When Does a Watch Need an Appraisal?
Understand appraisal purposes, qualified valuers and the difference between value estimates and authentication.
An appraisal may support insurance, estate, tax or sale decisions, but purpose and valuation basis must be clear. It is not automatically an authentication certificate.
Quick answer: An appraisal may support insurance, estate, tax or sale decisions, but purpose and valuation basis must be clear. It is not automatically an authentication certificate.
Why this question matters
Watch specifications are useful only when they are connected to real use. The right choice depends on fit, routine, maintenance, documented performance and the exact instructions for the model. This guide separates practical checks from marketing language so you can make a safer decision.
What to check
- Define the purpose and required valuation date.
- Check the appraiser's relevant watch expertise and independence.
- Ask what evidence and market data support the conclusion.
Do not treat one specification as proof of overall quality. A watch should be judged as a complete product: case, movement, strap or bracelet, legibility, service access, written warranty and seller transparency all matter.
Step-by-step approach
- Photograph and inventory the watch.
- Provide service and purchase records.
- Keep the signed report and update it when required.
Keep a written record of the exact model reference, seller description and warranty terms. When a claim is model-specific, confirm it in the current instruction manual or on the manufacturer's official support page.