Omega James Bond

Shop new and pre-owned Omega James Bond watches at Grand Caliber. Worn by 007 on screen for three decades, the partnership has produced Seamaster Diver 300M editions, Aqua Terra Bond references, and limited Spectre and No Time to Die titanium pieces. Collector pieces and current production both.

The James Bond Omega Collection at Grand Caliber

The James Bond Omega watches represent one of the most consequential product placement partnerships in the history of luxury watchmaking. Since 1995, when Pierce Brosnan strapped on a quartz Seamaster Professional 300M for GoldenEye, every James Bond film has featured an Omega watch on the wrist of 007. Eight films, four actors playing Bond (Brosnan, Daniel Craig, plus the supporting Bond family wrist time in archival sequences), and more than three decades of continuous on-screen presence have made the James Bond Omega Seamaster one of the most recognizable luxury watch references in popular culture. At Grand Caliber, our Dallas showroom regularly carries authenticated examples from across the James Bond Omega timeline, from the original Pierce Brosnan quartz Seamaster reference 2541.80.00 through the most recent No Time to Die titanium 007 Edition and the 2022 sixty year anniversary commemoratives. This page walks through the complete chronology, explains why each watch was chosen for the role it played on screen, and helps collectors understand which James Bond Omega references hold particular long-term appeal.

The Bond and Omega story is not a single watch. It is a thirty-plus year run of carefully curated references chosen by costume designers, sometimes shaped by direct input from the lead actor, and increasingly released to the public in limited editions tied to specific films. Some James Bond Omega watches were ordinary catalogue references that just happened to appear on screen. Others were purpose-built commemorative pieces produced in counted runs of seven thousand seven, fifteen thousand seven, or unlimited production with film-specific engravings. The distinction matters for any collector evaluating an example for purchase, and the Grand Caliber specialists in Dallas can walk you through exactly which configuration sits on your wrist and what its provenance means in the current secondary market.

Why Omega and James Bond: The 1995 Decision That Started It All

Before 1995, James Bond was a Rolex man. In the original Ian Fleming novels, 007 wears a Rolex, generally understood by readers as a Submariner or Oyster Perpetual. Sean Connery wore a Rolex Submariner reference 6538 in Dr. No (1962), Goldfinger (1964), and Thunderball (1965). Roger Moore wore various watches across his Bond run, including Seikos, a Hamilton Pulsar, and other digital pieces during the 1970s and early 1980s sci-fi era of the franchise. Timothy Dalton wore a Rolex Submariner reference 16610 in his final outing, License to Kill (1989). When the franchise paused for six years, the longest gap in Bond history at that time, the production team made a critical decision that would reshape the modern identity of an entire luxury watch brand.

Costume designer Lindy Hemming, who would later win an Oscar for her work on Topsy-Turvy, was tasked with reinventing the Bond aesthetic for the Brosnan era. Hemming has said in interviews that she wanted a watch that fit the specific Bond backstory as a former Royal Navy commander, not just a generic luxury sports watch. She thought Rolex had become too flashy for the discreet professional she imagined Bond to be. She contacted Omega. At the time, the Omega marketing was led by Jean-Claude Biver, the same Biver who would later become one of the most influential executives in modern luxury watchmaking through his work at Blancpain, Hublot, and TAG Heuer. Biver and the Omega team supplied Hemming with several Seamaster Professional dive watches free of charge for the GoldenEye production. The choice was a quartz Seamaster Professional 300M reference 2541.80.00, a 41mm steel diver with a blue wave dial and a blue bezel.

The choice of a quartz movement seems odd in hindsight, given that the modern mechanical revival was already well underway by 1995. But the 2541.80 was the most successful Seamaster reference in the catalogue at that moment, the Swiss watchmaking industry had not yet fully shaken off the legacy of the quartz era, and the Omega mechanical Seamaster Professional 300M was still finding its commercial footing. The James Bond Omega association would shift to mechanical movements quickly. But the first James Bond Omega Seamaster, the watch that started the run, was a quartz. Omega marked the moment with an advertising campaign that captured exactly what was beginning. The headline read, an enduring partnership begins. It has endured for more than thirty years.

