A fine watch can cross an ocean on the wrist and still meet its greatest danger at the bathroom sink. An unsecured crown, a blast of hot water or an enthusiastic scrub can breach a case that once left the manufacture sealed to specification. Quiet damage is more common: salt dries between bracelet links, perspiration works into leather, lubricants age and an exhausted quartz battery remains forgotten inside the case.

The best watch care is measured and specific. A steel dive watch, a hand-wound dress watch, a vintage chronograph and a gem-set quartz piece do not share the same tolerances. Their movements, seals, finishes and straps ask for different routines. The owner’s manual and reference number therefore belong at the center of any maintenance plan.

This Pursuitist guide explains what can safely be done at home, when water should stay far from the case, how winding differs by movement and when a watchmaker should take over. The objective is larger than a spotless bracelet. Good care protects precision, originality and the possibility that a timepiece will pass to another wrist decades from now.

Before Cleaning a Watch, Identify What You Have

Start with the reference, movement type, water-resistance rating and strap material. Find the manufacturer’s instructions for that exact model. A generic depth rating or a familiar-looking crown cannot substitute for the manual.

Ask four questions before water touches the watch:

Is the case rated for water resistance, and has that resistance been tested recently?
Is the crown fully pushed in or screwed down?
Are the crystal, crown, pushers and case visibly sound?
Can the strap tolerate water?

If any answer is uncertain, keep the watch dry. This rule matters especially for vintage pieces, watches with unknown service history and any case showing a chipped crystal, damaged pusher or loose crown. A watchmaker can clean the bracelet separately and pressure-test the case before recommending a more ambitious routine.

How to Clean a Luxury Watch at Home

1. Begin with a Dry Inspection

Remove the watch and examine the case, crystal, crown, pushers, clasp and bracelet under good light. Look for gaps, lifted crystals, loose stones, protruding bracelet pins and cracks in rubber or leather. A compromised component is a reason to stop and arrange service.

Use a clean microfiber cloth to lift fingerprints, dust and perspiration from the case and crystal. Work gently around the crown, bezel and case back. Avoid polishing cloths impregnated with abrasives. They remove a minute layer of metal and can soften crisp edges or alter contrasting brushed and polished finishes.

2. Wash Only a Sound, Water-Resistant Watch

For a modern watch with suitable water resistance and a secure crown, use lukewarm water, a small amount of mild soap and a very soft, clean brush. Brush lightly between bracelet links and around the case back, where salt and skin oils collect. Keep deliberate pressure away from crown and pusher openings.

Rinse gently with fresh lukewarm water and dry the watch completely with a soft, lint-free cloth. Do not use very hot water, a high-pressure faucet, an ultrasonic cleaner, steam, compressed air, household detergents or solvents. Professional ultrasonic protocols call for disassembly and separate treatment of the movement, case and bracelet, which puts the process beyond home cleaning.

What to avoid:

Ultrasonic cleaning with the watch head attached
Steam, very hot water and high-pressure faucet jets
Harsh dish soap, household detergent and solvents
Abrasive polishing cloths and metal polish
Compressed air around crowns, pushers and seals

If the watch has been in the sea or a chlorinated pool, rinse it promptly in fresh water, provided its water resistance is appropriate and current. Salt crystals can abrade finishes and accumulate inside a clasp. Chlorinated water can also be hard on seals and strap materials.

3. Treat the Bracelet as Its Own Component

A metal bracelet holds more residue than its surface suggests. When it can be safely detached, cleaning it separately allows better access while keeping the watch head dry. Owners without the correct tools and experience should leave removal to a watchmaker. A slipped spring-bar tool can scar a lug in an instant.

Collector’s pro tip: Experienced owners who change straps at home can cover the underside and edges of the lugs with clean strips of low-residue polyimide tape, commonly sold as Kapton tape, or low-tack transparent tape before touching the spring bars. Remove the tape promptly after the work. This barrier can reduce incidental scuffs, especially on 18-karat gold and platinum, but it cannot stop a badly slipped tool. Precious-metal cases and close-fitting bracelets remain sensible jobs for a watchmaker.

Clean steel, titanium, gold and mixed-metal bracelets conservatively with mild soapy water and a soft brush, subject to the manufacturer’s directions. Rinse and dry between the links. Inspect pins, screws and the clasp as you work. Any looseness, advanced stretch or projecting pin deserves professional attention.

