Seiko Australia has collaborated with the Supercars Championship, to create a limited edition of the Seiko 5 Sports as an homage to the racing circuit.
The Seiko 5 Sports Supercars Limited Edition (Ref. SRPL54) is being offered in a 100-meter rated 42.5 mm x 13.4 mm (46 mm lug-to-lug) stainless steel case with a black and red color scheme, and a special asphalt surface in the center of the dial.
For this racing collaboration, Seiko partnered with “The Supercars Championship, currently known as the Repco Supercars Championship under sponsorship, is a touring car racing category in Australia and New Zealand, running as an International Series under Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile regulations, governing the sport,” according to Wikipedia.
Seiko’s workhorse caliber 4R36 automatic drives the hours, minutes, center seconds, and day/date functions, with a maximum power reserve of 41 hours. The 24-jewel movement offers stop-seconds and features an industrial finish, visible through the clear caseback.
Each watch is individually numbered XXXX/2025 on the caseback.
Seiko went all out for this limited edition and created a box that has the track map of the Mount Panorama racing circuit in Bathurst, Australia under the lid. There’s also a scaled replicate of the pit lane Seiko watch tower that sits next to the watch.
“We are incredibly proud of our long-standing partnership with Supercars,” said Daniel Findlay, Seiko Australia Marketing Manager. “This Limited Edition Seiko 5 Sports watch is a testament to our shared passion for performance and precision. Every detail has been carefully crafted to capture the essence of the racetrack, offering fans a tangible piece of Supercars memorabilia.”
The Seiko 5 Sports Supercars Limited Edition Ref. SRPL54 is delivered with a 22 mm at the lugs, tapered, black nylon strap with red contrast stitching and red leather lining.
Retail is 695 AUD, and the watch will not be directly available in the US but if it was the literal currency conversion would be roughly $435, though converting based strictly on currency is not always accurate.
Learn more at Seiko.
Photos by Seiko.