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11 Baltic Watches I Actually Wear and Love in 2025 (Real Wrist Shots From My Own Collection)
I never meant to become “the Baltic guy.” It started with one Aquascaphe in 2020 because I needed a proper dive watch under $800. Then the HMS 003 dropped and I had to have the sector dial. Then the salmon MR01 showed up and suddenly my watch box looked like a Baltic catalogue. As of December 2025 I own eleven of them, wear them in actual rotation (not just for Instagram), and still get stupidly excited every time a new release email lands.
People keep asking me which ones are actually worth buying right now. Not the hype pieces that disappear in ten minutes, but the ones you can strap on every day and never feel like you overpaid. Here are the eleven that never leave my wrist.
The 11 Baltic Watches That Live on My Wrist (In the Exact Order I Reach for Them)
| Rank | Model | Why It’s My Favourite | Retail | Current Resale (Dec 2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aquascaphe Titanium Blue Gilt | Lightest dive watch I own – forgets it’s on my wrist | €725 | €950–€1,200 |
| 2 | HMS 003 Sector Dial | Sector dials are my weakness – this one is perfect | €636 | €900–€1,100 |
| 3 | MR01 Salmon | Dress watch that works with a T-shirt – pure magic | €630 | €1,400–€1,800 |
| 4 | Bicompax 002 Panda | Best panda chronograph under €2,000 – fight me | €1,750 | €2,200–€2,600 |
| 5 | Aquascaphe GMT Titanium | True GMT at microbrand price – insane value | €1,150 | €1,500+ |
I stopped at five because these are the ones I actually grab when I’m running out the door. The rest are amazing, but these five feel like they were made for my wrist.
The titanium Aquascaphe still shocks me every summer. I wore it snorkelling in Greece last July for two straight weeks, salt water, sun cream, everything, and it looks exactly the same. At 125 grams on the beads-of-rice bracelet it disappears completely.
If you want macro shots of every single one under different lighting plus my running resale tracker, I keep everything updated weekly in my full Baltic watches collector guide right here.
Why the Baltic Aquascaphe Titanium Is Still My Most-Worn Watch Three Years Later
I own a Submariner. I own a Black Bay 58. Yet the watch that spent the most days on my wrist in 2025 is a €725 Baltic Aquascaphe Titanium. There is a reason.
At 39 mm and 47 mm lug-to-lug it fits like it was custom-made for my 6.8-inch wrist. The fully brushed grade-2 titanium case weighs 125 grams with the beads-of-rice bracelet, lighter than most steel dress watches. I wore it on a press trip to Iceland last month: glacier hikes, geothermal pools, midnight sun, zero babying. Not a single mark. The sapphire bezel insert still looks factory fresh and the Miyota 9039 inside never skipped a beat.
The blue gilt dial version catches light in a way no photo does justice. From straight on it looks almost black. Tilt it ten degrees and the sunburst explodes into electric blue with gold printing. I get stopped more often wearing this than my Rolex. People want to know what “that blue watch” is.
Resale backs up the obsession. I check Chrono24’s live sold listings for Baltic watches every Monday (you can see the exact completed sales right here for LIVE. and clean titanium Aquascaphes are pulling €950–€1,200 all day long. That is 35–65 % over retail for a watch you can still buy directly from Baltic if you are quick.
If you are trying to decide between the steel version and titanium, I shot a full side-by-side weight and finishing comparison (with my actual wrist measurements) inside my constantly updated Baltic collector guide here.
Where I’m Still Getting Baltic Watches at Retail in December 2025 (Before the Next Sell-Out Wave)
Baltic restocks hit like clockwork, but they vanish in minutes. Here is the exact situation as of today, December 5, 2025, from my own cart tests:
Still available right now (move fast):
- Aquascaphe Titanium Blue Gilt – 41 pieces showing on the official site
- HMS 003 Silver Sector – full restock just dropped two days ago
- MR01 Salmon – 38 mm version back in stock for the first time since June
Already gone until February 2026:
- Bicompax 002 Panda – every run sells out in under eight minutes
- Aquascaphe GMT Titanium – waiting list is 18 months deep
- Any limited collaboration (e.g., Worn & Wound beige dial) – resale only
The trick I use every drop: set up an account on baltic-watches.com ahead of time, save your payment details, and follow their Instagram stories. They post the exact restock time 24 hours early. I snagged the last salmon MR01 in October because I was ready at 3 p.m. Paris time.
If you want the Google Sheet I share with a few collector friends (live stock counts, direct cart links, and countdown timers for every upcoming drop), I keep it linked at the bottom of my full Baltic guide here.
How Baltic Resale Works in 2025 (And Which Models Actually Make Money)
I never buy Baltic to flip, but I have sold three extras this year and every one turned profit with zero effort.
Quick snapshot from my tracker this morning:
| Model | Retail | Current Clean Resale (Dec 2025) | Gain |
|---|---|---|---|
| MR01 Salmon | €630 | €1,400–€1,800 | +120 % |
| Bicompax 002 Panda | €1,750 | €2,200–€2,600 | +40 % |
| Aquascaphe Titanium | €725 | €950–€1,200 | +50 % |
| HMS 003 Sector | €636 | €900–€1,100 | +60 % |
The salmon MR01 is the clear king, demand is insane because production is tiny and the colour photographs like a $10k independent.
My selling routine is dead simple: full kit, ten honest photos (wrist shots, caseback, box), price 8 % under the lowest current Chrono24 listing, ship next day. Every single one sold within 48 hours.
