Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

11 great dive watches that are as stylish as they are practical

Dive watches: These are the best of the best for on or below the surface

Omega Planet Ocean 600M Co-Axial Chronograph 45.5 mm
John Torcasio / Unsplash

Sometimes you just need to get away from the day-to-day grind and find some adventure to reinvigorate your life. Humans weren’t made to sit in cubicles in a windowless existence. We are driven to explore and find beauty in the world around us. And whether you are climbing mountains, jumping out of airplanes, or getting lost in the jungle, you need a great watch to help you keep your bearings. But there is one place on Earth that is more terrifying than anywhere else: the deep blue sea. And there is one tool you can use to help you get through — dive watches.

Recommended Videos

Sure, nowadays, dive computers will do a lot more for your excursion into the deep, but until recently, divers only had their air and watch. So picking the right one was almost a situation of life and death.

What makes a dive watch?

When dive watches were developed, they needed to make sure that divers could calculate the time they have been submerged (you really don’t want to run out of air) and decompression stops (you really, really don’t want your lungs to explode). So watchmakers started developing timepieces to help these adventure seekers alive, and they came down to these innovations.

  1. Water Resistance: This part is pretty important; in order for a watch to be considered a dive watch, it must be water-resistant to at least 100 meters. That has advanced in recent years so we can get deeper into the big blue ocean, but that is the minimum.
  2. Legibility: Thicker numerals and wider hands make it easier to read, and luminosity helps as you get deeper, where the sun doesn’t reach.
  3. Rotating Bezel: This lets the wearer know how long they have been underwater and sometimes even shows the diver’s depth.
  4. Durable Strap: Most dive watches have rubber or stainless steel straps, which are the most adaptable to seawater and can withstand pressure, direct sunlight, and humidity. These also dry quickly, so they can be worn outside the water as well underneath it.
  5. Helium Escape Valve: This isn’t required, but it sure goes above and beyond for the most serious divers. This feature releases trapped helium as you surface to protect the watch, allowing for the deepest dives without worry.

Tudor Black Bay

Tudor Black Bay
TUDOR

The Tudor Black Bay is nearly the stuff of legend, famed for its durability, its handsome style, and its place on the stylish wrists of guys like David Beckham. For your own pursuits on the water, you can’t go wrong with this refined luxury dive watch. You’ll have it for years and years to come. It embodies the dive watches of today that work just as well out of the water as beneath it.

Luminox Pacific Diver

Luminox Pacific Diver
Luminox

When we mention a dive watch to wear, well, anywhere, we’re thinking about a dive watch that can do well in the Pacific Ocean (note the name) and perform at the same rate back on land, on a camping trip, or a secluded, off-the-grid beach trip. This watch is the watch we have in mind, and it helps that it packs in a rugged 44mm case diameter and Swiss-made precision. Being one of the choices for the Navy Seals makes this watch one of the ones you can trust above all others.

Phoibos Wavemaster Dive Watch

PHOIBOS Wavemaster Dive Watch
Amazon

We’ll admit it: We have a soft spot for dive watches that are as cool as they are functional, and if that’s what you’re seeking in your next dive watch, you can’t go wrong with the Phoibos Wavemaster. We love the innovative dial design, the highly visible markings, and the fact that it’s rated down to 1,000 feet. Time to hit the water, folks.

Omega Seamaster James Bond 60th Anniversary
Courtesy of Omega

Omega Seamaster James Bond 60th Anniversary

How many different ways can we say that James Bond is cool? Well, here is one more. Omega dive watches have graced the wrist of 007 for years. If you want to find a classic piece of movie history rated to 30 ATM (professional diving suitable), along with a watch that will keep up with your every step while you chase down Blofeld, this is the watch for you.

Citizen Promaster Automatic
Courtesy of Citizen

Citizen Promaster Automatic

Citizen is one of the pioneers of timepiece technology as they have partnered with some of the best people in multiple industries, including watch gurus like La Joux-Perret and celebrities like Tony Hawk, to bring you the best watches on the market. From shock resistance to light-powered watches, their innovative work brings the Promaster the number one companion for meeting the challenge.

