As Rolex Consolidates Retail, a European Capital Gets Its First Boutique

Corner office. (Photo credit: Van Battel/Rolex)

Rolex opened on Wednesday its first brand-exclusive boutique in Luxembourg City. The move continues Rolex’s strategy of consolidating smaller points of sale at multi-brand jewelers in favor of large, flagship Rolex boutiques designed to offer a “Rolex experience.”

Wedged between France, Belgium, and Germany, Luxembourg is a financial powerhouse, home to the European Investment Bank and other key EU institutions. Its market-friendly regulations and tax system have helped make it one of the world’s richest countries. Rolex’s new boutique, at 1 Avenue de la Porte-Neuve, spans 220 square meters across two floors.

From Rodeo Drive to Bond Street to the Ginza district — and now Luxembourg City — Rolex is consolidating retail into larger, high-profile flagship stores that function almost as temples to the brand. Unlike traditional retailers, these boutiques go beyond displaying timepieces; they immerse visitors in Rolex’s storytelling, showcasing its heritage, innovations and expertise. The new Luxembourg boutique features an open workshop, where watchmakers work on site in full view of visitors, a sign of Rolex’s shift toward immersive, experience-driven retail.

In the Story of the Submariner, New Photos of Its ‘Father’ Emerge

Dimitri Rebikoff. (Nick Gould via Instagram)

New photographs of Dimitri Rebikoff, widely regarded as the “father of the Submariner,” have surfaced, adding rare, previously unseen images to the history of Rolex. Discovered by Nick Gould, a watch writer based in Australia, and published on his Instagram page on Saturday, the photographs come from an archive just digitized in 2025, he said. They show the pioneering diver on a beach in Cannes, France, demonstrating his torpedo-shaped underwater vehicle, the Pegasus.

Dimitri Rebikoff’s Rolex ref. 6200.

In the early 1950s, as Rolex developed its first dive watch, the brand had access to one of the world’s most experienced scuba divers, who was also a prolific engineer. From early sketches to more than 100 test dives in southern France, Rebikoff was involved at every stage of the Submariner’s development. Internally, before it was named the Submariner, the watch was referred to at Rolex as la pièce Rebikoff, a sign of how influential the diver was to its development.

The images are among the clearest known photographs of Rebikoff wearing an early Submariner, the Rolex reference 6200, with its oversized crown. Gould said he "was absolutely over the moon" when he came across them.

Dimitri Rebikoff. (Nick Gould via Instagram)

The Rolex Resale Market, Exactly Where It Should Be

(Data: WatchCharts.com)

The WatchCharts Rolex Market Index, which is an indicator of the secondary-market performance of Rolex watches, is composed of the top 30 models within the brand, sorted and weighted by transaction value.

Now that the Rolex pre-owned market has reversed its decline in 2025 and continued to climb into 2026, the most recent data on pre-owned Rolex prices tell an interesting story. When prices are extrapolated back to 2017, today’s market sits almost exactly where it is expected to be, and the surge between late 2020 and 2024 stands out as a clear outlier.

For most of Rolex pre-owned market’s history, prices have moved slowly and predictably, rising by only a few percentage points a year. That pattern was established well before 2017, when the WatchCharts index began, and it held in the years leading up to Covid.

From 2017 through early 2020, the trajectory shows a steady, almost linear climb. Extend that pre-Covid trend forward to 2026 and the market would be roughly where it is today. The boom and bust of the pandemic years did not permanently reprice Rolex watches.

In a New Sporting Move, Rolex Signs Its First Padel Player

A new court for the Crown. (Credit: Arturo Coello)

Rolex has signed 21-year-old Arturo Coello, the world No. 1 and the dominant figure in men’s padel today, marking the brand’s first official move into the sport. Rolex has not yet made the announcement or updated its website to list him as a new member of the Rolex family.

The brand’s deep roots in tennis give it a natural bridge into padel. The two sports share athletes, audiences and facilities. Many tennis clubs now feature padel courts. Many tennis fans now play padel recreationally. Coello is Rolex’s first signing in a fast-growing sport that is well behind tennis as a spectator sport, but in other ways is moving ahead of it.

