Tiffany and Co Watches

Tiffany & Co. Watches

Tiffany & Co. is one of the most recognizable luxury names on Earth — and while most people associate it with diamonds and blue boxes, the brand’s watch history runs

deeper than you’d expect.

From Patek co-signatures to vintage gold dress watches, Tiffany timepieces sit at the intersection of jewelry house elegance and Swiss horology. And depending

on the era, some are sleeper collector grails — others, less so.

A Little History

Tiffany started selling watches in the 1800s, with early pocket watches made in partnership with top Swiss and American manufacturers (including Patek Philippe, Movado

and Bulova). In fact, Tiffany was Patek’s first official retail partner in the U.S., and for many decades, collectors have prized dials double-signed “Patek Philippe / Tiffany & Co.”

In the 1980s and 1990s, Tiffany offered branded quartz and mechanical dress watches, often made by Swiss houses like Concord and Movado, and sometimes bearing

their own internal branding.

Fast forward to the modern era: Tiffany has partnered with Patek, Rolex, and LVMH brands, and has released its own in-house collections — including the CT60 line

inspired by a gold calendar watch gifted to FDR.

And of course, there’s the modern Tiffany-signed Rolex Oyster Perpetual, which has sent auction prices to the moon thanks to its dial signature alone.

What Collectors Love

Tiffany & Co. watches are collected across three main categories:

1. Tiffany-Signed Patek Philippe & Rolex

  • Dual-signed dials, often small-batch or boutique-only

  • Hugely collectible — especially vintage Calatravas and modern OPs

  • Expect significant premiums due to rarity and provenance

2. Vintage Tiffany Watches (1950s–1990s)

  • Swiss-made, usually mechanical or high-end quartz

  • Elegant, thin gold cases, sometimes with Tiffany dial-only branding

  • Often underappreciated and very wearable

3. Modern Tiffany In-House (CT60, East West)

  • Swiss mechanical watches built in collaboration with La Joux-Perret

  • CT60: classic three-handers and chronos with Art Deco styling

  • East West: rectangular, sideways dials inspired by 1940s travel clocks

Why Tiffany & Co. Deserves a Spot

Because when they do watches right, they’re actually very right.

A Tiffany-signed Patek or Rolex is a collector trophy — not because of extra functionality, but because of what that co-branding represents: a legacy of taste, exclusivity

and historic retailer relationships.

And even their in-house CT60 and East West pieces? They’re surprisingly well-built, low-production, and stylish in a way only Tiffany could pull off.

You’re not buying a tool watch. You’re buying a piece of horological high society.

What’s Out There Now

Tiffany’s modern watch catalog has slimmed down, but you’ll still find:

  • CT60 3-hand and chronograph — 40mm, Swiss automatic, Art Deco numerals

  • East West — rectangular dress watch with sideways dial, 1920s travel clock vibes

  • Tiffany Blue OPs (Rolex) — ultra-rare boutique editions

  • Tiffany-signed Pateks — usually Calatravas, Nautilus, or Aquanaut, vintage and modern

  • Vintage Tiffany Gold Watches — quartz or mechanical, Movado/Bulova era, under-the-radar elegance

Pricing varies wildly:

  • Vintage Tiffany-only pieces — $1,000 to $4,000

  • CT60 / East West — $3,000 to $7,000 pre-owned

  • Tiffany-signed Patek or Rolex — $50,000 to $2M+ depending on model

Fed’s Take

Tiffany’s watch game is a tale of two halves.

On one side, you’ve got some of the most collectible watches in the world — signed Pateks, boutique Rolex OPs, double-signature grails. On the other, you’ve got surprisingly cool vintage

and modern pieces that aren’t chasing hype, just offering style with a blue-box pedigree.

I’ve seen CT60 chronos and East West models come through the shop — they’re clean, underappreciated, and very Tiffany. And a Tiffany-dial Patek? That’s museum-tier.

If you’re into elegance with legacy, this is one brand where the name actually means something.

Check Out Our Tiffany & Co. Inventory

Delray Watch is always on the lookout for unique Tiffany & Co. watches — especially double-signed Patek Philippe, modern CT60 chronographs, and rare vintage pieces

from the mid-century catalog.

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