From afar, the watch industry may seem unhurried. But every passing day brings about new timepieces from brands big, small, new and old.
Below, find about a dozen new releases from the likes of Tudor, Hamilton and others. Together, they show an industry that never stops ticking — and, centuries later, can still find the time to surprise you.
Best New Gear: This article is part of an ongoing series collecting the most important new watches, gadgets, pocket knives and more. Catch up on other releases.
BalticBaltic Hermétique Summer
Baltic’s Hermétique is already one of the most unique affordable field watches on the market. Now, it’s been given a vibrant, fun warm-weather refresh with a quartet of Summer editions. They maintain the same case size and material, automatic movement and overall styling, but now they come in four bubbly, beachy dial colors and matching rubber straps.
CitizenCitizen Tsuyosa 37mm
After several updates, Citizen has finally released the perfect iteration of the Tsuyosa, the best affordable Datejust alternative. It has a 37mm case, introduced earlier in 2025, but the big update is the navy blue dial with a radial sunburst brushing. The integrated steel bracelet is a rounded three-link “president-style.” It runs on the Citizen caliber 8210 automatic movement with hacking and a 42-hour power reserve.
TudorTudor Pelagos FXD Chrono “Yellow”
Though Pelagos started life as a dive watch, here it is a racing chronograph with a fixed bezel and a 43mm case made of light, tough carbon fiber with a matte black finish. In honor of the Tour de France, the color yellow accents the dial’s sub-counters and tachymeter scale and runs in a stripe around the strap, while an IYKYK cycling-specific tachymeter scale displays average speeds cyclists tend to hit (below the typical 60km/h). Flip the watch over and you’ll find its coolest touch: along with the watch’s individual number out of 300, you get a top-down view of several cyclists racing diagonally across the caseback.
SeikoSeiko Diver’s 60th Anniversary SPB511
It’s been 60 years since Seiko released its first proper dive watch, the 62MAS. To celebrate, Seiko is releasing a series of watches, but the only one based on the 62MAS itself is this special entry in the SPB line. It sports a new dial texture that, despite being extremely thin, creates the illusion of intense depth in a mosaic of crashing ocean waves. The case back is engraved with a special 62MAS 60th Anniversary logo.