The 1995 GoldenEye Seamaster Professional 300M Quartz (Reference 2541.80.00)

The James Bond Omega Seamaster Professional 300M Quartz reference 2541.80.00 is the foundational James Bond Omega watch. Worn by Pierce Brosnan throughout GoldenEye, the 41mm steel case with its scalloped bezel, blue wave dial, broad arrow hour hand, and applied Omega logo set the visual template that would define the Bond Seamaster for the next decade. The watch was first introduced to the Omega catalogue in 1993, two years before GoldenEye reached cinemas, so the model used in the pre-title sequence (set nine years before the main action of the film, in 1986) is technically an anachronism. Fans have noticed and forgiven. The watch was the right choice for the moment.

The Seamaster Professional 300M Quartz uses the Omega calibre 1538 quartz movement. The case is rated to 300 meters of water resistance, with a screw-down crown at three o clock and a helium escape valve at ten o clock. The helium escape valve plays a memorable role in GoldenEye, where the bezel and HEV combine in a fictional laser cutter Bond uses to escape an armored train carriage. In reality the helium valve is a saturation diving safety device, not a beam weapon, but the gadget logic of the Bond franchise rarely cares about that distinction. Alec Trevelyan, Agent 006, played by Sean Bean, also wears a 2541.80.00 in GoldenEye, but on a black leather strap rather than the bracelet Bond wears.

For collectors today, the 2541.80.00 is one of the more accessible James Bond Omega references on the secondary market. Production was substantial, the watch ran in the Omega catalogue for years, and quartz examples often trade below the mechanical 2531.80.00 that succeeded it. The Grand Caliber Dallas showroom routinely sees these come through, and we evaluate each example for dial condition, bezel insert integrity, original bracelet stretch, and movement function before offering them. The original GoldenEye configuration with the steel bracelet remains the most desirable.

The Brosnan Mechanical Run: Seamaster Professional 300M (Reference 2531.80.00)

For the three remaining Pierce Brosnan Bond films, the watch shifted from quartz to mechanical. The Seamaster Professional 300M reference 2531.80.00 appears on the Brosnan wrist in Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Die Another Day (2002). The case is identical to the 2541.80: 41mm of steel, scalloped bezel, blue wave dial, broad arrow hour hand, lollipop seconds with red tip, helium escape valve. The change is internal. The 2531.80.00 runs the Omega calibre 1120, a chronometer-rated automatic based on the ETA 2892-A2 with a 44-hour power reserve.

The 2531.80.00 is, for many James Bond Omega collectors, the platonic ideal of a Bond Seamaster. The quartz movement of the GoldenEye watch is divisive among purists, but the mechanical 2531.80 is universally appreciated. It runs the now-classic skeletonized sword hands and lollipop seconds, the wave dial pattern was at its peak of cultural recognition, and it appeared across three films, giving it more screen time than any other single James Bond Omega reference. Inside Tomorrow Never Dies, the watch acquires a remote detonation feature used to break a glass jar and trigger a hand grenade. Inside The World Is Not Enough, the watch includes a laser cutter and a grappling hook. Inside Die Another Day, the bezel hides further gadgetry, including a laser used to free Bond from manacles. None of these features ship on the production model.

For the Grand Caliber Dallas clientele, the 2531.80.00 represents a sweet spot in the James Bond Omega range. The mechanical movement is reliable, parts are readily serviceable, the watch wears beautifully at 41mm, and the wave dial in good condition remains striking. We see strong continued interest in clean, full-set 2531.80 examples, particularly those with original box and papers documenting the period of the Brosnan Bond tenure. The reference was eventually discontinued in favor of newer Seamaster Professional 300M variants, which makes well-preserved examples increasingly difficult to find in the secondary market.

The Casino Royale Reset: The Daniel Craig Two-Watch Debut (2006)

The 2006 release of Casino Royale was a complete reboot of the James Bond franchise. New actor (Daniel Craig), new tone (darker, more realistic, fewer gadgets), new origin story (the film follows the first Bond 00 mission), and new visual identity. The James Bond Omega watch choice reflected the reset. For the first time in the partnership, the production used not one but two different Seamaster references on the Craig wrist, each suited to a distinct context within the film.

