
The Classique 7337 with peripheral oscillating rotor is Breguet's flagship automatic dress reference; secondary prices in yellow gold are firm among collectors who appreciate movement architecture as much as the aesthetic.
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
The 7337 is the everyday argument for owning a Breguet Classique. It brings the full guilloché dial, Breguet hands, and coin-edge case to a self-winding movement, so you get the house's signature aesthetic without the ritual of hand-winding. At 38mm in white gold, it wears like a serious dress watch that actually earns its keep.
Breguet launched the Classique line to embody Abraham-Louis Breguet's core design vocabulary: engine-turned dials, open-tipped blued hands, and slim coin-edge cases. The 7337 sits within that tradition as the automatic counterpart to the hand-wound 5177, sharing the same dial architecture but powered by the in-house Cal. 5165R with rotor winding. The reference has been in production continuously since 2005, which reflects genuine market confidence rather than catalog filler.
White gold is the flagship configuration; yellow and rose gold variants exist, but the white gold pairing with the silver guilloché dial is the most restrained and arguably the most faithful to the original Breguet aesthetic. Breguet re-engineered the movement family incrementally over the production run, and later examples benefit from refinements to the rotor and finishing that are not always visible in photographs.
Dial condition is everything on the 7337. The engine-turned guilloché is applied by hand to each dial and any scratch, print smear, or moisture intrusion is both immediately visible and expensive to correct. Inspect the dial under strong raking light before buying.
The coin-edge case is similarly unforgiving: polishing by an inexperienced watchmaker rounds the knurling and permanently degrades the case. Ask for service records and look closely at the case edge in photos. Straps on pre-owned examples are often worn through or replaced with non-Breguet leather; factor a replacement Breguet strap into your budget if condition matters to you.
White gold cases are prone to light scratching more quickly than steel, and many grey-market examples have been lightly polished to hide wear, which is the worst outcome on this case style. Confirm the reference number engraved on the case matches the dial variant you expect, as Breguet uses the same 7337 prefix across metal and dial combinations.
The 7337 in white gold typically trades in the $12,000 to $18,000 range on the secondary market depending on condition, papers, and box presence. That is a meaningful discount to retail for a watch with an in-house automatic movement and hand-finished guilloché dial. Demand is steady rather than speculative, which means prices are honest and you are unlikely to overpay by much if you buy a clean example with documentation.
The hand-wound 5177 commands slightly stronger collector attention, so the 7337 is often the better value entry into the Classique family for a buyer who actually plans to wear the watch.
The Cal. 5165R is a Breguet in-house automatic with a power reserve of approximately 45 hours. Breguet recommends service every five to seven years; the work should go to a Breguet-authorized watchmaker given the movement's finishing level and the cost of sourcing correct parts independently. Budget roughly $800 to $1,200 for a full service in North America.
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.
The peripheral rotor is the defining mechanical feature; its absence identifies a movement swap immediately.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Peripheral rotor architecture | Oscillating mass runs on the periphery of the movement; center of movement is fully visible with no rotor obstructing the view | Central rotor visible through caseback; any rotor mounted through the center of the movement indicates a swap |
| caseback | Exhibition caseback integrity | Original display caseback with Breguet engravings; sapphire crystal properly fitted | Solid caseback replacing original exhibition caseback; fresh tool marks around caseback edge suggest recent substitution |
| dial | Guilloché and Breguet hands | Classique-standard guilloché; open-tipped Breguet hands; Breguet signature at 12 | Any deviation from Classique standard dial and hand specification |