At Watches and Wonders 2025, German watchmaker Nomos Glashütte debuted a sleek new in-house Worldtimer.
Presented in a 100-meter water-resistant stainless steel case measuring 40 mm x 9.9 mm (48 mm lug-to-lug), the Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer is well-sized for a broad range of wrists and should easily slide under a long-sleeve cuff.
Mechanically, similar to the brand staple Zurich Worldtimer, the all-new Neomatik Worldtimer is powered by German in-house caliber DUW 3202 and features a smooth push-button (at 2 o’clock) that simultaneously jumps the hour hand and city ring, in a reassuringly precise way that you can only get from something mechanical. The more-than-a-decade-old Zurich mechanism (caliber DUW 5201) does the same thing and is still in the Nomos catalog, however, it’s positioned higher at $6,100 whereas the new Neomatik Worldtimer is $4,720.
Nomos’ latest in-house movement, the caliber DUW 3202 measures 31 mm x 4.8 mm, has 37 jewels, and offers a power reserve of just 42 hours, which is relatively short for a new caliber in 2025 but is forgivable considering the overall thinness — and that you get an awesome world time complication. You also striped bridges, blued screws, a skeletonized rotor, and a new traversing balance bridge. A two-arm balance bridge is preferable, especially for a sports watch. The
The 24-hour day/night subdial located at 3 o’clock, is set by a recessed pusher on the left case flank at 8 o’clock. This is not ideal compared to a dedicated finger-triggered pusher, but thankfully anything from a paper clip to a toothpick to you name it — can press and activate the flush-mounted button. For reference, the Zurich Worldtimer the 24-hour worldtime dial is controlled by the crown. The new push-button method is preferable to crown setting the second time zone.
In addition to two core regular production models (blue and silver), the Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer is available in six limited edition variations: Volcano, Dune, Glacier, Jungle, and Magma—each limited to 175.
There’s a lot of hype around this model this year, and it appears to be deserved because Nomos takes the venerable Zurich Worldtimer and modernizes it from top to bottom at a lower price than the original.
The retail price is $4,720. Learn more at Nomos.
Photos by Nomos Glashutte.