Editorial
The Altiplano Date Automatic makes a real argument: you can have a date complication and still wear something that disappears under a shirt cuff. At 40mm in rose gold with the caliber 1203P, it sits in a narrow category of dress automatics thin enough to pass as jewelry. This is the version you buy when the date-free 1200P feels like a compromise you will regret.
Piaget built its reputation on ultra-thin movements long before thin became a marketing category, developing some of the flattest calibers in watchmaking history through the 1950s and 1960s. The Altiplano line formalized that expertise into a coherent collection, with the ultra-thin philosophy applied across multiple case sizes and complications. The caliber 1203P arrived as an answer to the practical question of whether a date could be added without abandoning what makes an Altiplano worth owning.
It is thicker than the date-free 1200P, but Piaget kept it among the flattest automatic date movements in active production. The G0A43112 in 40mm rose gold represents the current iteration of that effort, introduced in 2018 as the collection settled into its mature form.
The case is 18k rose gold, which scratches more readily than steel and develops a patina some owners love and others find distracting. At 40mm the lug-to-lug is proportioned for slim wrists; it can look underwhelming on larger builds despite the case diameter. The date window at 3 o'clock is functional but not a design highlight, and the font choice has divided collectors who prefer the cleaner dial of the date-free version.
Like all ultra-thin automatics, the 1203P runs at a lower power reserve than a conventionally thick movement, so extended periods off the wrist will require resetting. Pre-owned examples sometimes show crystal damage because the flat sapphire sits close to the dial plane and offers less protection than a domed glass.