Gem-set bracelets and cases require more caution. Settings can loosen, and residue may hide movement in a stone. Ask the manufacturer or an authorized service center for the approved method before brushing or immersing the piece.

4. Keep Most Leather Straps Dry

Leather records its environment quickly. Water, perspiration, perfume, cosmetics and direct sun can darken it, stiffen it and weaken the areas around the buckle and spring bars. After wear, blot moisture with a soft, dry cloth and let the strap air-dry away from heat and sunlight. Never accelerate the process with a hair dryer or radiator.

Avoid conditioners, saddle soap and leather cleaners unless the strap maker specifically approves them. A product suited to shoes or furniture may change the color or finish of alligator, calfskin or another specialty leather. Rotation is often the most effective form of care. A second strap gives the first time to dry fully between wears.

Replace a leather strap when cracks, delamination, a loose keeper or enlarged spring-bar holes threaten security. The sentimental value of an original strap is best preserved in the archive once it can no longer carry the watch safely.

5. Follow Material-Specific Guidance for Rubber, Fabric and Ceramic

Rubber straps generally tolerate fresh water, yet oils, sunscreen and prolonged ultraviolet exposure can shorten their life. Rinse after swimming and inspect regularly for cracks near the buckle and lugs. Fabric straps vary widely, particularly when they contain leather linings, adhesives or special dyes. Follow the maker’s cleaning directions.

Ceramic cases and bracelets resist scratches well, though a sharp impact can chip or fracture them. Sapphire crystals share a similar vulnerability. Scratch resistance does not equal immunity from impact.

How to Care for a Manual Mechanical Watch

A hand-wound movement turns a small daily act into part of ownership. Wind the watch at roughly the same time each day, preferably before putting it on. Holding the watch in the other hand reduces sideways pressure on the winding stem.

Turn the crown slowly and evenly in the direction specified by the manual. On many traditional hand-wound movements, a firm rise in resistance signals a fully tensioned mainspring. Stop there. Forcing the crown can damage the spring or winding train. Some contemporary calibers use different protective systems, which is another reason to follow the instructions for the reference.

The daily schedule is a useful convention, not a law for every caliber. A movement with a 72-hour or longer power reserve may run for several days. Regular winding at a consistent point in the reserve can still support stable timekeeping. A power-reserve display, when present, provides better information than a guessed number of crown turns.

How to Care for an Automatic Watch

An automatic movement uses wrist motion to tension its mainspring. A watch worn actively and often generally requires no scheduled hand-winding. The old advice to wind every automatic watch once every two weeks has no sound universal basis.

When an automatic watch has stopped, wind it gently through the crown before setting the time and putting it on. The required number of turns varies substantially by caliber. Manufacturer instructions range from a few turns to several dozen. Shaking a stopped watch is a crude approach that supplies little controlled energy and can create an unnecessary impact.

Most automatic movements use a slipping bridle that protects the fully wound mainspring during normal operation. That design does not make endless crown winding desirable. Set the watch, secure the crown and let the rotor do its work.

A watch winder is optional. It can be convenient for a perpetual calendar or another complicated watch that is laborious to reset. A simple time-only automatic can rest until its next wear. If using a winder, match the caliber’s Turns Per Day, or TPD, and its required direction: clockwise, counterclockwise or bidirectional. Start with the watch manufacturer’s instructions. Established winder databases, including Orbita’s, can help when the manual is silent, though any conflict should be resolved in favor of the movement maker or an authorized service center. Continuous, excessive rotation adds wear without adding useful reserve.

How to Care for a Quartz Watch

Quartz movements reduce daily attention, though they still need seals, lubrication and professional inspection. Battery life varies by caliber and by the energy required for functions such as a chronograph, alarm or illuminated display. Some makers cite roughly two to three years for conventional batteries; longer-life systems can run well beyond that range.

Arrange replacement as soon as the battery is exhausted or the watch displays its end-of-life signal, often a seconds hand that advances in larger intervals. Leaving a depleted cell inside the case increases the risk of leakage and movement damage. A battery change should include inspection of the gasket and, where appropriate, a water-resistance test. Opening the case can compromise the seal if the work is poorly performed.

