
If I’m being honest, Italy is not the first country that comes to mind when I think of the best watchmaking brands. Switzerland, of course, is certainly number one.
Japan, Germany, and France all quickly follow suit, with brands like Seiko, A. Lange & Söhne, and historical French watchmakers like Abraham-Louis Breguet. Even England has a storied history in watchmaking, with old makers like Thomas Mudge, John Harrison, and even the famous George Daniels.
Italy has some superb watchmakers, don’t get me wrong. Panerai has been killing it with some unique and stylish watches for a long time.
Unimatic and U-BOAT are lesser-known but enjoy serious cult followings. Even BVLGARI, which makes Swiss watches but is of Italian origin. But there are relatively few well-known brands.
It should come as no surprise, then, that when I started to research this article, I was absolutely blown away by what I found. There are dozens of superb Italian watch brands out there, all of which deserve far more attention than they now receive.
As such, I’m certain that this article will surprise and thrill you, just as researching it did me. So let’s not wait any longer—here are the 15 best Italian brands on the market today!
- Officine Panerai
Could we start anywhere with anyone other than the definitive Italian luxury watch brand? Panerai was founded all the way back in 1860, making it significantly older than many old Swiss brands today.
Their most iconic watch, the Radiomir, was created in 1935—its name references the radium used to create its glowing dial, which made this dive watch highly legible and, as such, perfect for use by the Italian Royal Navy.
It’s a testament to the power of Panerai’s designs and watchmaking skill that they’ve been making pieces that look basically like how they did in the 1930s for almost a century now and they continue to be popular—if you think about it, that’s an accomplishment only really enjoyed by the highest of watchmaking brands, like Rolex.
But another characteristic of another advanced watch brand is that they continue to push the bounds of mechanical watchmaking forward, and Panerai has done just that with exceptional watches like the eLux LAB-ID, which uses a mechanical generator to power LED lights to illuminate the watch.
Panerai is making exceptional watches in a unique style—large, rounded cases, with sandwich dials and prominent numerals—just as they have been for decades, and all at shockingly acceptable prices considering the history of watchmaking prowess of this maison.
- Gagà Laboratorio and Gagà Milano
Gagà Laboratorio is a new and smaller brand, but it’s one that I’ve had my eyes on for quite some time now. Their design, the Labormatic, is fresh and unique, with a remarkable fluidity and harmony in its dial and case. It comes in just two colorways, the Cinquania (a lovely jade green) and Bauhaus (monochromatic grayscale).
However, I do have to admit that I haven’t been following as well with the elder sister brand of Laboratorio, Gagà Milano. Milano was founded by Ruben Tomella as an independent brand all the way back in 2004, so by now, Tomella has some serious experience in the market.
You’d think, based on the names, that Laboratorio is more of a chance for Tomella to unleash his full creativity with concept pieces, but in actuality Gagà Milano has been making exceptionally eye-catching and stand-out watches for years now that continue to go wildly underappreciated, though they do hold slightly more to a classic styling.
Gagà, Tomella tells us, is an Italian word for a dandy. For me, that’s the exact right word to use to describe Tomella’s creations across both Gagà Milano and Gagà Laboratorio. Their watches are big, bold, bright, and beautiful.
And to be honest, they could very easily have fallen into the unfortunate trap of trying to do too much and ending up looking like a novelty watch.
Yet such is the genius of Tomella’s design that the watches manage to present a coherent, attractive whole, which pushes the boundaries of elegance and charm, just like any dandy.
- Unimatic
Unimatic should be a familiar name to patrons of this blog and Exquisite Timepieces, as they’ve been making exceptional, minimalistic tool watches that are far from unnoticed by the watch experts here. And for good reason!
Their watches are affordable but stylish and with solid watchmaking chops, making for excellent entry-level pieces for the collector just getting started in the watch world as well as superb lightweight additions for the more experienced collector.
Many microbrands, I’ve found, struggle intensely with establishing a clear and unique design language. Most of their initial watches clearly reference some of the bigger players in the space—be it the Rolex Submariner for dive watches or the Omega Speedmaster for chronographs, there are usually clear cues you can find at a glance.
With Unimatic, you really get a taste of clear, fresh, and original design that exudes power and durability. Sure, it’s not always the most useful—the rotating “dive bezel” on their U1 Classic has almost no markings at all—but it is becoming an icon in its own right. Definitely a brand to keep your eye on, and worth snapping up one of their pieces if it speaks to you!
- Giuliano Mazzuoli
Watchmaking runs deep in the Mazzuoli family—his ancestors, all the way back in 1833 (that beats out Panerai, but who’s counting?), were making tower clocks, and Giuliano Mazzuoli started his own journey 20 years ago in 2005 with the creation of his Manometro.
Like Unimatic, Signore Mazzuoli has established a clear and unique design language faintly reminiscent of vintage Disco Volante watches. In this case, it was an old air pressure gauge that inspired him to this act of creation.
