At around ten lakhs, a Swiss maison stops simplifying and starts expressing itself. This is where the choice shifts from price to philosophy: a manufacture chronograph or a manufacture GMT, a revived 1952 classic or an architectural icon refined over generations.
The best watches under 10 lakhs aren’t entry-level luxury. They’re nowhere near the upper reaches of horology either. This is the band where heritage maisons sell their pillar collections at the accessible end of the ladder. The right one depends on what you value.
What follows is a shortlist drawn from Time Avenue’s authorised inventory in May 2026. You can see every piece on it in our Bandra West boutique.
Ten Watches at a Glance
Let’s have a look at the top 10 expensive watches–
| No | Watch | Type | Case | Movement | Price (Approx.) |
| 1 | Breitling Navitimer Automatic 41 | Pilot | 41mm steel | Self-winding mechanical | ₹5,35,600 |
| 2 | TAG Heuer Aquaracer Professional 300 GMT | Diver / GMT | 43mm steel | Automatic GMT | ₹5,16,000 |
| 3 | Breitling Avenger GMT 44 | Tool / GMT | 44mm steel | Self-winding mechanical, 2nd & 3rd time-zones | ₹5,56,200 |
| 4 | Bvlgari Bvlgari 103652 | Dress | 41mm steel | Automatic | ₹5,30,000 |
| 5 | Breitling Chronomat GMT 40 | Integrated-bracelet sport / GMT | 40mm steel | Self-winding mechanical, 2nd time-zone | ₹5,97,400 |
| 6 | Bvlgari Octo Roma 103481 | Architectural / Dress-sport | 41mm steel | Automatic | ₹8,76,000 |
| 7 | Breitling Premier Bentley Chronograph | Dress chronograph | 42mm steel | Automatic chronograph | ₹8,80,650 |
| 8 | Chopard Grand Prix de Monaco Historique | Motorsport chronograph | 44.5mm titanium | Automatic chronograph | ₹8,90,000 |
| 9 | Breitling Chronomat B01 42 | In-house chronograph | 42mm steel | In-house B01, 70-hour reserve | ₹8,70,350 |
| 10 | Omega Constellation 39mm | Heritage dress | 39mm steel & gold | Co-Axial Master Chronometer | ₹8,94,700 |
What ₹10 Lakhs Unlocks in a Swiss Timepiece?
Something meaningful changes once you approach ten lakhs. Heritage maisons sell their pillar collections here, and in-house calibres start appearing alongside the reliable Sellita and ETA bases below.
What this budget delivers:
Movements. GMT, flyback chronograph, and small-seconds layouts come standard. Power reserves stretch toward seventy hours. The Breitling B01 in the Chronomat 42 below is a manufacture movement, not a sourced base.
Materials. Sapphire crystal is universal. Ceramic bezel inserts appear on serious diving lines like the Aquaracer Professional 300. Hardened titanium becomes an option, as on the Chopard Monaco Historique.
Finishing. Case work shifts from machine assembly to hand-applied satin-and-polish contrast. That’s what separates a finished watch from one that has only been put together.
Genres. Integrated-bracelet sport watches, dress chronographs, and motorsport horology all fit inside this range, where most buyers assume they start higher.
Heritage. Pillar collections live here in their genuine modern references. You find Bvlgari’s Octo, Breitling’s Chronomat and Navitimer, the Omega Constellation, and Chopard’s motorsport line, all within reach.
Ten lakhs is a beginning, not a ceiling. Above it sits a different conversation, where Time Avenue’sExclusive Brands portfolio of L’Epee, Reuge, HYT, Konstantin Chaykin, Manufacture Royale, and Purnell takes over. For someone entering serious horology, this budget is the threshold worth crossing first.
Ten Timepieces Under 10 Lakhs From Time Avenue
Breitling Navitimer Automatic 41

The Navitimer is the original slide-rule pilot’s watch, launched in 1952 for working aviators and in continuous production since. Reference A17329371L1P1 brings the line down to its modern 41mm proportion, more wearable than the iconic 43mm. A deep green dial with a black alligator strap reads as dress-pilot rather than tool-pilot. It slides under a cuff in a way the larger references never quite manage.
Why it makes the list:
- Functional slide-rule bezel that still works as a complication, rather than serving as styling
- 41mm case sits better on most wrists than the iconic 43mm
- Dress-pilot crossover suits formal and business settings
- A Breitling pillar collection in its modern, accessible reference
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 41mm |
| Dial | Green |
| Movement | Self-winding mechanical (Breitling Calibre 17) |
| Strap | Black alligator leather |
| Price | Approximately ₹5,35,600 |
TAG Heuer Aquaracer Professional 300 GMT

