Live pricing is coming soon. Get notified when it is available for this reference.
The De Ville Prestige 36.8mm is Omega's most accessible dress watch, a clean steel case with a Co-Axial movement at a price point that undercuts most of the competition on mechanical quality. At 37mm it wears well on smaller wrists without reading feminine, and the simplicity of the dial, no complicated bezel, no busy indices, is the point. For a collector who wants a credible Omega on a leather strap for under $3,000 used, this is the honest answer.
The Prestige line has run continuously since the 1960s under various names, with the current aesthetic language settling in around the mid-2000s. Reference 424.10.37.20.03.001 uses the caliber 2500C, Omega's Co-Axial escapement in its third-generation form, introduced after the original 2500 debuted in 1999. The 2014 production date for this reference coincides with the broader De Ville refresh that standardized the fluted crown and updated the dial furniture.
The 36.8mm designation is Omega's own; the watch is commonly sold and described as 37mm. A 28mm ladies variant shares the same design language but carries different references and movements.
The 2500C has a known sensitivity to magnetism that predates Omega's Master Co-Axial generation, so verify the rate is stable and run it past a degausser before buying used. Check the bracelet clasp if it comes on the steel bracelet; the mid-links on these stretch and the clasps wear faster than you would expect for the price tier. Inspect the dial for moisture ghosting around the chapter ring, a sign the 30m water resistance was tested at some point.
Crystals on the Prestige are sapphire but the coating on the underside scratches if cleaned with anything abrasive. The fluted crown is small and the threads are fine; confirm it winds and sets smoothly without resistance.
Used examples of this reference trade reliably between $1,800 and $2,800 depending on condition and whether the box and papers are present. The blue sunburst dial variants pull a modest premium over silver or white, and the two-tone gold-bezel references sit in a different tier entirely. Retail new is around $3,900 to $4,200 depending on market, so the used discount is real and meaningful.
This is not a watch that appreciates; buy it to wear it.
The caliber 2500C carries an official Omega service interval of 5 to 7 years, with full service costs running $350 to $600 at an authorized service center depending on what parts need replacing. Independent watchmakers familiar with Co-Axial escapements can service it for less, often $200 to $350, though Omega purists prefer factory service for escapement work. Parts availability is good given the volume Omega produced across the 2500 family.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
Verify the Co-Axial escapement through the exhibition caseback; any De Ville Prestige with a standard lever escapement has had the movement swapped to an ETA base.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| movement | Co-Axial escapement | Cal. 2500C with visible Co-Axial three-arm lever fork through the caseback | Standard ETA lever escapement without Co-Axial fork; any movement not labeled Cal. 2500C |
| dial | Lacquer surface | Smooth, even sunray lacquer with consistent sheen across the dial surface | Bubbling, delamination, or uneven sheen in the lacquer indicating moisture damage or a replacement dial |
| crown | Crown signature | Omega symbol signed on the crown face |
| Unsigned crown or a crown with incorrect symbol proportions |