Among his collections, many of Mazzuoli’s pieces exude Italian charm, such as his Trasmissione Meccanica, which has a case that references Italian racing, and even more so his Carrara, crafted from the Carrara marble used to such acclaim by the finest of Italian sculptors.
In particular, I’m quite in love with his Carrara Chronograph, which couples the smoothly polished marble with an elegant vintage-style chronograph. Let me be the first to assure you that these are unique and startling watches that deserve far more acclaim than that which they have received so far.
- Venezianico
I’m gonna be honest with you guys. I think out of all the brands on this list that I’ve discovered while researching this article, I’m most excited about Venezianico. It’s hard not to be, honestly. Something about their design—I can’t put it into words, I’m afraid—is just… chef’s kiss.
You’ll have to excuse the slight fanboy moment I just had, but it’s been a while since I’ve had a watch inspire that level of excitement and admiration in me.
Pieces like their Nereide Aureo, Arsenale Ultrablack, and Nereide Acquaforte are just absolutely stunning. Now, to be fair, it’s clear that Venezianico is a design-first brand.
Their watches are exceptional, but most run on a simple Miyota 9-series movement. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, as it’s a solid movement that is used by a lot of microbrands.
That said, they do have something quite exceptional in the works: the caliber V5000, the first Italian-made caliber. This is the kind of brand that’s aiming for nothing short of bringing Italian watchmaking into the limelight, and I’m here for it.
- echo/neutra
echo/neutra is another one of those design-first brands that absolutely crushes it at making unique, eye-catching watches with their own strong and admirable style.
Like BVLGARI (more on them later!), they put Swiss Made on their dials, but that shouldn’t be seen as taking away from their Italian heart. Rather, echo/neutra couples Swiss watchmaking prowess with Italian design, and the result is nothing short of spectacular.
Take, for example, their Rivanera Gray, a watch so good even Hodinkee said it was one of the best microbrand watches.
It riffs on a very clear and iconic watch style, the Cartier Tank, in a way that’s completely new and really only conjures up associations with Cartier under prolonged examination. It’s architectural in its facets, but astonishingly simple and clear in every other way.
It’s ultra-light and ultra-thin. What does that mean for the watch? It creates a clear, coherently designed whole where every single part of it remains unobtrusive and yet beautifully crafted upon examination.
A quick search through their catalog, I guarantee, will produce nothing but many more pieces in this same style.
- Breil
Breil is not like many of the other brands on this list. They’re not the most design-forward or the most serious watchmakers. What they are is perhaps the most fully-formed, top-of-the-line maison out of everything else here, barring only BVLGARI (they don’t count, they’re Swiss-made).
Breil has everything, and does it all quite well to boot: men’s and women’s watches (most other brands here focus on men’s or unisex creations), jewelry, and even smartwatches. As they’re sure to tell you straight off in their History page, Breil is an avant-garde brand that’s not afraid to push the limits.
In this case, there’s no need to question their claims: everything they offer is crafted exclusively from steel when it would be an easy and tempting matter for a jewelry house to make precious-metal watches to increase their appeal.
Their watches aren’t boundary-breaking or genre-defining, but they are darn good-looking, and it’s just about impossible to argue with the appeal of that.
- D1 Milano
Say it with me this time, folks: here we’ve got yet another design-focused brand! I’m a huge fan of what D1 Milano brings to the table. I’ve had my eye on their iconic Polycarbon Sketch for a looooong time, and any day now I’ll pull the trigger.
In any case, D1 Milano has a huge variety of designs, both entirely different models and a wide selection of colorways for each one. Thus, like Breil, they have one of the most comprehensive catalogs on this list, making it very easy to find something that appeals to you.
D1 Milano will also be the first to tell you they are not a watch retailer in the traditional sense of the term. Rather, they focus on materials and designs, and especially the interplay of colors. They’re here to break the rules, and I have nothing but respect for the way that they do it.
Some brands, like Hublot, aim to push the boundaries with extremely expensive, ultra-high-end watches. Others, like D1 Milano, make that avant-garde watchmaking available to anyone at affordable prices. What’s not to love?
- BVLGARI
The only Italian brand that could possibly compete with Panerai has to be, without a doubt, BVLGARI. In terms of their offerings, they even far surpass Panerai, showing expertise in jewelry and even in hospitality.
BVLGARI was founded way back in 1884 in Rome as a jewelry house, and their first watches came as highly-jeweled dainty ladies’ watches.
One of BVLGARI’s most famous watch collections today, the Tubogas and its derivative the Serpenti, first appeared in the 1940s. It wasn’t until 1980, however, that they would establish a watchmaking department in its own right.
Masterpieces of watchmaking craft and design flesh out the modern BVLGARI catalog. The Octo Finissimo and Octo Roma, Bvlgari Bvlgari, and more are recognizable at a glance by anyone even mildly introduced to the world of watchmaking.
Their work in jewelry and other métiers d’art is without doubt a tremendous fuel for their watchmaking, and the final product is truly a work of art, no matter the model or style of the piece.
