There is no shortage of hype in the world of watch auctions even in the best of times. Every season brings another record, another rare reference, another room full of people who pretend they’re not emotionally attached to tiny mechanical objects that cost more than houses.
But it’s hard to ignore what Phillips just came up with.
The auction house concluded the first half of 2026 with watch sales of more than $235 million (~$340 million AUD) in Geneva, Hong Kong and New York, the strongest six-month period in watch auction history.
A full year ago, no house had reached this figure. Phillips did it in half. Of 937 lots, the sell-through rate stood at 99.8%. Two lots remained unsold.
The money is clearly still there. The more interesting question is where it went.
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Connected: Tom Brady’s watches sold for $7.1 million at auction, a great Rolex Daytona stole the show
The indie watch moment has arrived
The star of the sale was not the Rolex. It wasn’t even a Patek Philippe.
An FP Journey Subscription Resonance No. 007 sold in New York for $13.9 million (~$20.1 million AUD), making it the most expensive watch ever sold at auction by an independent manufacturer, the highest result for any watch made in a commercial sale in the 21st century, and the highest result for any watch made in the US since Paul Newman’s Rolex Daytona changed the meaning of that category.
Connected: The sale of Tom Brady’s $1.36 million watch shows why FP Jarn is the market’s new obsession

Independent watchmaking has been building toward such a moment for some time. Collectors are no longer just chasing instantly recognizable trophy names.
They still want rarity, condition and provenance, but increasingly they also want pieces with more of a story behind them, the kind of watch that would make any other serious collector lean across the table and ask how you got it.
FP Jarn is now firmly in that company with names like Voutilainen, Philippe Dufour, Roger Smith and Akrivia all contributing to the season’s results.
Connected: F1 legend Michael Schumacher’s ultra-rare watch collection fetches $6.6 million at auction
Patek is still on top
There is no sense that Patek Philippe is losing ground. A referee. 2523 “South America” World Timer sold for $10.2 million (~14.8 million AUD) in Geneva. A referee. The first series of 2499 pink gold reached $10.3 million (~$14.95) in Hong Kong. A referee. The 1518 Perpetual Calendar Chronograph brought nearly $4 million (~$5.8 million AUD) in New York.
Provence did what it usually does at this level. A Patek made for Eric Clapton sold for $5.2 million (~$7.5 million AUD). A watch gifted to Charles de Gaulle reached $1.87 million (~$2.71 million AUD). The correct name associated with the correct piece still moves the number in a way that no position alone can repeat.
Philips’ spring season really shows that the collector pool at the top end has matured beyond a simple hierarchy. Rolex matters. Patek matters. But the room is now paying serious money for independent makers, unusual references and watches that have real collector heat rather than just a recognizable logo.
Established names are not going anywhere. They have better competition than ever before.

