Editor’s picks: all our favourite watches from Dubai Watch Week 2025
Burj Park played host to Dubai Watch Week this year, and if you weren’t there, you missed something special. The week served up exactly what we’ve come to expect from the region’s premier horological gathering—serious watches for serious collectors, minus the stuffiness.
But let’s not pretend every piece deserved the attention it received. Between the marketing bluster and the Instagram-friendly installations, separating genuine achievement from mere spectacle required a discerning eye—and perhaps a second shot of espresso.
So here’s what actually mattered. These are the watches that made me stop mid-conversation, the pieces that had seasoned collectors reaching for their jeweller’s loupes, the timepieces that will define conversations in the months ahead. From technical tours de force to designs that made my heart skip, these are my top picks from Dubai Watch Week 2025.
Consider this your insider’s guide to what's truly worth coveting.
In case you missed it: Dubai Watch Week 2025 day 1: a grand celebration of time unfolds at Dubai Mall’s Burj Park
Chopard LUC Grand Strike – The Sound of Eternity
Chopard LUC Grand Strike – The Sound of Eternity (Photo: courtesy of Chopard)
Let’s address the elephant in the room: we’re drowning in “world firsts” and “groundbreaking innovations” that amount to little more than marketing copy. Which is precisely why the LUC Grand Strike deserves your undivided attention. Chopard Manufacture spent 11,000 hours—and filed 10 patents, five of them entirely new—developing what is officially the most comprehensively certified grande sonnerie in contemporary watchmaking. The party trick? Sapphire crystal gongs machined as a single piece with the dial, producing what Chopard rather poetically calls the “Sound of Eternity.” It’s not hyperbole.
The acoustic properties genuinely differ from traditional steel gongs—clearer, more resonant. At 43mm in ethical white gold with a dial-less design that showcases all 686 components of the calibre LUC 08.03-L, including a 60-second tourbillon, this is watchmaking without pretense. Grande sonnerie, petite sonnerie, minute repeater, COSC-certified, Poinçon de Genève—the full suite of complications and credentials. This isn’t just Chopard’s most complex creation to date; it’s a legitimate contender for one of the most significant sonnerie releases in recent memory.
Biver Automatique Lavender Jade
Biver Automatique Lavender Jade (Photo: courtesy of Biver)
While everyone else was chasing complications and carbon fibre, Jean-Claude Biver—yes, that Biver—decided to do something rather more subversive: create a time-only watch that costs 95,000 Swiss francs and makes you forget every other three-hander you’ve ever considered. The Automatique Lavender Jade is deceptively simple until you actually look at it. That dial isn’t merely purple; it’s genuine lavender jade, a material so uncommon in horology you’d be forgiven for not knowing it existed.
Housed in a 39mm platinum case—10mm thick, 47.55mm lug-to-lug—this is a watch that wears like a dream and photographs like a fever dream. The in-house calibre JCB-003-A features a bi-directional 22-karat gold micro-rotor and Biver’s signature zero-reset mechanism, with every single surface hand-decorated to standards that would make old-school Swiss ateliers weep. The 18-karat white gold hands are satin-finished and hand-beveled with four interior angles, because of course they are. This is watchmaking as thesis statement: no gimmicks, no Instagram bait, just exquisite execution of fundamentals elevated to an art form. At this price point, you’re buying into a philosophy that says less can indeed be infinitely more, provided you’re willing to obsess over every microscopic detail.
See also: The perfect match: Scottie Scheffler’s triumph and Rolex’s timeless bond with The Open
UR-Freak
UR-Freak (Photo: courtesy of Urwerk and Ulysse Nardin)
UR-Freak (Photo: courtesy of Urwerk and Ulysse Nardin)
Most brand collaborations amount to slapping two logos on an existing watch and calling it innovation. The UR-Freak is emphatically not that. This is Ulysse Nardin’s Freak—the watch that rotates its entire movement to tell time—colliding with Urwerk’s signature wandering hours satellite display in what is genuinely the first technical collaboration between two major independent watchmakers. Over 150 entirely new components were developed for the UN-241 calibre, which fuses Urwerk’s three connected satellite hands with Ulysse Nardin’s silicon mastery and revolutionary Grinder automatic winding system.
The result is a 44mm sandblasted titanium case housing a mechanism that makes a complete rotation every three hours, with time indicated by domed discs that jump from hand to hand along a 60-minute track—all rendered in Urwerk’s signature electric yellow Pantone 395 C against deep anthracite gray. No crown, naturally; you adjust the time via the turning bezel, with a special "Ur-Freak” locker tab at six o’clock. At 90 hours of power reserve and limited to 100 pieces, this watch may come across as two brands playing nice for the press, but really, it’s a legitimate technical achievement that proves what happens when independent minds with actual manufacturing prowess decide to create something neither could build alone. The fact that it also looks absolutely sensational is merely the cherry on top.
Raúl Tena The Pearl Diver
Raúl Tena The Pearl Diver (Photo: courtesy of Raúl Tena)
Independent watchmaking has no shortage of former engineers turned creative visionaries, but Raúl Tena’s debut piece suggests he might actually understand what that transformation requires. The Pearl Diver took over five years to materialise, involving a roster of Swiss masters that reads like a who’s who of haute horlogerie: Olivier Kuhn on hand-engraving, Atelier Miniare for enamel work, Kari Voutilainen’s atelier for the case, and Télôs for the bespoke RT01 movement. At its heart sits a hand-engraved gold sculpture depicting a pearl diver, patinated to evoke aged bronze, with an actual Gulf pearl nestled within the composition—a deliberate tribute to the region’s pearl-diving heritage and the Seddiqi family’s decades-long stewardship of watch culture in the Middle East.
