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The Seastrong Diver 300m is Alpina's workable answer to the question of how much dive watch you can get for under a thousand dollars. At 42mm with 300 meters of water resistance and a Swiss-made ETA 2892-A2 inside, it undercuts most of its Geneva neighbors on price while giving up little on capability. The checkered inner bezel ring ties this back to Alpina's broader Seastrong family and gives the dial a bit of visual texture you don't expect at this price point.
Alpina relaunched the Seastrong Diver in 2017 as part of a broader push to fill out the brand's sport-watch lineup under CEO Peter Stas. The Seastrong name goes back to Alpina's earlier tool-watch era, but the modern 300m reference is a clean-sheet design built around accessible Swiss movements rather than in-house calibers. Alpina positioned the line to compete with Certina, Tissot, and Hamilton rather than to chase Tudor or Oris, which is an honest read of where the brand sits commercially.
The 42mm case size was chosen to hit the mainstream sweet spot without tipping into oversized territory. It has remained largely unchanged since launch, which suggests Alpina got the spec mix right the first time.
The AL-525 designation is the Alpina reference code, but the movement inside is the ETA 2892-A2, which Alpina does not heavily modify. Buyers expecting a proprietary caliber will be disappointed. The lume on some examples is inconsistent between the dial indices and the bezel pip, so inspect both under low light before buying.
The unidirectional bezel action on early production pieces has been reported as slightly loose with less defined clicks than competitors at the same price. The bracelet is the weakest link on the package: the clasp has noticeable side play and most owners swap it for an aftermarket strap fairly quickly. Finally, this watch competes directly with the Certina DS Action Diver, which uses the same base movement and offers similar water resistance, so the Alpina premium is largely a brand preference call rather than a specification advantage.
New examples sell in the $700 to $900 range depending on retailer and configuration. Pre-owned prices have settled in the $450 to $650 band, which is fair given that the ETA 2892-A2 inside is a commodity movement with wide service availability. There is no meaningful collector premium on this reference and probably never will be.
Buy it because you want a capable daily dive watch from a Swiss brand, not because you expect it to appreciate.
The AL-525 runs the ETA 2892-A2, one of the most serviced movements in the industry. Any competent independent watchmaker can handle a full service for $150 to $250, and parts are widely available. Alpina's official service program exists but is rarely necessary given how well-supported this caliber is in the aftermarket.
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The Seastrong bezel must rotate counterclockwise only; both-direction rotation means the ratchet has failed and the 300m rating cannot be trusted.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Unidirectional rotating bezel | Bezel rotates counterclockwise only; positive ratchet click at each index position | Bezel rotates clockwise as well as counterclockwise; worn or failed ratchet mechanism |
| dial | "Seastrong" name on dial | "Seastrong" name present on dial | Missing "Seastrong" text; wrong reference or non-genuine dial |
| movement | ETA 2892-A2 movement architecture | ETA 2892-A2 movement layout visible through caseback | Non-ETA-2892 movement architecture; non-genuine movement swap |