Omega

Omega is the largest single source of haute horology mechanical watches in Switzerland: a manufacturer whose chronographs have timed the Olympics since 1932, reached the moon in 1969, and appeared on every James Bond actor since 1995. Honeyrock's selection focuses on the Seamaster Aqua Terra, Speedmaster, Seamaster Diver 300M, and Planet Ocean families, including Bond-era and Master Co-Axial references. Every piece authenticated in-hand by our physician-led vetting team.

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Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 38.5mm "Spectre" Blue Dial | Ref. 231.10.39.21.03.002 | 2023 Full Set
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 38.5mm "Spectre" Blue Dial | Ref. 231.10.39.21.03.002 | 2023 Full Set
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm "James Bond Skyfall" Blue Dial | Ref. 231.10.42.21.03.001
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm "James Bond Skyfall" Blue Dial | Ref. 231.10.42.21.03.001
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm "Captain’s Watch" Ryder Cup Edition | Ref. 231.10.42.21.02.002
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm "Captain’s Watch" Ryder Cup Edition | Ref. 231.10.42.21.02.002
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm | Skyfall Grey Teak Dial | Ref. 231.10.42.21.06.001
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 41.5mm | Skyfall Grey Teak Dial | Ref. 231.10.42.21.06.001
Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph 44mm Two-Tone | 18K Gold & Blue Dial | Ref. 210.22.44.51.03.001
Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph 44mm Two-Tone | 18K Gold & Blue Dial | Ref. 210.22.44.51.03.001
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Speedmaster Olympic Timeless Collection 35.5mm | Mother-of-Pearl Dial | Ref. 3836.70.36
Speedmaster Olympic Timeless Collection 35.5mm | Mother-of-Pearl Dial | Ref. 3836.70.36
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 38.5mm Silver Teak Dial | Ref. 231.10.39.21.02.001
Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 38.5mm Silver Teak Dial | Ref. 231.10.39.21.02.001
Seamaster Diver 300M 42mm Two-Tone | 18K Yellow Gold & Blue Dial | Ref. 210.22.42.20.03.001
Seamaster Diver 300M 42mm Two-Tone | 18K Yellow Gold & Blue Dial | Ref. 210.22.42.20.03.001

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About Omega

Omega occupies the position in Swiss watchmaking that no other brand can quite claim: a luxury manufacturer whose products have actually been to the moon, timed every Olympic Games since 1932, and appeared on the wrist of every James Bond actor since 1995. The brand was founded in 1848 in La Chaux-de-Fonds and now operates as the flagship watchmaker of the Swatch Group. Its production scale (approximately 750,000 watches per year) is roughly fifteen times that of Patek Philippe, which makes Omega the largest single source of haute horology mechanical watches in Switzerland.

What this scale means for the pre-owned buyer is two things. First, Omega's secondary market is the deepest of any single luxury watch brand, which translates to better supply at every price point and tighter spread between bid and ask. Second, Omega's Master Co-Axial Chronometer certification, which became standard across the line in 2015, represents the strictest in-line quality standard in Swiss watchmaking. Every Omega Master Chronometer is tested by both COSC and METAS, certifying it to magnetic resistance of 15,000 gauss, accuracy of +/-0 to +5 seconds per day, and full water resistance to depth. Rolex's Superlative Chronometer certification, by contrast, tests to +/-2 seconds per day with no METAS magnetic resistance equivalent.

The Omega families that matter

The Seamaster Aqua Terra is the modern Omega's most versatile line. 38.5mm, 41.5mm, and 43mm cases, in-house calibres 8500, 8800, 8900, and 8938 depending on reference. The teak-pattern dial in blue, grey, black, or silver has become a signature design element that no other brand reproduces. The Aqua Terra is the watch most collectors arrive at when they want a Swiss daily wear that reads sport, dress, or casual without picking a side. Honeyrock currently holds the line in approximately seventeen references including the Worldtimer (220.12.43.22.03.001), Annual Calendar (231.13.39.22.01.001), GMT Chronograph (231.10.43.52.06.001), and the limited London 2012 Olympic edition (522.23.34.20.03.001). Pre-owned market positions span $3,500 to $7,700. Read our complete Aqua Terra reference guide here.

The Speedmaster is the chronograph line that started as a motorsport instrument in 1957 and became the watch NASA flight-qualified for all manned space missions in 1965. The modern Speedmaster splits into the Moonwatch Professional (manual wind, calibre 3861), the Speedmaster '57 (40.5mm, automatic, calibre 9906), the Dark Side of the Moon (44mm, all-ceramic, calibre 9300), and the limited Silver Snoopy Award 50th Anniversary (42mm, animated caseback, calibre 3861). Pre-owned market positions span $4,000 to $16,000 depending on reference. Our guide to the Speedmasters beyond the Moonwatch is here.

