Rolex’s Two Entry Points
The Datejust and Oyster Perpetual are Rolex’s most accessible steel watches — and the decision between them shapes your entire Rolex experience. The Oyster Perpetual (from $6,150) is pure simplicity: time only, no date, no complications. The Datejust (from $8,250) adds a date window, the option of a fluted gold bezel, and Jubilee bracelet. That $2,100 gap buys significantly more customization — but less purity.
Specifications
| Spec | OP 36 (126000) | DJ 36 (126234) |
|---|---|---|
| Case | 36mm × 11.15mm | 36mm × 11.8mm |
| Movement | Cal. 3230 (70h) | Cal. 3235 (70h) |
| Complications | None | Date at 3 o’clock |
| Bezel Options | Smooth (domed) ONLY | Smooth, Fluted (gold), Diamond |
| Bracelet | Oyster ONLY | Oyster OR Jubilee |
| Crystal | Sapphire (no Cyclops) | Sapphire + Cyclops |
| Dial Options | ~8 colors (incl. Tiffany, coral) | ~20+ colors + motifs |
| Retail | $6,150 | $8,250-$10,800 |
The Case for the Oyster Perpetual
- Purity: No date window means perfect dial symmetry. Purists love the clean face.
- Thinness: 0.65mm thinner than the DJ (no date mechanism = less case depth).
- Price: $2,100 less for the same 904L case, 70-hour movement, and sapphire crystal.
- Statement dials: The Tiffany blue, coral red, and yellow OPs trade at massive premiums and have become cultural phenomena. These colors are not available on the Datejust.
The Case for the Datejust
- The date: For practical daily use, knowing the date at a glance is genuinely useful.
- Customization: Fluted gold bezel + Jubilee bracelet creates “the Rolex look” that the OP can’t achieve.
- Heritage: The Datejust (1945) predates the OP in its current form and is the most iconic Rolex silhouette.
- Cyclops lens: Love it or hate it, the magnifying lens over the date is the most recognizable single design element in watchmaking.
The Practical Choice
- Buy the OP if: You value minimalism above all, you want the cheapest new Rolex, you’re chasing a statement-color dial (Tiffany, coral), or you philosophically oppose date windows.
- Buy the Datejust if: You want the “classic Rolex” configuration (fluted + Jubilee), you use the date function, you want maximum customization, or this is a milestone purchase where the full Datejust experience matters.
Secondary Market
| Reference | Retail | Secondary |
|---|---|---|
| OP 36 Black (126000) | $6,150 | $6,500-$7,500 |
| OP 36 Tiffany Blue | $6,150 | $13,000-$16,000 |
| DJ 36 Blue/Fluted/Jubilee | $9,550 | $9,000-$10,500 |
| DJ 36 Green (Mint)/Fluted/Jub | $9,550 | $11,000-$13,000 |
Standard-color OPs trade near retail; statement-color OPs trade at huge premiums. Datejusts trade near or slightly below retail for most configurations, with mint/palm dials commanding premiums.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the OP “less of a Rolex” than the Datejust?
No — the OP uses the same 904L steel, the same class of movement (3230 vs 3235 are architecturally identical minus the date module), and the same Superlative Chronometer certification. The OP is a different design philosophy, not a lesser product.
Can I add a Cyclops later?
Not officially — there’s no date window to magnify on the OP. The Cyclops is bonded to the DJ’s crystal at the factory. Aftermarket crystals with Cyclops exist for the OP but would void warranty and look incorrect (no date window underneath).
Do you carry both?
Yes — our Datejust and Oyster Perpetual collections at DR.WATCH include both reference families. 904L Oystersteel, Swiss automatic movements, correct bezels and bracelets. Free worldwide shipping + 1-year warranty.