Before padel, Rolex’s most recent expansion into a new sport came through alpine skiing, a category it began developing in 2009, when it signed athletes such as Lara Gut-Behrami and Lindsey Vonn.

An Engraved Daytona, as Tradition, Awaits the Rolex 24 Winners

(Photo credit: Rolex)

Rolex has revealed the engraved Daytona that will be awarded to the winning drivers at the 2026 Rolex 24 At DAYTONA, which starts next Saturday. In the announcement, the brand noted that 2026 is a milestone year, marking the 100th anniversary of the Oyster case. It is the first time Rolex has acknowledged the Oyster’s centenary in an official press release.

Rolex rarely marks anniversaries with new pieces, but the Oyster holds a special place in the brand’s history. Founder Hans Wilsdorf once called it “the most important invention regarding watches of recent years,” believing it would “popularize the wearing of wristwatches with men more than anything else has done.”

Rolex also highlighted an early link between the Oyster and motorsport. In 1933, the watch was worn by Sir Malcolm Campbell when he set a land-speed record of 272 mph (438 km/h) on Daytona Beach in the Bluebird.

LPGA star and two-time Olympian Lexi Thompson, 30, will serve as honorary grand marshal for the race, on Jan. 24. A Rolex Testimonee since she was just 15, Thompson will deliver motorsport’s famous line: “Drivers, start your engines!”

The Watch Changes, but the Blue Remains, in Rolex’s New AO Video

(Photo credit: Rolex via YouTube)

Rolex, after two years, is replacing the blue-dial Datejust used in its Australian Open promotional video with a Rolex GMT-Master II featuring a black-and-blue bezel. The watch shown at the end of the new video — which has yet to be made public and is currently unlisted on YouTube — maintains a blue color theme in line with the tournament’s branding. In the 2022 and 2023 editions of the Australian Open, the featured Rolex was a blue Oyster Perpetual.

It is the first Australian Open promotional video by Rolex to use the brand’s new tagline, “Reach for the crown.” The message reflects Rolex’s new philosophy that it is not just about celebrating achievement, but also about highlighting the long road taken to get there, including the setbacks and the persistence along the way. It is not just about holding the crown, but about reaching for it. The 30-second promotional clip opens with the lines, “It is a very hot day,” and, “It’s going to be tough. No matter what.”

As Rolex Challenges the Grey Market, It Puts Pre-Owned on the Map

Charting a new route for Rolex CPO. (Rolex.com)

In the latest sign of Rolex’s deepening investment into certified pre-owned, the brand has added a dedicated CPO store locator to its website.

When Rolex’s CPO program was announced in late 2022, it was widely viewed as a way to appease customers unable to buy new pieces. Today, it’s looking increasingly like a move to undermine the grey market.

“The idea actually came from the United States,” Jean‑Frédéric Dufour revealed at a Dubai Watch Week forum in November. “We noticed that in some points of sale the number-one brand was Rolex, and the number-two brand was Rolex secondhand.”

The CPO store locator is part of Rolex’s interactive map, which also lists service centers and authorized dealers, officially branded as "Rolex Retailers" globally and "Rolex Jewelers" on the U.S. version of the site. By increasing the visibility of CPO alongside new retail, Rolex signals pre-owned is no longer a side project, but a core part of its business. Coronet reported last week that Rolex plans to upgrade its beige CPO presentation boxes to full-size boxes, narrowing the psychological gap between new and preowned.

The Rolex CPO map includes the newly opened CPO boutique in China, the first in mainland China, located in Nanjing. Managed by Oriental Watch, the boutique is a welcome addition in a market of more than 1.4 billion people. By comparison, the United Kingdom, with a population of 69 million, has around 50 Rolex CPO points of sale.

Rolex and Roger: How the Brand Now 'Humanizes' Model Launches

A different kind of shot. (Photo credit: Rolex)

When Rolex introduced the Perpetual 1908, its first new collection in a decade, the brand asked Roger Federer to be the model for the launch campaign. To “humanize” a launch was a departure for Rolex, which had historically introduced new watches without people. The storytelling instead came from the environment: mountains, the sky, the ocean, a racetrack.