The dressier watch is the Seamaster Diver 300M Co-Axial reference 2220.80.00. The case is the familiar 41mm steel form factor with a blue wave dial, but the movement is the Omega calibre 2500, the Co-Axial automatic that George Daniels developed and Omega industrialized starting in 1999. The 2220.80 looks like the Brosnan-era Seamaster but represents a generational leap in movement technology. This is the watch Bond wears at the Casino Royale poker tournament with his Brioni tuxedo, the watch on screen during the famous train sequence with Vesper Lynd when she asks if it is a Rolex and Bond corrects her: Omega.

The second Casino Royale watch is the Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M Big Size, reference 2900.50.91, a substantially larger 45.5mm steel diver on a black rubber strap. The Planet Ocean had been introduced to the Omega catalogue in 2005, just before Casino Royale, as a return to the dive-tool ethos of the original 1957 Seamaster 300. Black ceramic bezel, broad arrow hour hand, six hundred meters of water resistance, helium escape valve, and the same Omega calibre 2500 Co-Axial movement as the 2220.80. Bond wears the Planet Ocean during the field action sequences, including the famous emergence from the sea in Honey Ryder fashion. Omega later released a commemorative variant of the Planet Ocean reference 2907.50.91 with a 007 logo on the seconds hand and Casino Royale text on the caseback.

The two-watch strategy reflected the broader Daniel Craig reset. This Bond was not a gadget-dependent showpiece. He wore his Omega like a professional with a job, dressing the watch up or down depending on the situation. The two James Bond Omega references from Casino Royale established a template the franchise would repeat in Skyfall and Spectre: one dressier Seamaster, one more aggressive Planet Ocean or commemorative variant.

Quantum of Solace and the 42mm Planet Ocean (Reference 2201.50.00)

For 2008 Quantum of Solace, Omega and the Bond production team made another considered choice. The film picks up immediately after Casino Royale and Bond is still in the same operational mindset. But the 45.5mm Planet Ocean from Casino Royale, while striking, was a lot of watch for a film that emphasizes the tightly wound efficiency of the character. The James Bond Omega watch for Quantum of Solace is a slightly smaller 42mm Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M, reference 2201.50.00, on a brushed steel bracelet rather than rubber. Same six hundred meters of water resistance, same Omega calibre 2500 Co-Axial movement, same black ceramic bezel and broad arrow hour hand. Just a more wearable size.

The 2201.50.00 is, in the Grand Caliber view, one of the most underrated James Bond Omega references. It is the only James Bond Omega Seamaster that does not feature the famous wave dial pattern, which sets it apart visually from the Brosnan-era and Craig Casino Royale watches. It is also the only James Bond Omega Planet Ocean Bond wears on a bracelet, the others appearing on rubber or with later editions on mesh. Production was modest compared to the Seamaster Professional 300M, which means well-preserved Quantum of Solace James Bond Omega watches are increasingly hard to source on the secondary market. The 2201.50.00 was eventually discontinued and replaced by the larger Planet Ocean 600M Co-Axial 42mm reference 232.30.42.21.01.001 that appeared in Skyfall.

Skyfall and the Dual-Watch Strategy Returns (2012)

For 2012 Skyfall, Bond once again carries two James Bond Omega references through the film. The sport watch is the Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M Co-Axial 42mm, reference 232.30.42.21.01.001, a refresh of the Quantum of Solace watch with the then-new Omega calibre 8500 Co-Axial automatic. This is the Planet Ocean that Bond wears in the action sequences. The dressier watch, and the more horologically significant one, is the Seamaster Aqua Terra 38.5mm reference 231.10.39.21.03.001, with the blue teak dial and the Omega calibre 8500 Co-Axial. The Aqua Terra is what Bond wears around MI6, around Q, and during the quieter dramatic sequences with M, played by Judi Dench.

The Skyfall Aqua Terra is covered in detail on our dedicated Aqua Terra page, but its appearance in the James Bond Omega timeline is important: it marked the first time a non-dive-style Seamaster appeared on the Bond wrist on screen, signaling that the partnership was no longer constrained to the Seamaster Professional 300M and Planet Ocean configurations. It expanded the James Bond Omega vocabulary. Omega did not release a film-tied limited edition for Skyfall, instead releasing a commemorative Planet Ocean Skyfall edition with a Bond family crest oscillating weight and orange chapter ring, but these were marketing variants rather than the actual screen-worn references.