- Orologi Calamai
There are not a few brands out there that do one thing, and do it exceptionally well. Breitling does adventuring and pilot’s watches. A. Lange & Söhne does classy, “old-money” pieces. Calamai does plane turbine watches.
You heard that right. Every one of their watches is forged from the turbine of an F104 fighter jet that once flew in the Italian Air Force, just like the owner’s father, Giosuè Calamai.
The founder and owner, Francesco, was inspired by his father’s life and sought to build something that will last. He’s done exactly that here, by imparting a history to each of the watches he crafts that goes beyond what most other normal watches have.
And it’s not as if the appeal of these watches ends there. Calami offers a wide variety of options, with different complications and each with a striking sporty look.
But front and center for each one is its gorgeously finished case, crafted from the fine steel of an F104 Starfighter jet. Each watch is offered at a quite affordable mid-range price to boot. For history and military provenance, this is your go-to.
- U-Boat
You can spot a U-Boat from a mile away. They feel about as big as the eponymous submarine on the wrist, and every part of the design serves only to accentuate that, thanks to the oversized dial relative to the rest of the body of the watch.
Like Ressence, many of their watches are filled with oil to further emphasize the dial and make it legible from any angle. Interestingly, U-Boat takes this innovation a step further by also bathing the movement in oil, which supposedly helps with its lubrication as well.
Say what you will about the enormous cases and pronounced dials of U-Boat’s creations, they are striking and recognizable at a glance, and not a few celebrities swear by them.
If you’re craving something countercultural to swim against the tide of modern watchmaking trends, look no further than U-Boat.
- Gucci
Like many other fashion brands, Gucci has recently made such a concerted effort to improve its watchmaking division that it would be hard for me not to include it on this list.
They’ve got a huge catalog of well-designed watches for men and for women, all of which are clean and trendy without slipping into the domain of “Walmart watch” infamy.
Perhaps most of note, however, is Gucci’s High Watchmaking collection, which cleanly surpasses all but Panerai and BVLGARI on the rest of this list.
This specialty department has constructed some absolutely spectacular timepieces, several of which have received a GPHG nomination—equivalent to an Oscar nomination in watchmaking.
Their Gucci 25H Minute Repeater and G-Timeless Planetarium dazzle and amaze with superb clean design and watchmaking prowess that simply cannot be overlooked.
And even if you’re not in the market for a several-hundred-thousand-dollar timepiece, look no further than Gucci’s G-Flat collection, which is exquisitely designed and a well-respected watch in any collector’s eyes.
- Officina del Tempo
Few other brands walk so perfectly the line between maximalism and minimalism. Indeed, many brands will structure their entire identity on one side or the other of the line: Jacob & Co is (in)famous for its maximalism, and NOMOS Glashütte excels at Bauhausian minimalism. Officina del Tempo does both, and does it spectacularly well.
Almost every other collection they offer is one and then the other, seesawing from unobtrusive dress watches to spectacularly overengineered racing behemoths.
This is completely Made-in-Italy watchmaking at perhaps its apogee, where almost every concept in horology finds expression in one of many watches that have been offered by the brand celebrating its 25th birthday this year.
Here, heritage is married to limitless contemporary design, and the product is nothing short of exceptional.
- Anonimo
As I was exploring Anonimo a little more to prepare for this article, one thought kept coming back to my mind: this is the Italian Jacques Bianchi! Rest assured, I mean that in every way as a compliment, because I’m a huge fan of the French diving-focused microbrand and what they do.
Anonimo has a very similar origin story and makes watches that are similar in concept, but certainly quite distinct in style, which lets these two brands marvelously coexist in the market today.
While Jacques Bianchi makes more classical watches, Anonimo loves to play with design in typical Italian fashion, making striking professional divers that are also just as comfortable out of the water as in it.
You’ll want to take a particular look at their bronze pieces, which especially when diving will take on a lovely patina and age to a unique and tasteful sea green. Anonimo’s lovely and striking watches are anything but anonymous: their style and design will be recognized at a glance by those in the know.
- Zannetti
For large watchmaking brands, a certain amount of the quality and price associated with their pieces comes from the name on the dial.
If we’re being honest, a Patek Philippe would be significantly cheaper under many other names—part of it is the heritage, doubtless, but the name carries a significant weight to it. Others make their way through sheer craftsmanship.
Zannetti is a member of the latter camp, a name that carries little weight with most enthusiasts but whose craftsmanship can be easily appreciated by expert collectors at a glance.
Each piece, Zannetti proudly declares, is unique, and a dizzying array of métiers d’art are brought to bear across all their offerings for such a small independent brand.
Zannetti is nothing short of one of the most exceptional producers of watches in the world and deserves infinitely more attention than it now receives.
Conclusion
Italy may not be the best-known country for horological advancement, but it’s clear that its true skill has gone completely unrecognized.
From independent craftsmen like Zannetti to watchmaking powerhouses like BVLGARI, Italy provides something for even the most discerning collector, or beautiful watches that serve well as entry pieces for those just getting into the watch world.
Each of these brands deserves your attention and appreciation—what are you waiting for?