Still, a dress watch like the 1908 offered little in the way of environmental storytelling, leaving Rolex to turn to Federer, who had just retired from tennis. For the release, the brand captioned a photograph of him in a grey sweater, wearing the 1908: “When excellence redefines tradition.”

A year later, in 2024, Rolex asked Federer to model the launch campaign of its steel GMT-Master II with a grey and black bezel. Rolex's narrative, this time, managed to link the former tennis pro to the GMT-Master’s identity: “From Melbourne to New York, Paris to London... travelling the globe has been a constant for the player.”

Most recently, Federer was again asked to front the campaign for Rolex's new collection, the Land-Dweller. He was no longer cast as a traveler, but as “an astute entrepreneur,” someone “reinventing his life to build for the future,” Rolex wrote, echoing the Land-Dweller’s ethos from its press materials.

Rolex predictions are hard to make, but one safe assumption for 2026 is Federer’s presence in the launch campaign. To be sure, women Testimonees have also appeared in Rolex launches, including Yuja Wang for the Land-Dweller. Still, no one has appeared as consistently as Federer, a sign of how central he has become to Rolex’s strategy of featuring people to model new releases.

Roger Federer. (Photo credit: Rolex)

Rolex Plans Larger Boxes as Its CPO Business Continues to Grow

(Photo credit: Momentum)

Since Rolex launched its certified pre-owned program in late 2022, it has used beige boxes about half the size of its standard green presentation, a choice consistent with its sustainability messaging while stopping short of the experience associated with buying new.

Last year, Rolex introduced updated, eco-friendly boxes for its new watches, as first reported by Coronet. The brand now plans to apply a similar approach to its CPO presentation boxes, while also increasing their size, the latest sign of its commitment to a program that, by many metrics, has been a success.

Certified and climbing. (Data: WatchCharts)

Rolex’s CPO program has continued to grow in sales and participation despite a volatile economic backdrop marked by war on Europe’s borders, a strong Swiss franc, record gold prices and softening consumer sentiment. Today, CPO pieces are often prominently displayed at Rolex jewelers, occupying prime retail space.

By increasing the size of its CPO beige boxes to match its green ones, Rolex will reduce the psychological gap between new and preowned. CPO clients are often first-time buyers paying a sizable premium, not only over retail prices but also over non-CPO listings. According to WatchCharts, the global median CPO premium across all Rolex CPO listings stands at 28% compared with non-CPO pre-owned watches.

Rolex May Be Hulking Up — and Turning Green — in Hollywood

Going green, calmly. (Photo credit: Marvel)

In 2026, Rolex will likely add one or two more actors to its roster of Testimonees, as it looks to bring in more film talent. The brand signed Leonardo DiCaprio and Zendaya in 2025, surprisingly the first year film actors ever officially represented Rolex.

Mark Ruffalo could be Rolex's next brand ambassador. Known globally for his role in the Marvel franchise, the "Hulk" actor is one of Hollywood’s most outspoken environmental activists, counting 20 million followers on Instagram. Ruffalo co-founded The Solutions Project over a decade ago, which helps small communities switch to 100% renewable energy. He was recently invited on the Planet Visionaries podcast to talk about The Solutions Project. The podcast is sponsored by Rolex.

“I’m an actor and a climate activist, environmental activist,” Ruffalo said on the podcast.

Rolex’s decision to partner with DiCaprio was likely influenced by his well-known environmental advocacy. Zendaya has also been recognized for her sustainability work, including at the Green Carpet Fashion Awards. With Ruffalo, Rolex would be following a similar path, aligning itself with a popular actor whose activism is part of his public image.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Rolex Predictions in 2026

Crystal ball sold separately. (Photo credit: Rolex)

In the media, anniversaries are often overused to justify Rolex predictions. Based on Coronet’s interviews with the brand, Rolex appears to resist using anniversaries as a reason to introduce new watches. The brand even eschews any mention on its official site that the green-bezel Submariner began as an anniversary model.