The dual-watch approach in Skyfall, like in Casino Royale, gave the Bond character on screen a wardrobe rather than a single signature piece. This was both narratively sensible (a globe-trotting intelligence officer would not wear a six hundred meter dive watch with a tuxedo) and commercially shrewd. It expanded the addressable James Bond Omega audience from dive watch enthusiasts to dress watch collectors as well.

Spectre and the First Bond-Worn Limited Edition: Seamaster 300 (Reference 233.32.41.21.01.001)

The 2015 release of Spectre marked a turning point in how Omega productized its James Bond partnership. For all the prior twenty years of the partnership, the watches that appeared on the Bond wrist were ordinary catalogue references that anyone could buy, with commemorative limited editions released alongside but never being the actual screen-worn watches. Spectre changed that. For the first time in the partnership, the watch that appeared on the Daniel Craig wrist in the film was itself sold as a limited edition. The Omega official announcement explicitly called out this distinction.

The Spectre James Bond Omega watch is the Seamaster 300 Spectre Limited Edition, reference 233.32.41.21.01.001, produced in a run of seven thousand seven pieces. Note the number: seven, zero, zero, seven. A nod to 007 woven into the production count itself. The watch is based on the 2014 Omega reedition of the original 1957 Seamaster 300 reference CK2913, with the twisted lugs and broad arrow hour hand of the historical original. For the Spectre edition, Omega made several deliberate changes from the standard 2014 Seamaster 300. The bezel is a bidirectional twelve-hour ceramic insert with a Liquidmetal scale running zero through eleven rather than the conventional sixty-minute dive scale, suited to tracking a second time zone rather than dive elapsed time. The seconds hand is a lollipop type. The bracelet ships fully brushed without polished center links, with a 007 logo on the foldover clasp. The watch also ships with a black and grey striped NATO strap, a nod to the Connery-era Submariner NATO strap of Goldfinger and Thunderball.

Inside, the Spectre Seamaster 300 runs the Omega calibre 8400, the dateless variant of the calibre 8500 Master Co-Axial, with resistance to magnetic fields of fifteen thousand gauss. The caseback is engraved with SPECTRE and the limited edition number. The watch ships in a presentation box secured by a three-digit combination lock (the combination is left as an exercise for the new owner inner spy).

The Spectre Seamaster 300 sold out almost immediately and has been one of the strongest performing James Bond Omega references on the secondary market since release. The Grand Caliber Dallas showroom rarely sees clean examples sitting for long. The combination of the limited production count, the strong visual identity, the first-of-its-kind status as the actual screen-worn watch released as an LE, and the calibre 8400 movement makes the Seamaster 300 Spectre one of the most collectible modern James Bond Omega references.

The Aqua Terra Spectre Limited Edition (Reference 231.10.42.21.03.004)

The Seamaster 300 was not the only James Bond Omega limited edition tied to Spectre. Omega also released the Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M Spectre Limited Edition, reference 231.10.42.21.03.004, in a substantially larger run of fifteen thousand seven pieces. Note again the 007 nod in the production count. The Aqua Terra Spectre LE is a 41.5mm steel case with a blue dial featuring the Bond family coat of arms in an interlocking woven pattern across the dial surface. The seconds hand carries a smaller version of the same crest on its tip. The display caseback reveals a special oscillating weight shaped to resemble a gun barrel with a bullet at its center, a direct reference to the gun barrel sequence that opens every Eon-produced James Bond film. The movement is the Omega calibre 8507 Master Co-Axial with anti-magnetism to fifteen thousand gauss.

The Bond family motto, Orbis non sufficit (the world is not enough), appears on the watch documentation. It is the same motto that gave its name to the 1999 Brosnan Bond film and was first introduced as Bond family heraldry in the 1969 George Lazenby film On Her Majesty Secret Service. The Aqua Terra Spectre LE is essentially Bond family heritage wearable.

