The Natural Progression (Or Is It?)
Many Rolex collectors start with a steel Datejust and eventually ask: “Should I upgrade to the Day-Date?” It’s a natural thought — the Day-Date is Rolex’s most prestigious non-sports model, available exclusively in gold and platinum, with the iconic President bracelet. But “upgrading” implies the Day-Date is objectively better than the Datejust. Is it?
What You Gain With the Day-Date
- Day display: Full day of the week spelled out at 12 o’clock (26 languages available)
- Precious metal: 18ct yellow, white, or Everose gold, or 950 platinum. No steel option exists.
- President bracelet: Semi-circular three-link bracelet exclusive to the Day-Date — the most comfortable Rolex bracelet
- Status signaling: The “President” watch — worn by world leaders, Fortune 500 CEOs, and cultural icons since 1956
- Exclusivity: Far fewer Day-Dates produced than Datejusts; gold-only requirement limits the buyer pool
What You Lose (Or Trade Off)
- $31,400: The price gap between a steel DJ41 fluted/Jubilee ($10,800) and a gold DD40 ($39,650) buys a lot of other things
- Durability: Gold is softer than 904L steel. Gold cases scratch more visibly, and gold bracelets stretch over decades. A steel Datejust is a more carefree daily wearer.
- Weight: A gold Day-Date weighs ~180-200g; a steel Datejust weighs ~133g. The weight difference is significant on wrist — some love it (substantial luxury feel), others find it tiring after 8+ hours.
- Versatility: A steel Datejust goes everywhere — gym, beach, building site, black tie. A gold Day-Date is inappropriate for physical labor, beach activities, and casual environments where gold reads as ostentatious.
- Resale percentage: The Datejust holds 85-120% of retail. The Day-Date holds 80-95%. You lose more dollars on the DD, though both retain strong absolute value.
When the Upgrade Makes Sense
- ✅ You already own a steel sports Rolex (Sub, GMT, Explorer) and want a gold dress piece
- ✅ Your lifestyle involves regular formal events where a gold watch is appropriate
- ✅ You genuinely want the day display (useful for scheduling-intensive professionals)
- ✅ You can comfortably afford $40K+ without financial strain
- ✅ You’ve tried on the Day-Date and love the weight and President bracelet feel
When It Doesn’t
- ❌ The Datejust is your only watch (a steel DJ is more versatile than a gold DD)
- ❌ You’d need to sell the Datejust to fund the Day-Date (you lose a great watch to gain a different great watch)
- ❌ You work in environments where gold is inappropriate or risky (construction, sports, manual labor)
- ❌ The $31K gap would be better spent on experiences, investments, or other watches
The Third Option
Instead of “upgrading” from DJ to DD, many collectors keep the steel Datejust as their daily wearer and add a Day-Date as a special-occasion piece. Two watches covering 100% of situations. Total investment: $50,450 (DJ + DD) vs $39,650 (DD alone). More money, but more versatility.
Or: keep the Datejust and add a Day-Date superclone from DR.WATCH for the gold aesthetic at a fraction of the cost. Total: ~$11,100. The Datejust handles durability; the superclone handles gold occasions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get a two-tone Day-Date?
No — the Day-Date is never produced in Rolesor (steel + gold). It’s gold or platinum only. If you want gold accents with steel durability, the two-tone Datejust is your option.
Day-Date 36 or 40?
The 36mm is the historical size — what Eisenhower and LBJ wore. The 40mm is the modern standard. For vintage elegance: 36. For modern presence: 40. Both use the Cal. 3255 with 70-hour reserve.
Do you carry Day-Date?
Yes — Day-Date collection at DR.WATCH includes President bracelet, gold-tone case, functional day + date. Free worldwide shipping + 1-year warranty.