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The Best Watches for Beginners

The Best Watches for Beginners, Seiko Men's Analogue Automatic Watch Seiko 5 Sports
Serdar D.Watch Editor
6 min read

Rather than chase one model, pick your first watch by type. Casio digital if you want grab-and-go simplicity, a Seiko 5 automatic for your first step into mechanical, an Orient diver as a do-everything daily, or a Citizen Eco-Drive for zero maintenance. Below I lay out which one fits you.

Key takeaways

  • For a first watch, pick the type that fits your life, not one model: digital, automatic, diver, or no-maintenance quartz.
  • If you want zero fuss, a Casio digital is the cheapest, safest start, the F-91W or the metal-cased A168W.
  • For your first step into mechanical, the Seiko 5 Sports is an automatic with its own caliber at a price that will not scare you.
  • For one watch that goes everywhere, the Orient Mako 40 brings a 39 mm case and a genuine 200 meters.
  • If you want no battery or service worries, a Citizen Eco-Drive charges from light, so no battery changes.

How to choose your first watch

The right first watch is not the most expensive one, it is the one that fits your life. Start with three questions. First, will you wear it every day or only on occasion: daily wear puts durability and water resistance front and center. Second, do you want the living motion of a mechanical movement or something that just runs without thought: that is the choice between an automatic and a quartz watch. Third, your wrist size: 36 to 40 mm sits safely on most wrists, and the figure that really matters is lug-to-lug length.

The good news is that across all four of these types, Japanese brands have the value worked out: Casio, Seiko, Orient, and Citizen. Below I give one clear pick for each type.

Best cheap digital

If you do not want to think about your first watch at all, the answer is a Casio digital. The battery lasts years, it shrugs off water, you will not flinch when you drop it, and it reads in the dark. The classic resin-cased Casio F-91W has more than enough alarm, stopwatch, and everyday function; its lightness and simplicity make it the safest first watch there is. If you want a more metallic, retro look, the stainless-steel-bracelet Casio A168W gives you the same reliability in a smarter case.

Look at the Casio F-91W, or check its metal-cased sibling, the Casio A168W.

Best entry automatic

For your first step into the mechanical world, the pick is the Seiko 5 Sports, no contest. It is an automatic movement that runs without a battery: it winds from the motion of your wrist, and when it stops you give it a few shakes or turn the crown to start it again. It brings its own Seiko caliber, a display caseback, and solid everyday durability. It offers everything you want in a first mechanical watch at a price that will not scare you off.

See the Seiko 5 Sports.

Best everyday diver

If you want one watch that goes everywhere, the answer is an Orient diver. The Orient Mako 40, with its 39 mm case, sits even on a slimmer wrist, carries its own automatic caliber, and holds a genuine 200 meters of water resistance. Being able to wear the same watch at the office, at the beach, and on the weekend is the best value you can get on a first purchase. If you want to go deeper on dive watches, my guide to dive watches under $500 gives you the full tour.

Look at the Orient Mako 40.

Best no-maintenance pick

If you want to deal with neither a mechanical movement nor a battery, the answer is a Citizen Eco-Drive. It is a quartz watch that charges from light: as long as the watch sees light, there are no battery changes, and it keeps the accuracy of quartz. The classic Citizen Classic Corso, with its slim, refined case, suits both the office and daily life, and it is a watch you can put on and forget.

Look at the Citizen Classic Corso.

How much to spend

The sensible approach for a first watch is to pick the type and then buy that type's value point. On the digital side, Casio gives you the most reliability for the least money. Stepping up to automatic, the Seiko 5 is the ceiling of entry level with its own caliber. If you want one watch for every day, an Orient diver offers more than you would expect from a mechanical watch. If you want to escape maintenance entirely, a Citizen Eco-Drive is the calmest choice over the long run. Live prices change, so always check the current price on the product page. If you want a broader view of Japanese brands, my best Japanese watches piece lines the brands up side by side.

Specifications

Specifications
SpecificationValue
MovementAutomatic, Seiko's own caliber
Water resistanceSuited to daily wear
CaseStainless steel, sized for most wrists
CrystalHardened mineral

Pros

  • There is a clear starting point for every budget and every kind of use.
  • All four brands offer proven value within their own niche.
  • From automatic to quartz, digital to diver, it is gathered in one guide.
  • All are sized for daily wear, slimmer wrists, and a long life.

Cons

  • The right type for a first watch depends on personal priorities; there is no single answer for everyone.
  • An automatic watch drifts a few seconds a day and asks for a service every few years.
  • A digital Casio's look does not give the feel of a classic watch.
  • An Eco-Drive runs down if kept in the dark a long time and needs light again.

Verdict

If I have to name one place to start, the right first watch for most people drawn to mechanical is the Seiko 5 Sports: with its own automatic caliber, solid everyday durability, and a price that will not scare you, it makes the most satisfying entry into the watch world. If you want no maintenance at all, the Citizen Eco-Drive is just as right an answer, and if you simply want grab-and-go, so is the Casio F-91W. Pick your type first, and the rest is easy.

Watches we recommend

Frequently asked questions

Should my first watch be an automatic or a quartz?

Choose automatic if you want the living motion and the ritual of winding, like the Seiko 5 Sports; a few seconds of drift a day is normal. Choose quartz if you want it to run without fuss, and the calmest is a light-charged Citizen Eco-Drive.

Can one watch handle both the office and the beach?

Yes, the best do-everything choice is a diver. The Orient Mako 40, with its 39 mm case and a genuine 200 meters of water resistance, wears just as easily at the office, at the beach, and on the weekend. If you want one watch for everywhere, this is the most sensible first purchase.

How much should I spend on my first watch?

Rather than chase a figure, pick the type and buy that type's value point. In digital, Casio gives the most reliability for the least; in automatic, the Seiko 5 is the ceiling of entry level. Live prices change, so always check the current price on the product page.

Serdar D.

About the author

Serdar D.

Watch Editor

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Serdar D. is the editor at BraveryWatch. He believes a good watch should be not just expensive but right. He gets deep into the details, then turns them into something that is genuinely a pleasure to read. He gives relaxed, useful advice through the eyes of someone who truly cares about watches.

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