Production was much larger than the Seamaster 300 Spectre, which means the Aqua Terra Spectre LE is more accessible to collectors today. Resale values have been more modest, with values tracking closer to the standard Aqua Terra catalogue references than to the Seamaster 300 Spectre. For a collector who wants a Spectre-tied James Bond Omega watch but is priced out of the Seamaster 300 version, the Aqua Terra Spectre LE is a meaningful alternative. The Grand Caliber Dallas team can help evaluate both in the secondary market and walk through the trade-offs.

No Time to Die and the Daniel Craig Titanium (Reference 210.90.42.20.01.001)

For the Daniel Craig farewell Bond film, originally scheduled for 2020 and released in 2021 after pandemic delays, Omega took an approach that had never been used in the partnership before. The James Bond Omega watch for No Time to Die was developed with direct input from Daniel Craig himself. Craig was consulted during the design process, brought his perspective on what a watch for a military operative should be, and influenced specific design choices that ended up in the production model. Craig himself has said that he pushed for a lightweight watch suited to a military man, with vintage touches and a distinctive color palette.

The result is the Seamaster Diver 300M 007 Edition, reference 210.90.42.20.01.001 on a titanium mesh bracelet (a Milanese style) and reference 210.92.42.20.01.001 on a striped brown, grey, and beige NATO strap with 007 engraved on the metal loop. Both versions are 42mm in grade 2 titanium throughout, including the bracelet, with a thirteen millimeter thickness that is slimmer than the standard Seamaster Diver 300M thanks to a more domed sapphire crystal. The dial is a tropical brown matte finish, with vintage tan Super-LumiNova on the hands and indices. The bezel is aluminum (not ceramic) with a tropical brown insert, scaled to match the dial. The seconds hand is a lollipop type.

The most distinctive design touch is at six o clock on the dial: a broad arrow symbol, not a hand but a printed marker. The broad arrow is the historical pheon symbol used by the British government to mark government property, including military watches issued to British armed forces during and after the Second World War. The famous WWW watches (Wrist Watch Waterproof, the so-called Dirty Dozen of twelve British military watch makers including Omega itself) all carried the broad arrow on their casebacks. The 007 Edition revives the symbol on a modern Seamaster as a nod to the Bond Royal Navy commission and to the deep history of British military timekeeping. The caseback is closed (an Omega Naiad Lock construction) rather than display, with 007 over 62 engraved as a reference to the Bond agent number and to 1962, the year Dr. No was released.

The No Time to Die James Bond Omega watch was not released as a limited edition. After the speed with which the Spectre LE sold out, Omega took the position that the No Time to Die 007 Edition should be a non-limited production model, available to any collector who wanted one. Daniel Craig himself reportedly supported this decision: he wanted collectors who actually wanted the watch to be able to get it, rather than locking it behind an artificial scarcity gate. The watch runs the Omega calibre 8806, the dateless variant of the calibre 8800 Master Chronometer with a fifty-five hour power reserve, fifteen thousand gauss magnetic resistance, and METAS certification. The dateless dial is significant: it preserves the visual purity of the historical military reference and is unusual on a modern Seamaster Diver 300M, which typically carries a date window at six o clock.

For the Grand Caliber Dallas collectors, the No Time to Die James Bond Omega titanium is one of the most quietly compelling pieces in the James Bond Omega range. The grade 2 titanium construction throughout gives the watch a distinctive feel on the wrist, much lighter than the steel Seamaster references. The tropical brown palette ages gracefully. The broad arrow detail rewards attention. And the dateless dial gives the watch a clean, tool-watch character that fits exactly with the Craig vision of the operator wristwatch. Both the mesh and NATO references are worth considering, and the choice between them comes down to personal preference: the mesh is more substantial, the NATO is lighter and more authentic to military issue.

The 2022 Sixty Year Anniversary Editions: Steel and Canopus Gold

In 2022, Omega celebrated sixty years since the first James Bond film, Dr. No (1962). The commemorative James Bond Omega watches released for the sixtieth anniversary are not tied to a specific film. They are tribute pieces that compress the broader Bond legacy into two configurations, one in steel and one in Canopus Gold (the proprietary Omega white gold alloy).

