complication. Smiths Everest — the watch on Hillary and Tenzing's wrists at Everest base camp — is the most celebrated British watch of the 20th century and commands serious prices in original condition.
Vintage Seiko is one of the most active collecting categories globally. 62MAS, 6139 chronograph, 6105 'Captain Willard', King Seiko, Grand Seiko, Lord Elgin co-productions. Citizen Bullhead chronograph and vintage Parawater. Dial condition and originality of hands are critical — a correct 'fauxtina' dial on a 6217 can be worth multiples of a restored example.
Fears, Garrick, Loomes, Pinion, Farer, Halios, Anordain, Baltic, Brew, Furlan Marri, Ming — the independent watch movement has produced genuinely collectible pieces. Limited editions and first-run references hold value particularly well. We follow the secondary market for all established British and European independents and price accordingly.
English fusee movements, Swiss Lepine and Savonette cases, half-hunter and full-hunter cases in gold, silver and gold-filled. Military-issued pocket watches — particularly broad-arrow marked examples — command a collector premium. Complicated movements (minute repeaters, perpetual calendars) are specialist pieces that general buyers routinely undervalue.
Broad-arrow marked MOD-issued watches are among the most keenly collected categories in British horology. CWC, Precista, Longines (W10), Hamilton, Benrus, Rolex Milsub — all command significant premiums for correct originality. Tritium dials, hacking seconds and Arabic numerals are identifying features. Paperwork and provenance double many values.
We value any quality watch. If we can't make a fair offer, we'll tell you and return it free.
Watch valuation is not guesswork — it is a well-documented market. Understanding the factors that affect value helps you know what to include with your watch and what questions to expect from our specialist.
The most important thing to know: don't clean, polish or restore before sending. Original patina, original hands, unpolished cases and original dials — even with age-related marks — are almost always worth more than a professionally restored watch. We see heavily polished cases daily that have lost significant value through well-intentioned cleaning.
Within a single model, different references can vary by thousands. The Omega Speedmaster ref. ST105.003 is worth meaningfully more than a later 145.022 in equivalent condition. The reference is always the starting point.
An original dial — even with fading, spotting or light corrosion — is almost always worth more than a refinished one. Replaced hands, repainted text and new lume are value destroyers. We know the difference.
Sharp lugs, unpolished brushed surfaces and original case shape. A watch that has never seen a polishing wheel retains value that once lost cannot be recovered.
For modern watches (post-1980), original box, papers, swing tags and receipt can add 20–40% for some brands. For vintage pieces (pre-1970) they are rarer and correspondingly more valuable when present.
Original bracelets — particularly for Omega, Rolex and vintage Heuer — can account for 15–30% of the total watch value. An early Omega Gay Frères riveted bracelet on a Seamaster 300 is itself a collector item.
A working watch with documented service history by an authorised repairer is worth more than the same watch recently serviced by an unknown. Original service receipts and timing machine results add to confidence — and to offers.
From the moment you request your free label to the money landing in your account, the whole process takes nine working days. Nothing hidden, nothing ambiguous. Every step confirmed in writing.
Tell us what you're sending — brand, model, rough condition. A sentence is enough. We'll email you a free prepaid, tracked and insured shipping label the same working day. No special packaging required — any padded envelope or small box is fine. If you have the original box, include it.
Wrap your watch in bubble wrap or tissue, place it in a padded envelope or rigid box, attach the label, and drop it at any Royal Mail or DPD point. From the moment the courier scans the parcel, your watch is insured up to £5,000. You'll receive a tracking confirmation by email, and can watch progress in your online dashboard.
When your parcel arrives, we email you your unique parcel code and the scheduled broadcast time on our YouTube Live channel. Watch it live or come back to the time-stamped recording — we'll send you a direct link that jumps to your moment. Every watch is examined on camera: case, dial, hands, crown, movement if accessible. The audience of collectors in the comments often adds context we wouldn't have ourselves.
Our watch specialist produces a written valuation: reference number, serial range, movement calibre, condition assessment, comparable auction results from Chrono24, Antiquorum, Phillips and Sotheby's, and the offer figure with reasoning. Accept it and payment arrives within 72 hours of the broadcast. Decline it and your watch is returned, fully insured, within five working days — free of charge.
Seller names and parcel codes are kept private. Every other detail — brand, reference, condition, offer — is published openly.
Still unsure? Call us on 01234 815116 or email support@fairvintage.co.uk. Our watch specialist is happy to discuss your piece before you commit to sending anything.
Get a free label →Free insured postage. Every watch valued by a specialist in writing. Paid within 72 hours of your parcel going live on YouTube. No commission, no pressure, no surprises.