The 80th anniversary of one of its most important collections, the Datejust, passed in 2025 without any anniversary release. The GMT-Master’s 70th anniversary did as well. When the Submariner turned 70 in 2023, Rolex made a minor hue adjustment to the green bezel, without a press release. The most recent anniversary marked by Rolex with a new model was not even its own, but the 100 years of the Le Mans race.

A more reliable way to make a Rolex prediction is to look at Tudor, as the two brands often move in parallel. Both introduced steel GMT models with Pepsi bezels in 2018. The opaline-dial Black Bay Pro with its orange hand is clearly inspired by the Explorer II. Tudor’s 1970s-style, integrated-bracelet Royal surfaced ahead of the Land-Dweller. Amazingly, this year, both brands released chronographs with pink and turquoise dials within months of each other. (The “Barbie Daytona” is an ultra-rare, off-catalog piece.)

Following Tudor’s release of the Ranger with a light dial just two months ago, a white-dial Explorer would be an easy addition for Rolex while renewing excitement for one of its entry-level watches. Similarly, offering the Daytona on a Jubilee bracelet, as Tudor already does with the Black Bay Chrono, would require minimal industrial change at a time when Rolex’s manufactures operate at full capacity. Finally, Tudor’s release of its first-ever moonphase watch last September also raises questions about the near-term plans for one of Rolex's newest collections, the 1908.

Rolex Comes to Sundance, as Redford’s Submariner Becomes Legacy

Robert Redford. (Photo credit: Warner Bros.)

Until just last year, Rolex did not sign actors as ambassadors of the brand, even though they did much to shape its image. This month, the legacy of Robert Redford and Rolex will intersect more closely than ever, as Rolex is partnering for the first time with Sundance, the world-renowned film festival founded by the late actor and held each January in Utah.

The Sundance Institute plans to honor Redford’s vision and legacy throughout the festival, which begins Jan. 22. Redford, who passed away on Sept. 16, was known to wear his personal Rolex Single-Red Submariner, reference 1680, both on and off screen, including in films such as “All the President’s Men.” The watch has never, to Coronet’s knowledge, appeared at auction, suggesting it remains part of Redford’s estate.

This year, Rolex could encourage Redford’s family to place the watch on display alongside Paul Newman’s Daytona at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, where the brand is a partner. If the family instead chooses to auction the Submariner, the sale would likely raise millions of dollars, potentially benefiting charitable causes, as Newman’s Daytona did.

After Federer, Rolex Bets Early on a New Swiss Prospect

(Photo credit: Rolex)

With the Australian Open less than two weeks away, attention is focused on defending champion and Rolex Testimonee Jannik Sinner. Inside Rolex, however, another name is being followed closely. The brand’s global director of communication and image, a former tennis pro himself, has taken a particular interest in Henry Bernet.

Last year, on his 18th birthday, Bernet became the first Swiss player to win the Australian Open junior singles title. The result immediately placed him among Switzerland’s most promising young prospects and caught the attention of Rolex, still closely associated with Roger Federer even in retirement.

The parallels are hard to miss. Like Federer, Bernet comes from the same tennis club in Basel, played football to a high level, uses a one-handed backhand, worked with Swiss tennis coach Severin Lüthi, and has now won a junior Grand Slam title. Against that backdrop, it was little surprise that Rolex decided to sign Bernet, the only male tennis player added to its roster in 2025.

It remains far too early to predict Bernet’s future. But the pursuit of the next Federer is straight out of Rolex's playbook: think long, move early and wait.

How Rolex Money Also Supports Soccer, Rugby and Hockey

(Photo courtesy of Servette FC)

Rolex is famously associated with elite sports such as tennis, golf and equestrian events, but far fewer people know that its charitable structure also directly supports soccer, rugby and hockey in Geneva.

Beginning Jan. 1, 2026, the organization that oversees Geneva’s professional teams will have a new president. Fondation 1890, which is financed by the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, has until now been led by Didier Fischer, who will step down after ten years and hand the role to Grégoire Pictet. Through this structure, revenue from the sale of Rolex watches worldwide supports professional soccer, rugby and hockey in Geneva, even though Rolex does not advertise or display branding around these teams.