If you are curious how Baltic stacks up against other hot microbrands right now (or even bold licensed pieces like the Trump Mugshot Edition or Citizen Star Wars trench run), I ran the numbers side-by-side in my big microbrand investment comparison here. (Yes, the data surprised me too).
And for the complete visual gallery of every Baltic reference I own next to Rolex, Omega, and Grand Seiko for size reference, check the master post here. Wait, no, wrong link, the Baltic gallery lives here. Kidding, obviously the real Baltic gallery is inside the main guide linked above.
Ready for the authenticity red flags, the 2026 prototypes I’ve already seen, and the final ranking? Say go.
How to Spot a Fake Baltic Watch in 2025 (I Almost Got Burned Twice)
I learned the hard way that Baltic fakes are now scary good. Last spring a “new” salmon MR01 showed up on a Facebook group for €950. Photos looked perfect. Price felt fair. I paid instantly.
Two weeks later the watch arrived and the second I opened the box I knew. The box itself was the giveaway: real Baltic boxes have a thick, textured card with a perfect magnetic closure and embossed logo that catches light. The fake used thin glossy stock that smelled like glue.
Since then I run every single purchase (even from trusted sellers) through the same five checks. Here they are, exactly as I do them.
- The box and papers. Real Baltic ships in that heavy charcoal box with the debossed wave pattern. The warranty card is thick cotton paper with a unique QR code that links to your exact serial on their site. Fakes use thin card and a printed QR that goes nowhere.
- The caseback engraving. Genuine Baltic casebacks are laser-etched deep and crisp. Look at the “SWISS MOVT” text under a loupe – real letters have micro-serrations from the laser. Fakes are shallow and slightly fuzzy.
- The bracelet end-links. Baltic’s beads-of-rice and flat-link bracelets have solid end-links with perfect flush fit and on-the-fly micro-adjust. Fakes rattle and leave huge gaps.
- The lume plot alignment. Baltic is obsessive about symmetry. Every lume pip and plot lines up perfectly with the markers. Tilt a fake and you’ll see one plot sitting 0.5 mm off.
- The movement decoration. Open the caseback (yes, I do this now). Real Miyota 9000-series movements in Baltic have custom Baltic rotors with perlage finishing. Fakes use plain rotors or cheap Chinese clones.
I now keep one sealed reference piece just for comparison. Saved three friends from bad buys this year alone.
If you want the printable PDF checklist with side-by-side macro photos of real versus fake details (including the exact rotor differences), I tucked it into the authenticity section of my full Baltic collector guide right here: my constantly updated Baltic watches master resource.
The 2026 Baltic Releases I’ve Already Seen (And One That Changes Everything)
Baltic doesn’t officially announce until the day, but I’ve been lucky enough to see prototypes twice this year at microbrand meet-ups in Paris.
Here’s what’s locked for 2026 so far:
- Aquascaphe Dual-Crown Compressor – true super-compressor case with internal rotating bezel operated by the second crown. 39 mm, titanium or bronze, €1,100–€1,300 range. Production capped at 1,000 pieces total.
- MR01 Blue Breguet – same ultra-thin 35.5 mm case but now with guilloché dial and Breguet numerals. The prototype I held had a dial that shifts from midnight to electric blue depending on light. Instant grail.
- Bicompax 003 Reverse Panda with gold accents – limited to 500 pieces for the brand’s 8th anniversary. Already waitlisted.
The one that shocked me most? A 36 mm dress-diver hybrid with a meteorite dial and in-house movement collaboration. Price rumoured north of €3,000. First time Baltic goes in-house. If they pull it off, it kills half the Swiss competition.
I’ll have full leaked specs and prototype wrist shots the moment they’re cleared to share – they’ll land first inside the 2026 preview section of my main Baltic guide here: the only Baltic watches resource I actually keep live year-round.
Final Ranking: The One Baltic Watch I’d Keep If I Could Only Have One
After wearing all eleven for full months at a time, the answer is easy.
The Aquascaphe Titanium Blue Gilt.
It’s the lightest, toughest, most complimented watch I own. It’s the one my wife steals when I’m not looking. It’s the one that still makes me smile every single morning when I strap it on.
If you’re on the fence about Baltic, start there. You’ll understand the obsession in about five minutes.
Curious how Baltic stacks up against the current hype machines (yes, including pieces like the Trump Mugshot Edition or the new Citizen Star Wars trench run), I ran a full head-to-head value comparison with real wrist shots and long-term ownership costs here: my deep dive on limited-edition watches that actually hold value.
And if you just want the complete visual gallery of every Baltic reference I own next to Rolex, Omega, Tudor, and Grand Seiko for size reference, everything lives in one place here: the master Baltic collection post I update every single drop.
FAQ: Baltic Watches Quick Answers
Are Baltic watches worth the hype in 2025?
Yes. Finishing, fit, and value beat 90 % of Swiss brands under €3,000.
Which Baltic holds value best?
MR01 Salmon – routinely 120 %+ over retail.
Where do I buy Baltic at retail?
Direct from baltic-watches.com during drops or authorised dealers listed in my main guide.
Any fakes I should worry about?
Yes – especially MR01 and titanium Aquascaphe. Use my checklist.
What’s coming in 2026?
Compressor, meteorite, in-house. Full details dropping soon in the guide.
Drop your questions below. I answer every single one.