The steel version is the Seamaster Diver 300M 60 Years of James Bond, reference 210.30.42.20.03.002, a 42mm steel case with a blue oxalic anodized aluminum dial. The dial carries laser-engraved wave patterns that explicitly reference the 1995 GoldenEye Seamaster 2541.80, closing the loop on the original watch that started the partnership. The bezel insert is aluminum (not ceramic) in a slightly darker blue than the standard Seamaster Diver 300M ceramic models, again a nod to the early Brosnan-era SMP. At twelve o clock on the bezel, a commemorative 60 replaces the conventional inverted triangle pip. The watch ships on a brushed steel Milanese mesh bracelet, the same style used on the No Time to Die titanium 007 Edition, connecting the most recent Craig-era watch to the commemoration of the beginning of the franchise.

The most distinctive feature is on the caseback. The standard Seamaster Diver 300M has a sapphire display caseback showing the movement. The 60 Years of James Bond reference replaces that view with a Bond-themed animation. Beneath the sapphire is a micro-structured metallized surface depicting the Bond silhouette inside the gun barrel from the iconic film opening sequence. A rotating disc, attached to the pinion of the lollipop seconds hand, generates a moire pattern that makes the gun barrel appear to rotate and the Bond silhouette appear to move as the seconds hand sweeps. The effect is patent-pending and is, in the Grand Caliber view, one of the more genuinely clever execution details of any recent James Bond Omega commemorative. The watch ships in a blue wooden presentation box with three dots referencing the Bond film opening sequence and a hidden push button on the right side of the box.

The movement is the same calibre 8806 found in the No Time to Die 007 Edition: dateless, METAS-certified Master Chronometer, fifty-five hour reserve, fifteen thousand gauss magnetic resistance.

The Canopus Gold variant, reference 210.55.42.20.99.001, is a different proposition entirely. The case, bracelet, and clasp are all Canopus Gold, the proprietary Omega white gold alloy. The dial is natural grey silicon, a nod to the Caribbean sands of Bond tropical settings. The unidirectional rotating bezel carries a paving of shaded green and yellow treated diamonds, with two diamonds at twelve o clock. The movement is the Omega calibre 8807, a precious-metal variant of the 8806 with the same Master Chronometer certifications. The presentation box is constructed from mango tree wood with mother-of-pearl marquetry, a reference to the song Underneath the Mango Tree performed by Honey Ryder in the original Dr. No. The Canopus Gold 60th Anniversary James Bond Omega is the most maximalist James Bond Omega commemorative ever produced. It is unlikely to come through the Grand Caliber Dallas showroom often, but when it does, it is one of the most significant Bond Omega pieces a collector can own.

What to Look for When Buying a James Bond Omega at Grand Caliber

The James Bond Omega category spans more than thirty years of Omega catalogue production, multiple movement generations, multiple case sizes, and a range of limited edition variants from unlimited commercial production to seven thousand seven piece runs. The Grand Caliber specialists in Dallas approach each James Bond Omega evaluation with several considerations in mind.

Authentication is first. The James Bond Omega references are popular enough that counterfeits and franken-watches (watches assembled from authentic parts but combined incorrectly) circulate in the secondary market. We verify movement serial numbers against case references, inspect dial printing under magnification, evaluate hand fitment and lume aging, check caseback engravings against known correct configurations for each reference, and confirm crown and bezel function. For limited edition James Bond Omega references like the Spectre Seamaster 300 and the Aqua Terra Spectre LE, we verify the limited edition number engraving and confirm the watch is a genuine production example rather than a converted standard reference.

Documentation matters. A full-set James Bond Omega watch with original box, papers, instruction booklet, and any film-tied presentation packaging will trade at a meaningful premium over an example with just the watch. For the Spectre Seamaster 300, the original combination-lock presentation box and the strap-changing tool are part of the original package. For the No Time to Die 007 Edition, the brown fabric pouch is part of the original kit. For the 60 Years of James Bond steel edition, the blue wooden box with the secret button is significant. We evaluate completeness as part of every James Bond Omega we offer.

