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Everything You Need to Know Before Buying an IWC Watch

The International Watch Company may make the world’s most iconic pilot’s watches, but their offerings don’t stop there.

collage of watches
IWC

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Usually just called IWC, the International Watch Company was established in the mid-1880s by an American operating in Schaffhausen, a German-speaking town in Eastern Switzerland. Though the industrial revolution had already come to pass, fine Swiss watchmaking was still piecemeal labor done mostly in people’s homes. IWC’s founder, Aristo Jones, had a distinctly American vision of an electrically-powered watch factory, and once hydro-electric became established in the area, IWC’s headquarters quickly became one of the most prolific watchmaking facilities in the world, taking on highly profitable commercial and military contracts throughout the World Wars. (See inside their modern facilities here.)

Throughout WWI and WWII, IWC built more mil-spec pilot’s watches than any other company, and the focus on aviation timepieces remains central to IWC today. Their modern catalog also includes dress watches, dive watches, and more than a few grand complications costing hundreds of thousands. IWC’s products span a range wider than that of many other watch companies, and the quality of their wares places them among the major Swiss watch manufacturers.

IWC aficionados tend to collect and fuss over the pilot’s watches, and because the company refers back to its historic catalog so much, those in the know love to complain about inconsistencies between older models and their modern iterations. Interestingly, IWC is quick to respond to customer feedback, and few watch companies revise and improve their watches as regularly. Their famous “Mark” series pilot’s watches, for example, have gone through a befuddlingly large number of iterations, each one seeming to satisfy and disappoint the aficionados in equal measure.

a man wearing a watch on his wrist
IWC is also known for complicated, high-end watchmaking. This Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar combines that with the brand’s iconic aviation-focused collection.
Zen Love

For years, IWC has been steadily replacing 3rd-party movements with in-house calibers (which the brand will specifically name as "IWC-manufactured" in its spec list). Even in the lower end of their range, these upgrades often come without significant price increases, and this evolution makes their current catalog ever tastier, as the value propositions are getting better each year.

      Pilot’s Watches

      IWC segments their pilot’s watches into five categories: Classic, Spitfire, Top Gun, Le Petit Prince, and Antoine De Saint-Expuéry (author of Le Petit Prince). Within each category you’ll find many of the same watches, differentiated mostly by the dial’s color and case materials. Roughly speaking, here’s how the IWC pilot’s watches break down:

      Classic: a broad-ranging collection based on its pilots' instruments of the 1930s and '40s
      Spitfire: similar to the Classic, but featuring a caseback engraving of a Spitfire plane
      Top Gun: ceramic cases
      Le Petit Prince: steel or gold cases with blue dials and “Le Petit Prince”-themed case backs
      Antoine de Saint Exupéry: steel cases with brown dials

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      IWC Pilot's Watch Mark XX

      IWC Pilot's Watch Mark XX

      iwc.com
      $5,250.00
      • Diameter: 40mm
      • Movement: IWC 32111 automatic

        Starting with the now highly collectable vintage Mark XI, IWC has iterated on their most basic pilot’s watch, and this is the one that offers one of the most wearable iterations of it. Now with the XX replacing past Mark watches and featuring an in-house movement, it's even more attractive. It's also one of the brand's most affordable watches.

        a man wearing a watch on his wrist
        The IWC Pilot’s Watch Mark XX delivers much of what enthusiasts asked for from the collection, including a 40mm case and in-house movement.
        Zen Love

        IWC Pilot's Watch Chronograph Spitfire

        IWC Pilot's Watch Chronograph Spitfire

        iwc.com
        $7,400.00
        • Diameter: 41mm
        • Movement: IWC 69380 automatic

          A little bigger and featuring a weekday and date complication alongside a robust three-register chronograph function, this watch is a purebred IWC staple. The Pilot's Watch Chronograph comes in many iterations but the Spitfire is particularly cool, recalling vintage military vibes.

          IWC Big Pilot's Watch

          IWC Big Pilot's Watch

          iwc.com
          $13,200.00
          • Diameter: 46.2mm
          • Movement: Manufacture cal. 52110 with 8-day power reserve

            With its large dial, clever power reserve indicator at 3-o’clock, and unmistakable “onion” crown, the Big Pilot’s Watch is perhaps IWC’s most iconic timepiece, one that could stand for the brand above all others. These things really live up to their Big name with 46mm cases meant for Stallone and Schwarzenegger type wrists, but there are also (still sizable) 43mm versions, as well.

            IWC Pilot's Watch Timezoner Chronograph

            IWC Pilot's Watch Timezoner Chronograph

            iwc.com
            $12,300.00
            • Diameter: 46mm
            • Movement: IWC 89760 automatic

              No pilot’s watch collection is complete without a serious world timer, and the Timezoner model sees IWC taking global travel seriously (this was less of a concern back in the short-flight days of the World Wars). This watch will track a second time zone as well as the time in cities around the world, with a couple versions available such as those with and without chronograph functionality.