Solar and rechargeable quartz watches follow a different regime. Give them the light exposure specified by the manufacturer and do not treat their rechargeable cell as a conventional disposable battery.

Water Resistance Is a Condition, Not a Permanent Trait

The depth printed on a dial or case back describes a tested pressure rating under defined conditions. It does not promise that an aging watch will remain sealed forever. Gaskets dry and compress. Crowns receive knocks. A battery change or case opening can disturb the system.

Activity guidance also varies by manufacturer. One brand may approve swimming at a rating another brand treats more conservatively. Read the instructions for the model and consider how recently the case was pressure-tested. For regular swimming or water sports, many manufacturers advise an annual water-resistance check. Testing before a beach or dive holiday is sensible. A watch used mainly on land may follow a longer interval set by its maker.

Before entering water, push or screw the crown completely into its operating position. Do not wind the watch, set the time or operate chronograph pushers underwater unless the reference was expressly designed for those controls to function while submerged. Rinse a suitable watch in fresh water after salt or chlorine exposure.

Showers, saunas, steam rooms and hot tubs are poor environments for a fine watch. Heat and rapid temperature change stress seals, while soap and cosmetics can attack gaskets and straps. The shower also directs moving water at the case. Remove the watch first.

Condensation beneath the crystal demands immediate attention. Pulling out the crown or leaving the watch in rice is not a repair. Stop using its functions, keep it out of further moisture and take it promptly to a qualified service center. Corrosion can begin long before a fogged crystal clears.

Protect the Movement From Magnetism, Shock and Heat

Magnetism can cause a mechanical watch to run dramatically fast, slow or erratically. Keep it from resting directly on speakers, magnetic clasps, induction equipment, tablet covers and other concentrated magnetic sources. Brief proximity to ordinary electronics is rarely cause for alarm. Direct, sustained contact with a strong magnet is the more useful risk to control.

If a previously accurate mechanical watch changes rate suddenly, a watchmaker can test it for magnetism and often demagnetize it quickly. Modern watches advertised with high antimagnetic resistance should still be used within the maker’s stated limits.

Avoid hard impacts, severe vibration and abrupt temperature extremes. The appropriate boundary depends on the watch. A contemporary sports watch may be engineered for tennis, sailing or climbing, while a vintage minute repeater belongs in a more sheltered setting. Repetitive arm motion is not inherently damaging to every automatic watch. The construction and condition of the particular reference decide the risk.

Apply fragrance, sunscreen and moisturizer before putting on the watch, then let the products dry. Solvents, cleaning chemicals and insect repellent can discolor straps or damage seals and surface treatments.

Set the Calendar With Care

Date mechanisms may already be engaged during certain nighttime hours. Forcing a quick-set date while the gears are meshed can cause damage. As a common rule of thumb, avoid the quick-set date function when the watch’s hands display any time from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. The displayed time matters, regardless of the actual hour where the owner is standing.

The exact danger window and correction sequence vary by caliber. Some manufacturers begin the restricted period at 8 p.m.; certain movements extend it to 4 a.m. Annual calendars, perpetual calendars, moon phases and travel-time watches can require their own sequence. Consult the manual before correcting any calendar display. For a simple date watch whose instructions cannot be found, advance the main hands forward to a clearly safe daytime position such as 6 a.m. before using the quick-set function. Ask a qualified watchmaker or authorized retailer before attempting the same with a complicated calendar. After winding or setting, return the crown and every pusher to the correct operating position.

How Often Should a Luxury Watch Be Serviced?

There is no credible universal service interval. Current manufacturer guidance illustrates the range: TAG Heuer recommends complete service around every five years; Omega gives a general interval of five to eight years; Cartier recommends a functional check every six years; Patek Philippe advises service every eight to ten years; and Rolex recommends approximately ten years, depending on the model and real-world use. Breitling recommends more frequent maintenance checks and a complete service every four to six years.

Those figures are reference points. Climate, water exposure, shock, complications, frequency of wear and the age of the movement all matter. A watch should go in sooner if it begins gaining or losing time abruptly, its power reserve falls, winding becomes rough, a function fails, the rotor makes an unfamiliar sound or moisture appears beneath the crystal.

