What is a Considered a Vintage Watch Nowadays?

Powerfunk Monday, July 22nd, 2024 3 min. read
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While a vintage watch is generally considered to be any watch more than about 30 years old, there are certain traits that watch collectors tend to expect from certain eras. I’ll do my best to quickly break down what is considered a vintage watch nowadays, and also address the increasingly popular term “neo-vintage.”

Two watches that are both considered vintage

Vintage Watch Traits

Before I elaborate on some nuances of what is considered a vintage watch, here’s a quick chart to give you an overview of how terms are understood today. Note that these aren’t cut-and-dried definitions and there’s some overlap:

Typical TraitsVintageNeo-VintageModern
Year Made1950-19951988-20122000+
CrystalAcrylicSapphireSapphire
Beat rate5-6 bps8 bps8 bps
BraceletFolded metalSolid links, but still old basic claspsSolid links (including endlinks), and often quick-adjust clasps
LumeRadium (before about 1962) or tritiumTritium (before about 1999) or Super-LumiNovaSuper-LumiNova (or equivalent)
Traits of vintage, neo-vintage and modern watches

What’s the Simplest Definition of a Vintage Watch?

While the most basic definition of a vintage watch is a watch that is over 30 years old, the exact number is arbitrary, and you might hear some people say the cutoff is 25 years. But, in my opinion, as of 2024 people still don’t really consider watches from 1999 to be full-blown vintage yet. Many would call those “neo-vintage,” and I’ll get more into that soon. Watches older than 75 years old are often called “antique,” but honestly the collector interest in those is minimal–they’re just too tiny and too hard to service.

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What is Considered Vintage Has Evolved

When I first really got into Swiss watches in 2008 or so, there was one simple, widely accepted way to distinguish a vintage watch from a modern one–its crystal. An acrylic crystal meant it was a vintage watch, and a sapphire crystal meant it wasn’t. That made perfect sense, because at the time, sapphire crystals had been common for about 30 years and they notably change the “feel” of a watch.

A vintage “Ed White” Omega Speedmaster circa 1965

I once predicted that at a certain point, the defining cutoff between vintage and modern would inevitably change and likely become “tritium or Super-LumiNova” instead of “acrylic or sapphire.” And I think we’re just about there. Tritium, the radioactive type of lume that was common until the late 1990’s, develops patina over time while modern lume doesn’t.

Defining Vintage Rolex

To many Rolex collectors, any “4-digit” model is considered a vintage Rolex watch. That means, simply, that the model number is 4 digits long–like a GMT-Master ref. 1675 for instance. 4-digit Rolexes generally have acrylic crystals and movements that beat 5.5 times per second.

Jean-Claude Killy Rolex chronograph ref. 6236
This “Jean-Claude Killy” ref. 6236 is one of the most desirable vintage Rolexes

4-digit Rolex models began to get replaced by 5-digits in the late 1970’s–those Rolexes tick 8 times per second and have sapphire crystals just like new ones do. But 5-digit models (which were, in turn, replaced by 6-digit models starting in 2000) are generally considered “neo-vintage” watches.

A 6-digit Day-Date like ref. 118238 from 2000, despite being almost 25 years old, would still be considered modern by some because of its predominantly modern characteristics. The main difference that people notice between 5-digit Rolexes and newer ones is the weight of the bracelet and clasp. Vintage and even neo-vintage Rolex bracelets feel much lighter than modern ones.

What is Neo-Vintage?

The term “neo-vintage” has been gaining steam in the past decade, and it generally refers to watches that are about 12-35 years old. A neo-vintage watch almost always has a sapphire crystal, but at least some characteristics (like maybe a rattly stamped clasp) that materially differentiate it from current models.

Watches like the Rolex 16610 are considered neo-vintage
The Rolex Kermit ref. 16610 LV is one of the most popular neo-vintage Rolex models.

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People who like vintage watches enjoy the look and feel that they offer–they have traits that new watches don’t; collectors aren’t looking for certain watches just because they’re old. So it makes sense that what is considered a vintage watch has changed, and will continue to change, as more defining watch characteristics age and become ubiquitous. Maybe in 2050, any watch without a quick-adjust clasp will be considered vintage.

3 responses to “What is a Considered a Vintage Watch Nowadays?”

  1. Tina Bina Avatar
    Tina Bina

    Doesn’t “vintage” just mean that an item is authentically from a time period (ie – my purple Oakleys, which I’d still have if no one stole from my high school locker!).

    Your explanation makes it seem as if Antique and Vintage are one and the same, which further confuses ppl on the subject.

    Maybe there’s a solid analogy w/ concert t- shirts: you can buy an AD/DC concert shirt at Pac Sun, but it’s only made to look Vintage and not as cool or valuable as the ‘real’/ ‘authentic’ / ‘original’ thus ‘vintage’ t-shirt your uncle bought from the original concert at the actual venue.

  2. Lise Anntionette Bouchard Avatar
    Lise Anntionette Bouchard

    I have come across a watch that my grandmother wore..it must be at least 75 or 80 years old. Is this considered a antique? It is a bracelet watch..gold..with a tiny chain on the clasp..the hands are very tiny..hopefully I will have a answer..thank you..

    1. Powerfunk Avatar
      Powerfunk

      Hi Lise, I would say that yes, that’s bordering on “antique” status. Some people have a hard 100-year minimum for what they consider “antique” but ultimately it’s all arbitrary. It sounds like you have a “cocktail watch” which was popular in the 1940’s.

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