Two Solutions to the Same Problem
Both GMT and worldtimer complications exist to answer the question: “What time is it somewhere else?” But they solve it differently, display information differently, and appeal to different types of travelers. Understanding the distinction helps you buy the right complication for your lifestyle.
GMT: Track Two Time Zones
How It Works
A GMT watch has a fourth hand (in addition to hours, minutes, seconds) that completes one rotation every 24 hours instead of 12. This 24-hour hand, combined with a 24-hour bezel (rotating or fixed), displays a second time zone. The main hour/minute hands show local time; the GMT hand shows “home” or “reference” time.
Types of GMT
- “True” (Flyer) GMT: The local hour hand jumps independently in 1-hour increments without disturbing the running movement. Adjust local time instantly when crossing zones. Used by: Rolex GMT-Master II, Tudor Black Bay GMT, Omega Seamaster GMT.
- “Caller” (Office) GMT: The GMT hand adjusts independently, leaving local time on the main hands. Used by: some vintage GMTs, Grand Seiko GMT.
- “Tourist” GMT: Both hands move together — to change time zones, you pull the crown and set the entire watch. The GMT hand is a 24-hour reference only. Used by: budget GMTs, some Seiko references.
Tracking a Third Zone
If the GMT bezel rotates (like the Rolex GMT-Master II), you can track a third time zone by rotating the bezel to offset the 24-hour hand. Example: GMT hand on New York time, bezel rotated +5 hours to show London time, main hands on Tokyo local time. Three zones, one watch.
Best GMT Watches
- Rolex GMT-Master II 126710BLRO ($10,900): The gold standard. True GMT, Cerachrom Pepsi bezel, Cal. 3285.
- Tudor Black Bay GMT ($3,925): Best value true GMT under $5K.
- Omega Seamaster Aqua Terra GMT ($7,000): Dressy GMT with Master Chronometer.
- Longines Spirit Zulu Time ($2,700): Best ceramic-bezel GMT under $3K.
Worldtimer: Track Every Time Zone at Once
How It Works
A worldtimer displays all 24 (or 37, including half-hour offsets) time zones simultaneously on a single dial. The standard design: a rotating 24-hour disc in the center, surrounded by a city ring showing one city per time zone. The local city is at 12 o’clock; to read any other city’s time, find it on the ring and read the corresponding hour on the 24-hour disc.
Setting a Worldtimer
Most worldtimers have a city-ring advance pusher (usually at 10 o’clock). Press it to rotate the city ring until your current city is at 12 o’clock. All other cities automatically display the correct time — including DST offsets if the watch accounts for them.
Best Worldtimer Watches
- Patek Philippe World Time 5231J ($55,000+): The definitive worldtimer. Hand-painted cloisonné enamel world map on the dial. Caliber 240 HU.
- Vacheron Constantin Overseas World Time ($32,000): Integrated bracelet + worldtimer. One of the best travel watches ever made.
- Jaeger-LeCoultre Geophysic Universal Time ($12,500): Lacquered world map dial, Cal. 772 (in-house).
- Frederique Constant Worldtimer ($2,995): Best budget Swiss worldtimer.
- Nomos Zürich Weltzeit ($5,460): German alternative with in-house movement and unique dial layout.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | GMT | Worldtimer |
|---|---|---|
| Zones Displayed | 2 (3 with rotating bezel) | 24+ simultaneously |
| Reading Complexity | Simple (glance at GMT hand) | Moderate (find city, read disc) |
| Dial Cleanliness | Clean (one extra hand) | Busy (city ring + 24h disc) |
| Zone Changing | Crown adjustment | Pusher advances city ring |
| Movement Complexity | Moderate (+1 gear train) | High (+city ring mechanism) |
| Price Entry | $650 (Orient Star GMT) | $2,995 (Frederique Constant) |
| Best For | Tracking 1-2 specific zones | Global travelers, traders, pilots |
Which Do You Need?
- Choose GMT if: You regularly track 1-2 specific time zones (e.g., home + office). You prefer a clean dial. You want the widest range of price options. You value sports-watch aesthetics.
- Choose worldtimer if: You communicate with people across many time zones (global business, trading, family scattered worldwide). You appreciate the visual complexity and craftsmanship. You want a conversation-piece complication. You travel to different destinations regularly (not just the same two cities).
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a GMT track half-hour time zones (India, Iran, Nepal)?
Standard GMT watches cannot — they track in whole-hour increments. Some worldtimers (Patek 5231, Vacheron Overseas) include half-hour offset cities (Mumbai, Tehran). If you regularly deal with half-hour zones, a worldtimer is the better choice.
Which is more legible at a glance?
GMT, by a significant margin. The 24-hour hand on a clean dial is instantly readable. A worldtimer requires finding the correct city on a crowded ring and cross-referencing it with the 24-hour disc — a 3-5 second process.
Do worldtimers auto-update for daylight saving time?
No — mechanical worldtimers use a fixed city ring. When DST changes occur, the displayed time for affected cities will be off by 1 hour until you advance or retard the city ring. Some smart-connected watches handle DST automatically, but pure mechanicals cannot.
What does DR.WATCH carry?
Our GMT-Master II collection is our strongest GMT offering — Pepsi, Batman, and Root Beer bezels with true GMT movements. For worldtimer aesthetics, browse our premium collection. Free worldwide shipping + 1-year warranty.