MTM Black Gray US-744X
Courtesy of MTM

MTM Black Gray US-744X

MTM watches are made for service members by service members—the people who know what it means to take action. They are some of the best tactical watches on the market. The US-744X was designed to look like a watch in the boardroom and function like a tool under the surface. Inspired by the U.S. Navy’s Virginia Class Attack Submarine, this watch is expert-level in kick-ass.

Mido Ocean Star GMT
Courtesy of Macy's

Mido Ocean Star GMT

Since its appearance on the market for the first time in 1959, the Mido Ocean Star has been a beacon of dive watch ingenuity with its revolutionary single-shell case. With the ability to withstand the most severe environments, the legacy of the Ocean Star lives on in Mido’s Commander watch collection, one of the many timeless pieces the company makes. And definitely, one that will take you from the surfboard to the submarine.

Glashutte Original SeaQ
Courtesy of Glashutte

Glashutte Original SeaQ

From long-lived legacies to debuts of the newest chapter, you have the Glashütte SeaQ. While Glashütte itself can be traced all the way back for nearly two centuries, the SeaQ is their first diver. It inspires you to dive deep, not just literally in the ocean, but figuratively into yourself to find your greatest fears and most curious wonders.

Breitling Superocean
Courtesy of Breitling

Breitling Superocean

Since the sport of diving became all the rage in the swingin’ sixties, watch companies discovered that timing was everything. So to give them the best timing in the world, Breitling stripped away everything that wasn’t focused on the new passion of diving. What was left was called the Slow Motion. Their new Superocean builds on everything that their original masterpiece had, only modernizing it for the most dependable work in their arsenal.

Bremont Submarine Descent II
Courtesy of Bremont

Bremont Submarine Descent II

In 1800, half of the world’s watch market came from inside the borders of London. That is an incredible statistic that feels unheard of today with all the focus in Switzerland and Japan. Today, Bremont is keeping that legacy alive with the newest in their exclusive dive collection — the Supermarine Descent II.

Mido Ocean Star Decompression
Courtesy of Teddy Baldassarre

Mido Ocean Star Decompression

We couldn’t help but add one more Mido product to the list, mostly because it has one of the most striking faces you will ever see on a dive watch. With the face displaying the depth levels and the bezel allowing you to choose from 24 cities around the world, you’ll never be out of time no matter where on land or sea you are.

There you have it. Summer is in full swing, which means that all of your favorite activities on and below the water are waiting for you to ditch the office. Call in, take a vacation, or sneak away early. But whatever you do, don’t even think about getting wet until you have one of these masterpieces on your wrist.

Mark D McKee
Mark is a full-time freelance writer and men's coach. He spent time as a style consultant and bespoke suit salesman before…
Zenith Chronomaster original debuts handsome midnight blue dial variant
Vintage modern: Zenith's chronomaster original blue dial honors 1969 a386 legacy
New Chronomaster Original from Zenith

Zenith offers the first blue dial model of its Chronomaster Original, expanding the group that follows the 1969 A386 El Primero. This watch sells for CHF 9,900, EUR 10,400, or USD 10,300. The midnight blue watch combines older looks with the modern El Primero 3600 movement that measures time to a tenth of a second.
The year 1969 made watchmaking history when the first automatic chronograph movement came out. Zenith's El Primero caliber, a fast, complete chronograph, became the first to finish among other makers. The round A386 watch, with its three-color counters, became the brand's main model that showed Zenith's chronograph past.
The Chronomaster Original, which came out in 2021, acts as the A386's real follower, not just a copy. This good mix of old details and new function keeps the small 38mm case size and three-color sub-dials. These parts copy the first sizes while holding the newest El Primero 3600 movement.
The midnight blue dial creates a good blend—it mirrors the blue outer scale, the date window frame, and the date disc for color matching. The blue, grey, and silver counters lie slightly on top of each other. They have a spiral finish that stands out against the sunray-brushed blue dial.
Older style shows through the correct fonts and logos that match the first watch. It also has raised, cut, and lit hour markers. The trapezoid date window at 4:30, the double outer scale, the white stick hands with black parts and glowing material, and the bright red central chronograph seconds hand keep true to its past.
The El Primero 3600 caliber works better than the first movement—it runs at 5Hz. The Chronomaster Original records times to a tenth of a second as the red central chronograph hand goes around every 10 seconds. The first tachymeter scale gives way to precise tenth-second marks on the edge.
Fast work changes sub-dial details, with all counters reading to 60. Small seconds appear in the light grey sub-dial at 9 o'clock. The 60-minute counter sits in the dark grey sub-dial at 6 o'clock. The 60-second elapsed times show in the blue sub-dial at 3 o'clock.
Digital scans of the 1969 watch led case building, making sure of the real 38mm size with a sloped side, sharp cut lugs, pump pushers, and mixed brushed and shiny parts. The very thin edge keeps original sizes. Newer additions include curved sapphire glass on the front and back.
The El Primero 3600 appears through the 12-sided caseback edge. It keeps a column wheel and flat parts while offering a 60-hour power hold and a stop-seconds function. The open rotor shows the new movement's blue column wheel and open bridges.
Each watch has a three-link stainless steel band and a blue calfskin strap with folding locks, offering options for different wearing events.