TAG Heuer’s serious diving line earns its spec sheet honestly. The Aquaracer Professional 300 brings 300m of water resistance, a ceramic bezel insert, and a screw-down crown. Reference WBP2010.BA0632 layers a working second time-zone on top of that diving foundation. One watch for the office, the long flight, the weekend on water.
Why it makes the list:
- 300m water resistance with a ceramic bezel insert
- Bicolour blue-and-red outer bezel reads day-and-night GMT at a glance
- 43mm case sits in the modern sport-watch sweet spot
- Blue sunray dial photographs well across lighting conditions
- Three-discipline versatility, where most sport watches do one job
Specifications
| Case | Steel, fine-brushed and polished, 43mm |
| Dial | Blue |
| Movement | Automatic GMT |
| Bracelet | Steel |
| Price | Approximately ₹5,16,000 |
Breitling Avenger Automatic GMT 44


Here is the line Breitling builds for military and professional use. The Avenger sits firmer and more legible on the wrist than the Chronomat or the Premier. Reference A32320101B1A1 carries a 44mm steel case and a matte black dial. Few watches in this band genuinely track three time zones at once.
Why it makes the list:
- 300m water resistance, built for use rather than styling
- 24-hour GMT bezel plus GMT hand tracks three time zones at once
- Generously sized indices and heavy Super-LumiNova for legibility
- 44mm case carries presence without crossing into oversized territory
- A tool watch with no compromise on its brief
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 44mm |
| Dial | Black |
| Movement | Self-winding mechanical, with 2nd and 3rd time-zones (24-hour) |
| Bracelet | Steel |
| Price | Approximately ₹5,56,200 |
Bvlgari Bvlgari (Reference 103652)


This is the maison’s signature dress watch, identifiable across a room by the logo engraved twice into the bezel. Its design has stayed essentially unchanged since 1977, which in this category counts as the highest compliment a watch can receive. In steel with a silver dial, the Bvlgari Bvlgari 103652 gives you Roman classical proportion in restrained form. Its 41mm case slips under a shirt cuff.
Why it makes the list:
- Among the most identifiable dress watches in modern horology
- Design unchanged since 1977, signalling a maison that doesn’t chase trends
- 41mm case profile slips under a shirt cuff for formal and business wear
- Integrated steel bracelet finishes the line with the same flat polish as the bezel
- Clean three-hand-and-date layout for maison identity without complication overhead
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 41mm |
| Dial | Silver |
| Movement | Automatic |
| Bracelet | Stainless steel |
| Price | Approximately ₹5,30,000 |
Breitling Chronomat Automatic GMT 40


Breitling’s answer to the integrated-bracelet sport watch sits here. The Chronomat carries the Rouleaux bracelet as its visual signature, with rounded interlocking links that identify the watch instantly. Reference A32398101A1A1 keeps it to a 40mm case and a clean white dial. For someone comparing this against steel sports watches that command twice the budget, the Chronomat 40 makes its case on merit.
Why it makes the list:
- Integrated-bracelet sport watch design in a genre most buyers assume starts higher
- Rouleaux bracelet is one of the most distinctive bracelet patterns in the category
- 40mm proportion suits daily wear more naturally than the larger Avenger or B01
- GMT complication earns its place on a sport watch in our view, better than a chronograph
- White-on-steel finish reads cleanly across formal and casual contexts
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 40mm |
| Dial | White |
| Movement | Self-winding mechanical with 2nd time-zone (24-hour) |
| Bracelet | Steel Rouleaux |
| Price | Approximately ₹5,97,400 |
Bvlgari Octo Roma (Reference 103481)