The hand-painted enamel dial features Eastern Arabic numerals on a circular-brushed steel minute ring, while the jumping hours and retrograde trailing minutes mechanism offers 60-plus hours of power reserve in a choreography that’s genuinely mesmerising. Available in 44mm cases of steel, titanium, gold, or platinum, this inaugural opus is limited to five pieces, with future Art to Watch creations developed entirely bespoke with individual collectors. It’s ambitious, deeply personal and refreshingly free of the cynicism that plagues so much independent watchmaking. Whether Tena can sustain this level of ambition across a collection remains to be seen, but The Pearl Diver makes one hell of an opening statement.
Tudor Ranger dune white dial
Tudor Ranger dune white (Photo: courtesy of Tudor)
Tudor just did something interesting: made their expedition watch even simpler. The Ranger now comes in 36mm alongside the existing 39mm case, and debuts a new “Dune white” dial—a not-so-subtle nod to Tudor’s partnership with the Dakar Rally, where the brand’s watches accompany drivers through the Empty Quarter’s towering sand dunes and punishing heat. This is watchmaking stripped to its essentials: satin-brushed 316L steel, Arabic numerals at 3, 6, 9, and 12 o’clock generously coated in Super-LumiNova, and those distinctive arrow-shaped hands with the burgundy seconds tip. Inside sits Tudor’s calibre MT5400 or MT5402 depending on case size—COSC-certified, silicon balance spring, 70-hour power reserve, the works—meeting standards even stricter than the official chronometer requirements.
At roughly a tenth the price of everything else in this article, the Ranger makes a compelling argument that tool watches shouldn’t require a second mortgage. It’s available on either a fully brushed steel bracelet with Tudor’s clever T-fit quick-adjustment clasp or a tri-colour fabric strap woven in France on 19th-century Jacquard looms. Five-year transferable guarantee, no registration required, waterproof to 100 metres. This is the watch you actually wear when heading somewhere inhospitable, not the one you photograph for Instagram and immediately return to the safe.
Read more:Opinion: Patek Philippe 1518’s new record sales hint at more than just rising prices
Bulgari Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo
Bulgari Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo (Photo: courtesy of Bulgari)
Bulgari Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo (Photo: courtesy of Bulgari)
Bulgari Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo (Photo: courtesy of Bulgari)
Bulgari Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo (Photo: courtesy of Bulgari)
If you’re reading this hoping to acquire one, I have bad news: all 70 pieces sold out before most collectors even knew they existed. The Mattar Bin Lahej x Octo Finissimo collaboration takes Bulgari’s obsession with ultra-thin watchmaking—the 40mm case measures a mere 5mm thick—and transforms it into a canvas for laser-engraved Arabic calligraphy. The engraving, inspired by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum’s words on designing the future, covers the sandblasted titanium case, bracelet and grey dial in intricate script that somehow enhances rather than clutters the Octo Finissimo’s famously austere aesthetic.
Inside sits the BVL 138 manufacture movement at just 2.23mm thick with its micro-rotor, hand-decorated with Côtes de Genève and offering 60 hours of power reserve. What makes this collaboration genuinely special isn't the exclusivity or the already-sold-out status—it’s that Bulgari managed to honour Emirati heritage through Mattar Bin Lahej’s artistic vision without compromising the technical achievement that made the Octo Finissimo legendary in the first place. The transparent caseback bears both the limitation number and the artist’s signature. For the 70 collectors who secured one, this represents something increasingly rare: a limited edition that deserves its limitations.
H Moser & Cie Streamliner Perpetual Moon Concept Meteorite
H Moser & Cie Streamliner Perpetual Moon Concept Meteorite (Photo: courtesy of H Moser & Cie)
Leave it to H Moser & Cie—the Swiss manufacture that once put a Swiss cheese logo on a dial to mock the industry—to create a perpetual moon phase that’s somehow both cosmically ambitious and defiantly understated. The Streamliner Perpetual Moon Concept Meteorite features a dial cut from genuine Gibeon meteorite that crashed in Namibia millions of years ago, revealing the Widmanstätten pattern—those natural geometric structures formed by iron-nickel alloys that are literally impossible to reproduce artificially. Moser then applies a golden tone and their signature fumé effect, creating depth and light play that’s unique to each piece. The perpetual moon phase itself is absurdly accurate: one day of drift every 1,027 years, now powered for the first time by an automatic movement, the HMC 270 calibre with 72 hours of power reserve.
At 40mm in steel with an integrated bracelet, red gold hands and moon disc, and distinctive Globolight inserts, this is Moser doing what they do best—taking haute horlogerie seriously while refusing to take themselves seriously. No logo, no indices, just a bare dial that lets a piece of actual space debris do the talking. A discreet pusher on the case flank adjusts the moonphase, because even when you’re working with meteorites and millennium-accurate complications, usability still matters. This watch is proof that minimalism doesn’t mean absence—it means knowing exactly what to leave in.
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