114 Swiss Watch Brands: From Patek Philippe to Swatch – The Complete Overview
The Swiss watch industry exports watches worth CHF 25.6 billion annually, employs 65,000 people and comprises over 600 companies. From the CHF 1 million Patek Philippe to the CHF 150 Swatch: here are all 114 relevant brands – sorted by price segment, with history and context.

Only 2% of all watches produced worldwide carry the 'Swiss Made' label – but they account for over 50% of global watch revenue by value.
Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry FH, 2025
📊 The Swiss watch industry in numbers
The figures of the Swiss watch industry are impressive – and they tell a story of dominance and vulnerability at the same time. In 2024, Switzerland exported watches worth CHF 26.0 billion according to the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry (FH) – a decline of 2.8% compared to the record year 2023 (CHF 26.7 bn). In 2025, exports fell further to CHF 25.6 billion (-1.7%). Driven by the weakening of the Chinese market (-25.8%) and geopolitical uncertainties.
What the raw numbers conceal: the industry is extremely concentrated according to SRF. The Swatch Group (Omega, Longines, Tissot, Breguet) and Richemont (Cartier, IWC, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Piaget) together control over 40% of the market. Behind them come Rolex (as an independent giant) and LVMH (TAG Heuer, Hublot, Zenith). The remaining 600+ companies share the rest.
🇨🇭 What 'Swiss Made' really means
Since the Swissness Act of 2017, stricter rules apply. "Swiss Made" is not just a marketing label – it is a legally protected standard with clear requirements:
The difference from earlier regulations: before 2017, it was enough to install a Swiss movement and carry out the final inspection in Switzerland – even if the case came from China. Today, the entire value chain must be predominantly Swiss. This has put pressure on some affordable brands that manufactured parts abroad.
The Swissness debate is far from over – quite the opposite. Critics argue that even the stricter rules leave loopholes. The 60% threshold refers to production costs, not components: a watch can theoretically have a dial from China and a strap from Thailand, as long as the expensive parts (movement, case) are made in Switzerland. Particularly controversial are so-called "Swiss-Assembled" watches, which are assembled in Switzerland but whose individual parts come from all over the world. Brands like Invicta – formally registered in La Chaux-de-Fonds but with significant overseas production – are repeatedly criticised. The Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie therefore deliberately distinguishes between "Swiss Made" and genuine manufactures that produce everything from the raw movement to the hands in-house. For the buyer, this means: "Swiss Made" is a minimum standard, not a guarantee of one hundred percent Swiss craftsmanship. Those who want that must look for manufacture certificates like the Geneva Seal, the COSC Chronometer certification, or the Qualité Fleurier seal.
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1.What percentage of a watch must come from Switzerland to carry the «Swiss Made» label?
2.How many companies belong to the Swiss watch industry?
3.Which group accounts for an estimated 29% of total Swiss watch exports?
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📍 The watch valleys: where Swiss watches are born
Swiss watches do not come from Zurich or Bern – they come from small valleys in the Jura and Western Switzerland, where watchmaking families have passed down their craft for centuries. The 26 Swiss cantons have different economic strengths – but in Geneva, Neuchâtel and Vaud, much revolves around the watch movement. The Canton of Neuchâtel alone is home to over 180 watch companies employing around 15,000 people – that is one in four jobs in the canton. La Chaux-de-Fonds, whose entire urban layout was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2009, is literally a city built for watchmaking: the wide streets and large windows were designed in the 19th century so that watchmakers would have maximum natural light at their workbenches. Today you can visit the manufactures of Zenith, Girard-Perregaux and TAG Heuer – an excursion tip that few people know about:
⏰ The quartz crisis: when Japan nearly wiped out Switzerland
In the 1970s and 80s, the Swiss watch industry stood on the brink. Japanese quartz watches from Seiko and Casio flooded the market – more precise, cheaper, more reliable. Within 15 years, Switzerland lost two-thirds of its watchmakers. Of 90,000 jobs, only 30,000 remained. The irony: the quartz movement was invented in 1967 at the Swiss CEH laboratory in Neuchâtel – but the Swiss industry dismissed it as a gimmick. Seiko launched the Astron in 1969, the first quartz watch on the market, and within a decade Switzerland's global market share collapsed from 50% to under 15%. Heritage brands like Zenith, Longines and Eterna faced extinction. Banks pushed for liquidation. Entire watchmaking dynasties in the Jura lost their livelihoods – towns like Le Locle and La Chaux-de-Fonds, which depended entirely on the watch industry, suffered an economic catastrophe whose effects linger to this day.
The world's first quartz watch. From Japan, not Switzerland.
Swiss watch exports collapse. Mass layoffs.
Nicolas Hayek saves the industry with a CHF 50 plastic watch.
Merger into Swatch Group. The consolidation begins.
China and Russia discover Swiss watches. Exports skyrocket.
All-time export record.
Decline of -1.7%. Chinese market weakens.
The irony: the quartz watch was invented by a Swiss – at the CEH laboratory in Neuchâtel, 1967. But the Swiss industry didn't believe in it. Japan did.