Architectural icon in Bvlgari’s catalogue, descended from the work of Gérald Genta’s studio in the early 2000s. Bvlgari has refined the case across two generations since. The Octo Roma 103481 builds on 110 facets, with a layered structure that catches light differently from every angle. Reference 103481 in steel with a blue dial reads dressy for an evening and substantial for daily wear.
Why it makes the list:
- 110-facet case construction, one of the most distinctive geometries in modern watchmaking
- Lineage from Gérald Genta’s studio, with two generations of architectural refinement
- 41mm proportion sits between the thinner Octo Finissimo and the chronograph references above
- Blue-on-steel finish works for evening dress and for daily wear
- The most distinctive piece on this list from across the room
Specifications
| Case | Steel, 41mm |
| Dial | Blue |
| Movement | Automatic |
| Bracelet | Stainless steel |
| Price | Approximately ₹8,76,000 |
Breitling Premier Bentley Chronograph

Breitling’s dress-chronograph line lives under the Premier name. Its Bentley collaboration brings automotive heritage into the dial layout without the loudness of a racing watch. The Premier Bentley reference AB0118A11L1A1 carries a green dial, currently the most-requested colour across the entire range. A chronograph at this level of finish, on a steel bracelet, in a 42mm case, is unusually well-resolved for the band.
Why it makes the list:
- Dress chronograph that functions as evening wear, rare at this budget on a steel bracelet
- Green dial reference, currently the most-requested colour across the entire Premier range
- Bentley collaboration adds automotive heritage without racing-watch loudness
- Self-winding mechanical chronograph with date, the everyday complication done properly
- 42mm case proportion stays elegant for cuffed wear
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 42mm |
| Dial | Green |
| Movement | Automatic chronograph |
| Bracelet | Steel |
| Price | Approximately ₹8,80,650 |
Chopard Grand Prix de Monaco Historique Chronograph

Chopard created this line for the Monaco Historic Grand Prix, and named it after the event. That biennial Grand Prix runs pre-1980 racing cars on the streets that host Formula One in alternate years. The Chopard Monaco Historique carries pump pushers, contrasting subdials, and a case shape drawn from chronographs of that era. Chopard finishes the piece to contemporary standards rather than recreating it as pastiche.
Why it makes the list:
- Motorsport heritage tied to a real-world racing event, not invented branding
- Titanium case keeps wrist weight manageable despite the 44.5mm proportion
- Silver-and-yellow dial reads with vintage motorsport directness against the black strap
- Pump pushers and contrasting subdials are period-accurate without descending into pastiche
- Chopard finishing carries refinement the price band doesn’t telegraph
Specifications
| Case | Titanium, 44.5mm |
| Dial | Silver and yellow |
| Movement | Automatic chronograph |
| Strap | Black leather |
| Price | Approximately ₹8,90,000 |
Breitling Chronomat B01 42


Breitling launched the Calibre B01 in 2009 as the maison’s first in-house chronograph movement in modern production. The Chronomat B01 42 is the canonical reference that carries it. Reference AB0134101K1A1 brings a copper dial inside the round case with the Rouleaux bracelet. The colour distinguishes this piece from the steel-dial Chronomats below.
Why it makes the list:
- Breitling’s first in-house chronograph movement, with provenance traceable to a single maison
- 70-hour power reserve, well above the 42-hour standard at this budget
- Column-wheel chronograph construction, evident in the firm pusher click
- Copper dial gives the reference a distinct visual identity from steel-dial Chronomats
- Rouleaux bracelet shared with the Chronomat line, on the upper-end chronograph reference
Specifications
| Case | Stainless steel, 42mm |
| Dial | Copper |
| Movement | In-house Breitling B01 automatic chronograph, ~70-hour power reserve |
| Bracelet | Steel Rouleaux |
| Price | Approximately ₹8,70,350 |
Omega Constellation 39mm