Condition is third. The Seamaster Professional 300M references from the Brosnan era are now twenty to thirty years old, and many have been through service or refurbishment. We look for original dials and hands, untouched lume, bezel inserts that have not been replaced, and bracelets that have not been excessively stretched. For the Daniel Craig era references, we look for unpolished cases, original bracelet links, and uncracked bezel inserts (the No Time to Die aluminum insert in particular can show wear).

Limited edition status is fourth. The Spectre Seamaster 300, Aqua Terra Spectre LE, and Canopus Gold 60 Years editions are explicit limited editions with engraved production numbers. The 2541.80, 2531.80, 2220.80, 2900.50.91, 2201.50, 232.30.42, 210.90.42, and 210.30.42 references are catalogue production references without engraved limitation, though they have all been discontinued. Some commemorative variants like the 2907.50.91 Casino Royale edition and the Planet Ocean Skyfall edition occupy a middle ground: not film-worn but film-tied. Understanding which category a watch falls into is important for valuation.

The James Bond Omega Collection at the Grand Caliber Dallas Showroom

The Grand Caliber Dallas showroom regularly carries authenticated James Bond Omega references across the full timeline. Our inventory rotates based on what arrives through our buying program, but we routinely stock examples of the Seamaster Professional 300M references from both the Brosnan quartz era and the Brosnan mechanical era, the Daniel Craig Casino Royale Seamaster and Planet Ocean references, the Quantum of Solace Planet Ocean, the Skyfall Aqua Terra and Planet Ocean references, the Spectre limited editions when available, the No Time to Die 007 Edition titanium in both mesh and NATO configurations, and the 2022 60 Years of James Bond steel commemorative. Visit us in person to evaluate James Bond Omega watches alongside the broader Omega catalogue, including Speedmaster, Constellation, and Aqua Terra references. Our specialists can walk you through provenance, condition, market positioning, and long-term collectibility for any James Bond Omega watch in our showroom or available through our network.

Call us at (214) 225-7198, email info@grandcaliber.com, or stop in at the Dallas showroom to see current James Bond Omega inventory. We buy, sell, trade, and authenticate Omega watches across the entire collection, and we are happy to source specific James Bond Omega references on request when our current inventory does not include the exact configuration you are looking for. The James Bond Omega Seamaster has been one of the most enduring partnerships in luxury watchmaking, and Grand Caliber is proud to be the Dallas destination for authenticated examples from across the thirty-year run.

Omega Seamaster Diver James Bond 60th Anniversary Edition | Grand Caliber Texas
Watch, Box, Papers | 2024 | 42mm
Omega Seamaster 196.1523 | Vintage Watches at Grand Caliber Dallas
Watch Only | 41mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster Diver 300 M 007 210.92.42.20.01.001
Watch, Box, Papers | 2024 | 42mm
Price On Request

Vintage

1998 Blue Omega Seamaster 196.1523 | Grand Caliber Watches
Watch, Box, Papers | 1998 | 41mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster Diver James Bond 60th Anniversary | Grand Caliber Dallas, Texas
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster Diver 300M 007 210.90.42.20.01.001 | Grand Caliber TX
Watch, Box, Papers | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster Diver 300M 007 210.90.42.20.01.001
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega` Seamaster Diver 300M 210.30.42.20.03.002 | Omega Dallas
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
Seamaster Diver James Bond Omega Watch 210.90.42.20.01.001 | Grand Caliber Dallas
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
James Bond 007 Omega Seamaster 210.90.42.20.01.001 Watch | Grand Caliber Dallas
Watch & Box | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster James Bond 210.22.42.20.01.004 at Grand Caliber | Omega Dallas
Watch, Box, Papers | 2020 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster 300 210.90.42.20.01.001
Watch, Box, Papers | 2024 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster "No Time To Die" 210.90.42.20.01.001
Watch Only | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Planet Ocean (James Bond) 29075091
Watch, Box, Papers | 2006 | 46mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster 210.90.42.20.01.001
Watch, Box, Papers | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster "Bond 007" 210.90.42.20.01.001
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster 300M James Bond 60TH Anniversary
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request
Omega Seamaster James Bond 60TH Anniversary 210.30.42.20.03.002
Watch, Box, Papers | 2023 | 42mm
Price On Request