              IWC Aquatimer

              Flying below the radar, these submersible divers from IWC are robust timepieces with compelling features and a look that imitates nothing while remaining a classic in its own right. The internal rotating timing bezel is actuated via the crown at 9 o’clock, a feature which, taken visually, offers a unique symmetry to these waterproof watches.

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              IWC Aquatimer Automatic

              IWC Aquatimer Automatic

              iwc.com
              $7,000.00
              • Diameter: 42mm
              • Movement: IWC 32111 automatic

                If the time, date and a rotating timing bezel are all you’ll need, then the Aquatimer Automatic is the watch for you. With 300 meters of water resistance, these watches are more than ready for any watery adventure, and as of 2022 it comes with an in-house movement. Aquatimers also come in chronograph variants and special editions.

                IWC Portugieser

                Based on oversized timepieces developed in the 1930s for two Portuguese merchants, these watches range in price from $7,250 to well into six figures for grand complications, indicating that IWC is not only committed to this platform, but that the Portugieser covers a lot of ground for their customer base.

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                IWC Portugieser Chronograph

                IWC Portugieser Chronograph

                iwc.com
                $8,400.00
                • Diameter: 41mm
                • Movement: IWC 69355 automatic

                  With its dressy-leaning, no-nonsense feel, the Portugieser comes in a number of forms, including time-only versions, but it's best known as a chronograph. Though these appear very straight-ahead and conservative watches, they are easily among the watch world's icons and they live up to expectations in terms of details and quality when seen in person. Water resistance is 30 meters, so don’t do any cannonballs in this one.

                  a man wearing a watch on his wrist
                  The IWC Ingenieur for 2023 returned to the Genta design of the 1970s. It looks and wears fantastic on the wrist in any of its variants.
                  Zen Love

                  IWC Ingenieur

                  After Audemars Piguet and Patek Philippe hired Gerald Genta during the 1970s to design the now-famous Royal Oak and Nautilus steel sport watches, IWC brought the famed designer into its fold to help them compete in this fast-emerging market. The result was the Ingenieur, a watch that never gained the fame of either the Royal Oak or the Nautilus. Over its decades of life, the Ingenieur has featured integrated bracelets and funky bezels like those watches, but it's also returned the more conservative form from the 1950s that was conceived as an antimagnetic watch for scientists. As of 2023, the collection consists, once again, of the Genta design.

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                  IWC Ingenieur

                  IWC

                  IWC Ingenieur

                  iwc.com
                  $11,700.00
                  • Diameter: 40mm
                  • Movement: IWC 32111 automatic

                    In 2023, the Ingenieur returned (again) to its most distinctive form, that designed by horological design kingmaker Gerald Genta in the 1970s. Replacing a model based on a somewhat nondescript '50s design with a sourced movement, the 2023 Genta Ingenieur stepped into a world obsessed with such sporty integrated bracelet watches a là the Royal Oak and Nautilus. It's now easily one of the brands flagship collections and comes in three dial colors, as well as a titanium version.

                    IWC Portofino

                    The Italian seaside town of Portofino is so elegant and beautiful that when the equally elegant and beautiful Cate Blanchett walks the red carpet wearing an IWC Portofino, we confront a self-referential, kaleidoscopic display of luxury. Grab a shard of that impossibility and strap it to your wrist with the Portofino.

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                    IWC Portofino Automatic 37

                    IWC

                    IWC Portofino Automatic 37

                    iwc.com
                    $6,250.00
                    • Diameter: 37mm
                    • Movement: IWC 32111 automatic

                      Simple, elegant and unmistakably IWC in design, the Portofino collection is available in an array time-only automatic, chronograph and other configurations, each with different dial, case and strap options. For a nicely sized everyday wear, however, it's hard to beat this shiny, 37mm-wide, 9.4mm thick beauty with an in-house automatic movement.

                      The Da Vinci Collection

                      For an American-founded company operating in Switzerland, IWC sure does seem to love the Italians. The DaVinci series watches step up the jewels and complications to a degree that spans, again, an incredibly wide range of features and price. As such, the pilot’s watch aesthetics are not to be found here.

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                      IWC Da Vinci Moon Phase 36

                      IWC

                      IWC Da Vinci Moon Phase 36

                      iwc.com
                      $400.00
                      • Diameter: 36mm
                      • Movement: Sellita SW300-1 a automatic

                        Aimed at those who prefer classic European cues of elegance, the Da Vinci's defining trait is its articulating lugs which help models of any size fit the wrist better. Those sizes range from is offered in a wide array of styles that range from 36mm to 44mm and also include the brand's usual range of features. For the gentleman seeking a touch of elegance and romance in an everyday dress watch, the moonphase variant will fit the bill.

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