The Seamaster Diver 300M is the James Bond diver. Wave-pattern dial, helium escape valve at ten o'clock, skeletonised hands. Pierce Brosnan wore it in GoldenEye through Die Another Day. Daniel Craig wore variants of it across his Bond films. The current 2018-onwards 210-series Diver 300M trades $5,200 to $9,500 on the secondary market depending on metal and complication. Our James Bond Omega buyer's guide is here.

The Seamaster Planet Ocean is the harder-wearing Omega diver. 42mm to 45.5mm cases, 600 metres of water resistance, ceramic bezels, in-house calibre 8500. The Skyfall reference 232.30.42.21.01.001 is the Bond-connected Planet Ocean and trades $4,800 to $5,200 pre-owned.

The Constellation is Omega's dressier expression. Star on the dial, integrated bracelet design, available in steel, two-tone, and full gold. The Constellation is the Omega for collectors who want the brand authority without the sports watch language.

What separates Omega at the movement level

Three things distinguish Omega within Swiss watchmaking.

First, the co-axial escapement. Developed by George Daniels in the 1970s and adopted by Omega across its production line beginning in 1999, the co-axial escapement uses three escape wheels instead of one. This reduces sliding friction in the escapement (the primary cause of long-term timing drift) and significantly extends service intervals. A standard Swiss lever escapement watch wants service every 4 to 5 years. A co-axial Omega wants service every 8 to 10 years.

Second, the Master Chronometer certification (METAS). Introduced in 2015, Master Chronometer testing certifies the watch (not just the movement) to 15,000 gauss magnetic resistance, the chronometric accuracy of +/-0 to +5 seconds per day, and full water resistance. This is a meaningfully stricter standard than the COSC chronometer certification used across most of the Swiss industry. Honeyrock's Omega inventory is dominated by Master Chronometer references.

Third, manufacturing scale gives Omega the resources to invest in materials science at a level few competitors can match. Sedna gold (an alloy of gold, copper, and palladium that resists fading), Liquidmetal bezels, ceramic case construction, anti-magnetic spring barrels: these are Omega-developed technologies that have since been imitated by smaller manufacturers.

Buying pre-owned Omega

Pre-owned Omega is the most accessible entry point into Swiss haute horology for new collectors. Several practical points:

Calibre identification matters. The pre-co-axial movements (calibre 1120, 1164, 1861) are still serviceable but represent the older generation of Omega watchmaking. The co-axial generation (calibre 2500) is the entry into modern Omega. The Master Co-Axial generation (calibre 8500, 8800, 8900, 9300, 9905, 3861) is the current top of the line and represents the watches with the strongest secondary market.

Service history matters more on the older calibre 2500 and pre-co-axial movements than on the current Master Co-Axial calibres. The 8500 family is designed for 8 to 10 year service intervals and many pre-owned examples from 2015 to 2020 are now approaching first service. Factor that into the purchase price if no service record exists.

Bond editions trade at a premium to standard production. The Skyfall Aqua Terra (231.10.39.21.03.001), the Spectre Aqua Terra (231.10.42.21.03.003), and the Planet Ocean Skyfall (232.30.42.21.01.001) all command 5 to 15 percent premiums over their non-Bond siblings in equivalent condition.

Box, papers, warranty card. Full-set examples command a 10 to 15 percent premium and matter most on limited editions and Bond-connected references where authentication and provenance documentation add resale value.

What Honeyrock holds

Our current Omega selection focuses on the Seamaster Aqua Terra family (the broadest depth of inventory), the Speedmaster line (including Silver Snoopy Award, Dark Side of the Moon, and Speedmaster '57), the Bond-era Aqua Terra and Planet Ocean references, and the current-generation Seamaster Diver 300M in two-tone configurations. Every Omega in our inventory is inspected in-hand by our physician-led vetting team. Movement identification, service history, dial originality, and case finishing are documented before listing.

For collectors entering Omega for the first time, the Aqua Terra 38.5mm in any teak dial colour with a Master Co-Axial calibre 8500 movement is the most defensible starting point. For collectors who want the chronograph language, the Speedmaster '57 (332.10.41.51.03.001) is the most honest expression of the line's earliest history. For collectors who want the Bond connection, the Skyfall Aqua Terra or Planet Ocean Skyfall deliver cinematic provenance at price points well below equivalent Patek or Vacheron sports references.

Browse the current selection below. Reference numbers, calibre identification, year of production, and condition notes are listed on each product page.