Editorial
Bell & Ross built its reputation on the square BR 01 and BR 03 instrument cases, so the BR 05 is a deliberate pivot: a round 40mm watch on an integrated bracelet that still reads as Bell & Ross without the aviation cosplay. It launched in 2020 and gave the brand a seat at a table dominated by the Royal Oak and Nautilus, though Bell & Ross would rather you not frame it that way.
Bell & Ross spent its first two decades owning the square instrument-watch category, selling watches that looked like cockpit gauges. The BR 05 arrived in 2020 as a studied departure: round case, integrated bracelet, and a price point aimed squarely at buyers who want a dressy-sport watch without going Audemars or Patek. The aviation influence survives in the bezel shape and lug construction, but this is a metropolitan watch more than a tool watch.
Bell & Ross backed the launch with an in-house movement rather than outsourcing, which matters for long-term ownership. The BR 05 is now the entry point for buyers who want Bell & Ross mechanics without committing to the square.
The integrated bracelet is link-specific and Bell & Ross authorized service is the only realistic path to bracelet sizing or repair outside major cities. Early production examples had reported bracelet clasp play that was quietly revised mid-run, so inspect the clasp action on any pre-2022 example. The BR-CAL.321 is in-house but Bell & Ross's service network is thin compared to Rolex or IWC, and independent watchmakers may decline work on proprietary movements.
The case-bracelet joint collects grime and is fiddly to clean properly. Dial-side printing quality is consistent, but verify lume plots for uniformity on used pieces.