Read more
These new Panerai watches are as tough as they are beautiful
Panerai’s latest Luminor watches: Nautical precision in matte titanium
Panerai up close with black background

Panerai presents timepieces showcasing lightweight titanium cases with a distinctive matte grey finish, offering exceptional resistance against corrosion for extended durability. The understated yet premium aesthetic makes these watches versatile enough for professional diving and formal occasions, proving that high-performance tool watches can offer a sophisticated look.

Luna Rossa's clean, regatta-ready design

Read more
Ulysse Nardin dazzles with blast sparkling rainbow high jewelry limited edition
Ulysse nardin's blast sparkling rainbow features mystery-set sapphires
Ulysse Nardin Sparkling Rainbow Liminited Edition

Ulysse Nardin transforms its avant-garde Blast collection into spectacular high jewelry territory with the Blast [Sparkling Rainbow], an eight-piece limited edition priced at CHF 451,700 that fuses haute horlogerie with gem-setting artistry. The timepiece showcases 211 rainbow-colored sapphires totaling 13.33 carats across the entire watch construction.
The original Blast collection, introduced in 2020, drew inspiration from stealth aircraft design to marry high function with unconventional aesthetics, establishing Ulysse Nardin's reputation as avant-garde icon. This high jewelry interpretation elevates that foundation through unprecedented gem-setting complexity while maintaining the collection's distinctive architectural language.
Central to the technical achievement sits the in-house UN-172 skeletonized movement featuring flying tourbillon, silicon escapement, and platinum micro-rotor visible at 12 o'clock. Operating at 18,000 vibrations per hour with 72-hour power reserve, the caliber demonstrates Ulysse Nardin's silicon innovation expertise dating to 2001's legendary Freak timepiece.
The 45mm white gold case receives invisible setting treatment across 211 individually selected sapphires cut into 85 unique shapes. This rainbow spectrum creates seamless gradient effect encircling the entire watch while employing "mystery setting" technique that allows light passage through gems, creating floating stone illusions without visible metal frameworks.
Gem-setting complexity extends beyond case architecture to encompass bezel, dial, crown, and clasp applications, ensuring complete chromatic coverage across every visible surface. The rainbow arrangement requires precise color matching and graduated placement to achieve the seamless transition effects that define the piece's visual impact.
Construction challenges multiply when combining high jewelry techniques with complex movement architecture. The skeletonized dial must accommodate both sapphire setting requirements and tourbillon visibility while maintaining structural integrity and shock resistance expected from luxury sports watches.
The integrated white rubber strap and deployant clasp receive matching sapphire applications, completing the rainbow aesthetic while ensuring practical wearability. Despite extensive gem setting, the watch maintains 50-meter water resistance, demonstrating successful integration of jewelry and timepiece functionality.
Limited production to eight pieces emphasizes exclusivity while highlighting the intensive handwork required for each example. The mystery setting technique demands exceptional gem-setting expertise, with each sapphire requiring individual cutting and placement to achieve the floating effect.
This release continues Ulysse Nardin's tradition of pushing horological boundaries through unconventional materials and techniques. The brand's silicon escapement innovations combine with high jewelry craftsmanship to create timepieces that challenge traditional luxury watch categories.
The CHF 451,700 pricing reflects both the extensive gemwork and limited availability, positioning the piece among the most exclusive offerings in Ulysse Nardin's contemporary catalog. Eight-piece production ensures immediate collector status while showcasing the manufacture's high jewelry capabilities.

Read more