During the warranty period, use the service route specified by the manufacturer. Complicated modern watches also benefit from the dedicated tools, parts and training of an authorized center. For an out-of-warranty or vintage watch, an independent watchmaker with documented expertise in the caliber can sometimes offer a more preservation-minded approach. Credentials, parts access, pressure-testing equipment and a written scope of work matter more than convenience.

Discuss refinishing before authorizing service. Polishing removes metal. On a vintage watch, it can soften lugs, erase bevels, weaken hallmarks and reduce collector appeal. Photograph the watch before it leaves, state in writing whether polishing is permitted and ask how original crowns, hands, dials and bezel inserts will be handled. Request the return of replaced components when the service provider’s policy allows it, and retain every invoice. A coherent service history becomes part of the watch’s provenance.

A Practical Watch-Care Schedule

When
What to do

After regular wear
Wipe the case and strap with a clean, soft cloth; blot perspiration from leather.

After salt or chlorinated water
Rinse an appropriately water-resistant watch in fresh water and dry it fully.

When dirt becomes visible
Clean a sound, recently tested water-resistant case and bracelet with mild soapy water and a soft brush. Keep vintage or uncertain cases dry.

Before regular swimming or a water holiday
Arrange a pressure test if the maker recommends it or the service history is uncertain.

When a quartz end-of-life signal appears or the watch stops
Replace the battery promptly through a qualified service provider.

At the maker’s interval, or earlier if performance changes
Book inspection or complete service appropriate to the reference and use.

How to Store a Watch

Store a clean, dry watch in a fitted box, pouch or watch roll, protected from direct sun, strong magnetic sources and large temperature swings. Keep watches from touching one another; a diamond bezel can make quick work of a neighboring polished case. Do not leave a crown pulled out as a storage strategy unless the manufacturer explicitly instructs it. The open position can invite dust or moisture and may not meaningfully preserve the movement.

For long storage, check leather and rubber periodically for drying or cracking. Mechanical watches can be wound according to manufacturer guidance.

Preserve the complete set as carefully as the watch. Keep the inner and outer boxes, warranty card or certificate, sales receipt, manuals, booklets, hangtags, spare bracelet links, original strap and service documents in a dry, temperature-stable and secure place, such as a climate-controlled safe or secure cabinet with monitored humidity. Boxes and paper can mildew, fade or deteriorate, so avoid attics, basements and direct sunlight. Digitize the documents and maintain a separate inventory with reference and serial numbers, photographs, service records and current insurance information.

Collectors call this package “box and papers,” or a “full set.” It strengthens provenance, buyer confidence and marketability. Marketplace studies have sometimes placed the premium for a complete set in the 10 to 30 percent range, with substantial variation by reference, age, condition and demand. Treat that range as market shorthand, not an appraisal. A matching warranty card generally carries more evidentiary weight than a box that can be sourced separately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I clean a luxury watch myself?

Yes, with conditions. The watch should be a modern, sound and appropriately water-resistant model with a secure crown and a water-safe bracelet or strap. Use lukewarm water, mild soap, a very soft brush and a lint-free cloth. Keep vintage watches, leather straps and cases with uncertain water resistance dry until a watchmaker assesses them.

Can I wear a water-resistant watch in the shower?

It is safer to remove it. Heat, steam, soap, cosmetics and directed water can stress seals and damage straps. A depth rating alone does not account for the watch’s age, gasket condition or the manufacturer’s activity guidance.

How often should an automatic watch be serviced?

Follow the manufacturer’s interval for the reference. Current recommendations across major luxury brands range from roughly four to ten years, with earlier service warranted by water exposure, declining power reserve, irregular timekeeping or malfunction.

What should I do if there is condensation inside my watch?

Treat it as urgent water ingress. Keep the watch dry, avoid operating the crown or pushers and take it immediately to an authorized service center or qualified watchmaker. Home drying methods cannot remove internal moisture safely or address damage already underway.

The Pursuitist Final Word

The finest care is restrained. Wipe away what the day leaves behind, wind according to the movement, test water resistance before trusting it and let a skilled watchmaker open the case. Resist cosmetic restoration performed on autopilot. The marks of honest use can belong to a watch’s history, while softened lugs and a refinished dial cannot be recovered.

A timepiece survives through a chain of small, correct decisions. Make those decisions with the reference in hand and the next owner in mind.



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