Omega Watches
- Seamaster Planet Ocean Chronograph
- Seamaster Planet Ocean XL
- Seamaster Planet Ocean XL
- Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph
- Seamaster Diver 43.5MM
- Planet Ocean 600m Master Co-Axial
- Seamaster Planet Ocean Master 43.5MM
- Seamaster Planet Ocean Master 43.5MM
- Seamaster Planet Ocean Master 43.5MM
- Aqua Terra Worldtimer 43MM
- Seamaster 007 Edition 'No Time to Die'
- Seamaster Diver 300M
- Seamaster Diver 300M Master Chronometer
- Seamaster Planet Ocean
- Seamaster Professional Chronograph
- Seamaster Professional Chronograph
- Seamaster Professional Chronograph
- Speedmaster Moonwatch
- Speedmaster Professional 'Moonwatch' Apollo XI 40th Anniversary
- Speedmaster Tokyo 2020 Olympic
- Speedmaster '57
- Speedmaster '57
- Constellation Co-Axial Master Chronometer
- DeVille Chronoscope 'Saint Moritz'
- Seamaster 'Olympic Vancouver 2010'
- Seamaster 300 Master Co-Axial
- Seamaster Aqua Terra 41 MM
- Seamaster Master 41MM
- Seamaster Master Chronometer 41MM
- Seamaster Professional James Bond 50th Anniversary Limited Edition
- Speedmaster '1957 Relaunch'
- Speedmaster 'The Legend' Schumacher
- Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M 38.5 MM
- Seamaster Aqua Terra 38.5 MM
- Seamaster 120 'Alveoles'
- Constellation Co-Axial 35mm
- Alligator Strap for Planet Ocean 37.5
- Omega alligator strap
- Rubber Deployant Seamaster Planet Ocean XL Strap
- Rubber Strap for Omega Planet 44
- Speedmaster Moonwatch Strap
Omega Watches
Founded in 1848 by the 23-year-old Louis Brandt in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Omega began its existence as "Louis Brandt et Freres" and would eventually become a watch trusted by Olympic officials, favored by the latest incarnations of James Bond, and worn by the first men to step foot on the moon. The company's first self-produced calibres, including the Labrador and Gurzelen, ensured the celebrity of the brand by the 1880s and inspired its renaming after the development of the 1894 Omega calibre. In 1904, the company passed to four young people, including Paul-Emile Brandt, who forged the merger of Omega and Tissot into the Societe Suisse pour L'Industrie Horlogere in 1930. Over the next several decades, the SSIH either absorbed or created around 50 companies and became Switzerland's number one watch producer. Weakened by the influx of quartz watches and economic downturn in the 1970s, the company went through several upsets and acquisitions to emerge as the Swatch Group in 1998.Do you have a Omega watch to sell? We are looking to buy most modern models from this brand. To get an idea of models we have bought direct from end-users, review our list of Omega models we have bought.