One of the oldest collection names still in Omega’s catalogue, traceable to 1952. Its contemporary 39mm reference is the cleanest expression of the line in current form. The Constellation 39mm reference 131.23.39.20.02.002 pairs a steel case with yellow-gold elements. Its claw-style bezel has signalled Constellation to anyone who knows the line for decades.
Why it makes the list:
- Co-Axial Master Chronometer movement, METAS-certified, anti-magnetic to 15,000 gauss
- 39mm proportion suits wearers who prefer understated wrist presence
- Heritage collection traceable to 1952, with the claw bezel as its signature
- Steel and yellow-gold case with green alligator strap reads dress or smart-casual
- The highest mechanical-watch certification currently in regular production
Specifications
| Case | Steel with yellow-gold elements, 39mm |
| Dial | Silver |
| Movement | Co-Axial Master Chronometer automatic |
| Strap | Green alligator leather |
| Price | Approximately ₹8,94,700 |
How to Shortlist a Watch at This Budget?
Most buyers walk into Time Avenue, a luxury watch store in mumbai with a price band in mind and walk out with a watch they didn’t expect. Doing the thinking before you arrive closes that gap.
A first question sorts half the list. Is this a dress watch, a sport watch, or a tool watch? Below ₹5 lakh, you’re often forced into a compromise. Above ₹5 lakh, the catalogue runs deep enough for a definitive answer instead. From our list, the Bvlgari Bvlgari sits firmly in dress. The Avenger GMT lands in tool, and the Aquaracer Professional 300 GMT in sport.
Your second question is which complications you’ll actually use. GMT helps if you travel across time zones. A chronograph helps if you time things, with laps, runs, or espresso shots all eligible. Three-hand layouts suit wearers who value purity over mechanical theatre.
The third question is case size, answered honestly against your own wrist. Forty to forty-two millimetres is the modern centre of gravity. Thirty-nine and below suits understated wear, like the Constellation 39mm. Forty-four and above asks for presence, like the Avenger 44 or the Monaco Historique 44.5. Our team handles size fittings in the boutique before any decision is made.
Then comes heritage against design boldness. Some buyers want the maison’s signature collection, a Constellation or a Navitimer. Others want the architectural statement, an Octo Roma. Both choices stay equally valid at this budget.
Most of these questions resolve themselves at Time Avenue, on the wrist, in conversation with someone who isn’t trying to sell you the next thing. And sometimes, a quick look at watch brands by prestige provides the context needed to separate marketing hype from lasting watchmaking heritage.
Why Authorisation Matters at This Price?
India’s luxury watch market includes a grey-market and parallel-import channel. The gap between an authorised purchase and an unauthorised one becomes consequential at this budget. Authorised means direct supply from the maison, manufacturer warranty honoured globally, and authenticity guaranteed at the source. Outside that, the buyer carries those risks.
Time Avenue has operated as an authorised dealer in Mumbai for over 27 years, currently carrying authorisations across fifteen-plus Swiss maisons. Our boutique on Turner Road, Bandra West, is the practical home of the collection. The team’s brief from us is to consult, not to close. Pricing inside the authorised channel matches the maison’s pricing, and there’s no markdown to chase elsewhere. Any reduction offered outside that channel signals exactly what you should worry about. You can also discover our collection for watches under 1 lakh at the Time Avenue boutique to begin that relationship.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the best luxury watch to buy under 10 lakhs?
A: It depends on what you want from it. For a dress watch, look at the Bvlgari Bvlgari 103652 or the Omega Constellation 39mm. For sport, the TAG Heuer Aquaracer Professional 300 GMT or the Breitling Chronomat GMT 40. For a chronograph buyer, the Breitling Chronomat B01 42 or the Premier Bentley. The right answer follows intended use rather than any single ranked list.
2. Are luxury watches under 10 lakhs a good investment?
A: Most Swiss watches in this band hold their value rather than appreciate, with a few exceptions in heavily collected references. The realistic case for buying at this budget is craftsmanship, heritage, and decades of wear. Some references and limited editions do appreciate over time, but you shouldn’t depend on it.
3. Which Swiss watch brands are available under 10 lakhs in India?
A: Brands with strong representation in this band include Breitling, Omega, TAG Heuer, Bvlgari, Chopard, Longines, and Bell & Ross. At Time Avenue, that list extends to Hublot, Franck Muller, and Blancpain at the upper end. Our catalogue continues beyond ten lakhs into the Exclusive Brands portfolio.
4. What should I look for when buying a watch under 10 lakhs?
A: Decide first if you need a dress, sport, or tool watch. Then pick a complication you’ll actually use, and settle case size against your own wrist. Heritage of the collection and the finishing of case and movement carry weight beyond dial colour or strap material. Both of those, you can change later. Buy from an authorised channel for warranty and authenticity.
5. Where can I buy authentic luxury watches under 10 lakhs in Mumbai?
A: Time Avenue is an authorised dealer for over fifteen Swiss maisons, in continuous operation since 1998. Our boutique is at 189 Turner Road, Bandra West, Mumbai. Book ahead so the team has time to prepare the references you want to see.