The rescue came from a man who did not make watches himself: Nicolas G. Hayek, a Lebanese-Swiss management consultant from Zurich. In 1983 he was hired to analyse the ailing watch conglomerates ASUAG and SSIH – and instead of the expected liquidation, he recommended a merger. His idea: a radically cheap Swiss watch made of plastic, with only 51 instead of the usual 91 parts, mounted directly into the case and therefore not repairable, but unbeatable on price. The result was the Swatch – the name stands for "Second Watch", a fun second watch. The industry thought Hayek was mad. But the Swatch became a cultural phenomenon: collectors bought dozens, limited editions became speculative objects. To this day, Swatch has sold over 600 million watches. What is often forgotten: Hayek used the cash flow from the Swatch mass business to rescue the group's luxury brands. Without the CHF 50 plastic watch, there would be no Omega, no Breguet and no Blancpain today. The Swatch Group – renamed in 1998 – became the world's largest watch conglomerate. Hayek led it until his death in 2010 at the age of 82. His son Nick Hayek Jr. has run the company ever since.
🔍 What the numbers don't show
Despite CHF 25.6 billion in export volume, the industry is more fragile than it appears. The 65,000 employees earn on average well above the Swiss median wage – but the Chinese market, which drove the luxury boom of the past 20 years, has been weakening since 2024. Hong Kong – once the largest sales market – has plunged by over 20%. What buyers often underestimate: the maintenance costs. A basic Rolex service costs CHF 800–1,200, at Patek Philippe CHF 1,500–3,000, and for complicated pieces (perpetual calendar, minute repeater) it can reach CHF 5,000+ – every 5 to 7 years. Over 30 years of ownership, servicing a Rolex Submariner adds up to around CHF 5,000 – more than half the purchase price. This also puts the value-appreciation euphoria into perspective: only the top 5% of models (Daytona, Nautilus, Royal Oak) appreciate reliably. The rest loses 20–40% after purchase, much like a new car.
Despite the tradition, there is a generational question: young people wear smartwatches. The Apple Watch sells more units per year than the entire Swiss watch industry combined. The difference: CHF 400 for an Apple Watch vs. CHF 8,000 average price for a Swiss watch. Switzerland sells fewer watches, but more expensive ones.
🔧 Maintenance Cost Calculator: What does Swiss Made cost over 30 years?
The purchase decision is just the beginning. Calculate the total cost of ownership of your Swiss watch.
Service interval: every 5–7 years (average 6 years). Quartz watches: battery every 3–4 years (CHF 30–80) + seals every 10 years.
Indicative values based on average prices of authorised service centres (as of 2024/2025). Actual costs vary depending on condition, age, and dealer.
The Swiss watch industry's response to the Apple Watch varies by price segment. In the luxury segment, demonstrative composure prevails: Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet emphasise that their customers do not want notifications on their wrist, but craftsmanship. Indeed, the Apple Watch has barely harmed the high-end segment – on the contrary, waitlists for Rolex and Patek Philippe are longer than ever. Under pressure, however, is the entry and mid-range segment: anyone spending CHF 300 to 1,000 on a watch now considers whether an Apple Watch with health tracking and messaging offers more. Tissot, Certina and Hamilton feel this competition directly. The industry's response is two-pronged: some brands – like TAG Heuer with the Connected line – have launched their own smartwatches, with moderate success. Others bet on emotionalisation: the MoonSwatch collection (Swatch x Omega) proved in 2022 that a mechanical watch can become a hype object when marketing and storytelling are right. In the long run, the smartwatch generation could actually play into the hands of the Swiss luxury segment: anyone who has worn an Apple Watch for years eventually yearns for something lasting – and then reaches for a mechanical watch as a conscious counterpoint.
Rolex alone accounts for an estimated 29% of all Swiss watch exports – more than the next 5 brands combined.
Morgan Stanley Watch Market Report, 2024
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❓ Swiss watches – what connoisseurs want to know
Facts about the CHF 26 billion Swiss watch industry
This article is based on data from the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry (FH), official export statistics and verified industry reports. Prices listed are non-binding retail prices.
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Only 2% of all watches produced worldwide are Swiss Made – but they account for over 50% of global watch revenue by value. Quality beats quantity.
Discussion
7 voices from the community
Budget-Finder ist genial. Hab sofort gesehen welche Swiss Made Uhren unter 1000 Franken möglich sind. Certina war mir gar nicht bekannt.
Der Uhren-Hub ist mega!! 114 Marken durchsuchbar mit Preisfilter, das hat keine andere Seite. Oris gefunden die ins Budget passt 👍
Schon cool, aber die Wartungskosten werden etwas verharmlost. Meine Omega Seamaster: CHF 1'100 Service alle 5 Jahre. Das sind über 30 Jahre locker CHF 7'000 nur für Wartung – mehr als der Kaufpreis. Bei einer Tissot Powermatic rechnet man nochmal CHF 400 pro Service. Swiss Made ist ein Luxus, auch im Unterhalt.
Wichtiger Punkt, Thomas. Die Total Cost of Ownership ist tatsächlich ein Thema, das viele beim Kauf unterschätzen. Die genauen Service-Kosten variieren stark je nach Marke und Komplikation – im Haute-Segment kann ein Service schnell CHF 3'000+ kosten.
Articolo molto utile! In Ticino conosciamo bene le manifatture di Castel San Pietro. Il marchio Swiss Made è una garanzia – bello vedere tutte le 114 marche in un solo posto.
Als Uhrmacher: die Lohnzahlen stimmen leider. Schönster Beruf der Welt, aber die Margen sehen wir nicht.
Danke für den Einblick, Patrick. Die Lohnunterschiede in der Uhrenbranche sind tatsächlich gross – unser Artikel zu Lohntransparenz zeigt, wie sich das branchenübergreifend entwickelt.
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Swiss Watches · 22.03.2026