Men's Watches on Sales

Men's Watches on Sales

Men's Watches span one of the broadest categories in watchmaking, and the selection here — over 800 pieces from Timex, Casio, Tissot, Versace, and Philipp Plein — reflects that breadth, running from everyday quartz pieces to Swiss-made dress watches and high-impact fashion designs.

Choosing the right Men's Watch for how you wear it

The single most important question is intended use. A field or expedition watch — typically 44 mm or larger, with a mineral or sapphire crystal, screw-down crown, and at least 100 m water resistance — is built to take punishment outdoors. A dress watch sits at the opposite end: slimmer case (often 38–40 mm), no busy sub-dials, and a leather strap that works under a shirt cuff. Between those poles sit sport-chronograph and casual analogue styles, which cover the widest ground day-to-day.

Case diameter shapes how a watch reads on the wrist. Sizes between 38 mm and 42 mm suit most wrists and read as versatile; anything above 44 mm makes a deliberate visual statement. Case thickness matters too — a watch thicker than 12 mm will sit proud of the wrist and can catch on a jacket sleeve.

Movement type and what it means in practice

Quartz movements, driven by a battery, keep time to within roughly 15 seconds per month and need almost no maintenance. They dominate the more accessible end of the price range and are the sensible choice for a watch worn hard. Automatic movements, which wind from wrist motion, appeal to those who want a mechanical connection to the watch — they require no battery but lose a few seconds per day and benefit from a service every five to seven years. Solar-powered quartz, found in several sport-oriented lines, eliminates battery changes by converting light to energy stored in a rechargeable cell.

Men's Watches across the price range

From around €80 up to approximately €2,200, the Men's Watches here cover genuinely different tiers of craft and materials. At the lower end, stainless-steel cases with mineral crystals and quartz movements offer reliable daily wear. In the mid-range, Swiss-made movements — such as those in Tissot's line — bring in-house or ETA calibres with higher finishing standards; for that angle, the Swiss Made watches section is worth exploring. At the upper end, fashion houses like Versace and Philipp Plein prioritise case design and material drama — IP-plated cases, bold dials, and branded hardware — over horological complexity. If you are shopping at the higher end of the range, the luxury watches section covers that tier in more detail. For current discounts, the Men's Watches on sale page lists reduced-price options across the full breadth.

Straps, bracelets, and water resistance

A stainless-steel bracelet is the most durable everyday option and resists sweat and moisture. Leather straps age well but should be kept away from water — a 30 m water-resistance rating on a leather-strapped watch means splash-proof, not swim-proof. Rubber and nylon straps pair naturally with sport cases and handle submersion better. Water-resistance ratings are worth reading carefully: 30 m covers rain and handwashing, 100 m is safe for swimming, and 200 m or above suits recreational diving.