TAG Heuer
Best-known for its innovations in the earliest development of the automatic wrist-mounted chronograph, TAG Heuer has maintained a spirit of precision, fast-moving innovation, and dynamic, avant-garde design to keep pace with the evolution of timing in all forms of sporting since the late 1800s. Though its focus has been keenly on the world of motorsport, TAG Heuer has since evolved its many references to keep time for all manner of competition and extreme sport — from golf and downhill ski racing to big-wave surfing and deep-sea diving.
TAG Heuer Debuts Carrera X Porsche Limited-Edition Watch
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TAG Heuer Announces Aquaracer Professional 200 Solargraph Watch
First Look: TAG Heuer Monaco Gulf Special Edition With Heuer 02 Movement
TAG Heuer Unveils Connected Calibre E4 Smartwatch Series
TAG Heuer Debuts Updated Formula 1 Red Bull Racing Special-Edition Watch For 2022
TAG Heuer Unveils Aquaracer Professional 200 Watch Series
Video Interview: George Bamford’s Weird Watch Collecting On eBay
Review: TAG Heuer Carrera Calibre 5 39mm & 41mm Watches
TAG Heuer Unveils Aquaracer Professional 300 Naomi Osaka Limited-Edition Watch
TAG Heuer Unveils Three New Autavia 60th Anniversary Watches
TAG Heuer Debuts Carrera Year Of The Tiger Limited-Edition Watch
How TAG Heuer’s Most Beloved Dive Watch Returned to the Sea
Founded in 1860 in St. Imier, Switzerland, by Edouard Heuer, it wouldn’t be until the mid-1960s that the Heuer name would roar into watchmaking legend, helping pioneer the development of the world’s first automatic chronograph, which would soon be depended upon by professional motor racers and coveted by enthusiasts. Through two formative decades in motorsport under the watchful eye of Jack Heuer, and savvy partnerships with legendary names like Ayrton Senna and Steve McQueen, the Heuer family name became synonymous with dependability, precision, and rebellious, but easy-wearing luxury. The brand would become known as TAG Heuer in 1985, plotting a future for the innovative, avant-garde watchmaker that the brand is best known as today.
With its early expertise in the automatic chronograph, TAG Heuer’s best-known designs remain the legendary Monaco (a favorite of McQueen’s), the sporty and youthful Formula 1, and the perennially innovative Carrera. The brand’s foray into the early, formative years of recreational diving would later yield the Aquaracer — a collection of sleek, super-capable dive watches descended from the original Heuer Professional from the 1980s. The TAG Heuer of today continues many of these sporting traditions and timekeeping innovations, through sponsorship of world-championship winning F1 drivers like Max Verstappen, development of deep-diving watches like the Aquaracer Superdiver, and the pioneering of its own Connected smartwatch platform, along with traditional chronograph movements like the Connective Calibre 11, which now powers the next generation of Monaco and Carrera references.