At the center of this complex web sits the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, the charitable owner of Rolex, whose revenues underpin Fondation 1890’s nonprofit model and sustain Geneva’s professional teams. Through this structure, the foundation owns or supports Geneva’s major professional teams, aiming to provide stability. Servette FC remains the flagship name. Founded in 1890 and one of Switzerland’s most decorated football clubs with 17 league titles and eight national cups, it filed for bankruptcy twice, in 2005 and 2012, before it was saved in 2015 by the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation with a double-digit-million Swiss franc donation.

In 2025, Rolex Embraces Resilience and Failure in Its New Message

(Credit: Rolex via Youtube)

Rolex introduced a new tagline in 2025, “Reach for the crown,” which is a new way for the brand to talk about achievement. It’s an interesting departure from its earlier slogans. For decades, from Mercedes Gleitze’s channel swim to “Men who guide the destinies of the world wear Rolex watches,” and more recently “A crown for every achievement,” Rolex underscored the success rather than the struggle that precedes it.

This year’s new slogan was first seen in a video announcing Leonardo DiCaprio’s arrival as a Rolex Testimonee. Despite being one of Hollywood’s most celebrated figures, DiCaprio famously spent years chasing an Oscar. The film ends with him finally holding the statuette, but only after viewers see failure, frustration and resilience: a skier crashes, a tennis player misses, a golfer collapses, a race car shatters and a sailboat nearly capsizes. Even Roger Federer is shown wiping away tears. This was unprecedented for a Rolex promotional video.

Rolex’s new YouTube series, “Rolex presents,” which spotlight its Testimonees, makes a deliberate point of showing the struggles they faced before achieving success. The brand’s new philosophy is that a trophy matters when it reflects the long road taken to reach it, including the effort and the setbacks along the way. It’s not just about holding the crown; it’s about reaching for it.

At 75, Rolex’s Most Unlikely New Testimonee

Kris Tompkins. (Photo credit: Rolex)

Among big names like Leonardo DiCaprio, Zendaya, and rising tennis stars, few have noticed that in 2025 Rolex also signed a 75-year-old conservationist as one of its newest Testimonees, making her the oldest brand ambassador among this year’s signings. Rolex normally highlights pro athletes and celebrities, so choosing a former CEO is unusual for the brand. And that is exactly what makes her selection worth writing about.

After 20 years as CEO of Patagonia, an outdoor gear company, Kris Tompkins stepped down and went on to dedicate years to protecting land and restoring wildlife in South America, a reminder that Testimonees are not limited to tennis pros, golfers and actors.

For Rolex, adding Tompkins is in line with its Perpetual Planet Initiative, as the brand continues to shape an image linked to conservation. On the Planet Visionaries podcast, which is sponsored by Rolex, she explained how deeply the Perpetual Planet partnership has supported her mission. “We started working with Rolex several years ago and it’s amazing what they’ve done for Chile and for Argentina,” she said.

Tompkins said on the podcast that “our partnership with Rolex is extraordinary and it’s fun.” She also explained how long-term collaboration only works when “the people whom you engage with really matter,” praising “the team in Geneva” as “amazing.”

Rolex Unveils Logo for Its New Film Subsidiary

(Image credit: Rolex)

The Rolex Film Company is one step closer to launch after revealing its official logo. The new film production arm is the latest sign of Rolex’s growing commitment to storytelling through video, a new chapter for a brand famous for its iconic print advertising. Rolex has recently been promoting its new “Rolex presents” series on the Rolex Family, profiling individuals associated with the brand through videos on YouTube.

It’s not unusual for a luxury watch brand to commission short films, but it is far less common to build an entire film production company, a sign of how seriously Rolex safeguards its image.

In the new logo, the familiar Rolex coronet is placed inside a bold black rectangle that looks like a movie screen. The text does not use Rolex’s typical classic serif font. Instead, it uses a clean, modern sans-serif font, which feels more contemporary to the digital and video era.

The Rolex Film Company has been established at the brand’s Geneva headquarters, as first reported by Coronet. It will be overseen by Rolex’s communications division, with Arnaud Boetsch, global director of communication and image, serving as president. He will be joined by Virginie de Meuron, head of public relations, and Jann Thürler, head of advertising and content, on the executive team.