May offer: 10% off Citizen and Frederique Constant watches — use code FC-CTZN-10

Rexxor Watches

We can't find products matching the selection.

Rexxor is a watch brand whose pieces sit in the accessible, everyday-wear segment of the market. If you are not yet familiar with the name, the buying principles that apply to any watch in this tier are the same: movement type, case dimensions, and strap material are the three factors that determine whether a watch will suit you long-term.

Movement: quartz or automatic?

Most watches at this price point run quartz movements, which use a battery-powered oscillator to keep time to within roughly fifteen seconds per month. Quartz requires almost no maintenance beyond a battery change every one to three years and is the practical choice for a daily-wear piece. Automatic movements, by contrast, are wound by the motion of your wrist and appeal to those who want a mechanical connection to the watch — they typically need a service every five to seven years. If Rexxor offers automatics, check the stated power reserve, which tells you how long the watch runs without being worn.

Case size and strap: getting the fit right

Case diameter is measured in millimetres across the dial face. A 38–42 mm case suits most wrists and reads as a versatile everyday size; anything above 44 mm leans sport or statement. Lug-to-lug distance — the measurement across the case from top to bottom — matters more than diameter alone, because it determines how the watch sits on your wrist. Strap width is standardised and expressed in millimetres; common sizes are 18, 20, and 22 mm. Stainless steel bracelets are durable and easy to clean; leather straps are lighter but need occasional conditioning; silicone and rubber are the right call for any activity near water.

Water resistance and intended use

Water-resistance ratings are stamped on the caseback and expressed in metres or ATM (atmospheres). A 30 m or 3 ATM rating covers splashes and rain only — not swimming. A 50 m or 5 ATM rating is adequate for swimming in a pool; 100 m and above suits snorkelling. These figures assume static pressure, so a 50 m-rated watch should not be worn for high-impact water sports. Check the rating before assuming a watch can handle your routine. For a broader look at what is available across all brands, the full watches section covers the complete range, and the brands hub lets you compare Rexxor alongside names such as Timex, Citizen, and Casio.