The Coolest James Bond Watch You’ve Never Heard of Brings Back 007’s Classic Color

The affordable dive-style watch travels back to ’73.

Close-up of a silver stainless steel wristwatch with a blue gradient dial, white markers, and a date window showing the number 8.Tissot

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Everyone knows James Bond is a watch guy. The iconic character wore a watch in the original Ian Fleming novels (an unnamed Rolex model), and he’s worn at least one watch — often more — in every official Bond film.

The best-known Bond watches come from those eternal sports watch rivals, Rolex and Omega. For 007’s first three decades on-screen, the character mostly wore a Rolex Submariner. For the last three, he’s exclusively donned an Omega Seamaster.

But before Omega became Bond’s exclusive wrist outfitter in 1995 with the reference 2541.80 in Goldeneye, filmmakers played it much more fast and loose with the superspy’s choice of watch. Besides their Rolexes, Sean Connery also wore a Breitling Top Time, Timothy Dalton wore a TAG Heuer Night Diver and Roger Moore wore a slew of Seikos, among others.

Then there’s perhaps the least-known Bond watch, the Tissot PR-516. Yes, Bond wore a Tissot, which the brand quietly reissued late in 2024 with significant changes. Now, the budget brand has a new color option for the watch that’s much closer to the one worn by 007.

a tissot pr516 watch
The reissued PR516 from 2024 played it safe with a black colorway more similar to Bond’s old Rolex than his Tissot.
Tissot

A Moore accurate PR516

The Tissot PR-516 appears twice on the wrist of 007 in Moore’s first Bond film, 1973’s Live and Let Die. It’s difficult to tell what he has on the wrist on-screen — both appearances are during chase scenes — other than it isn’t the Submariner the character is supposed to be wearing. But on-set photos released over the years have allowed horological sleuths to positively identify the watch as PR-516.

How Bond came to wear the Tissot, however, is a question that remains unanswered. Some believe it was Moore’s personal watch that he forgot to swap out during the scenes (myself included), since he was photographed wearing it frequently on set. Another theory posits that it was lent to the actor by the crew to wear as a close-enough alternative while the Submariner prop watch was still being prepared.

However the PR-516 ended up on the wrist of James Bond ultimately isn’t that important, because now the humble Tissot will forever be known as a Bond watch.

Silver metal wristwatch with a blue dial and black bezel worn on a wrist with a hand in a blue denim pocket.
Tissot’s modern PR516 now more closely resembles the vintage “Roger Moore” version.
Tissot

The new version released by Tissot in 2024, the PR516 Powermatic 80, got a lot right. It features almost the same retro case shape, the same rectangular handset with a syringe minute hand, and very similar dial and bezel markings. While not identical, the vibe was about the same — you can tell the two watches are related.

But the watch also changed quite a bit. It was upsized from 36 to 38mm. It ditched its rotating friction-fit dive bezel for a fixed bezel that only looks like a dive bezel (why do brands keep doing this?), it swapped out the plexiglass crystal and bakelite bezel insert for sapphire and mineral glass, respectively, and it updated the automatic movement to a far more advanced Powermatic 80 with an 80-hour power reserve and an anti-magnetic Nivachron hairspring.

Now, Tissot has made its contemporary PR516 a bit more similar to its spy-worn forefather with a new blue-green dial color. The watch worn by Moore is believed to have featured a very similar color dial, with PR-516 references sporting the look now colloquially called the “Roger Moore” by collectors.

Vintage Tissot PR 516 automatic wristwatch with a blue dial and stainless steel bracelet on dark fabric.
The “Roger Moore” PR-516 worn in Live and Let Die is believed to have featured a blue-green dial like the example above.
Analog:Shift

Moore’s watch paired its teal dial with a bright orange seconds hand, which, unfortunately, is missing from the new Tissot. The new version also replaces the original’s vertical brushing with a gradient effect for a bit more modern appeal.

Pricing and availability

Maybe Tissot will eventually really lean in and give us a proper “Roger Moore” PR516 in the future, but for now, this new version — which has been released alongside a very clean white dial iteration — is as close as we can get.

Even without the tenuous Bond connection, the new teal dial makes the PR516 Powermatic 80 a far more attractive watch than before, and a pretty compelling one at just $825 on a Jubilee-style bracelet.

Silver Tissot PR516 Powermatic 80 wristwatch with blue dial, black bezel, and stainless steel bracelet.Tissot

Tissot PR516 Powermatic 80 Blue-Green

Specs

Case Size 38mm
Water Resistance 100m
Movement Tissot Cal. Powermatic 80 automatic (ETA)

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