Editorial
The Santos Medium in steel is Cartier's most practical everyday watch: a 35mm case that works across most wrists, an in-house automatic movement, and a bracelet-to-strap swap you can do at the table without tools. It is not a dress watch or a sport watch but something genuinely its own, and that has kept it in production continuously since Cartier relaunched the line in 2018. If you are new to Santos, this is the reference to start with.
Louis Cartier designed the original Santos in 1904 for Brazilian aviator Alberto Santos-Dumont, who needed a watch he could read in flight without removing it from his pocket. The square case with exposed screws went into limited production and eventually became one of the first purpose-built wristwatches sold to the public. Cartier relaunched the Santos as a commercial line in 1978, and it became a fixture of the 1980s alongside the Panthère and Must de Cartier range.
The 2018 relaunch with reference WSSA0061 brought the line fully in-house: a new caliber, a redesigned integrated bracelet, and the QuickSwitch system that lets the wearer change straps in seconds. That combination of heritage design and genuine modern engineering is what separates this generation from earlier Santos references.
The 35mm size reads small to buyers accustomed to 40mm sport watches; try it on before deciding because it wears closer to 37-38mm on the wrist due to the integrated bracelet and the way the lugs sit. Earlier Santos references from the 1980s and 1990s used ETA-based movements and often have service history that is harder to document; the WSSA0061 is easily identified by the 1847 MC caliber and the QuickSwitch bracelet system. Gray market pricing on this reference fluctuates significantly, and some gray market pieces arrive with missing bracelet links or without the original strap, which matters because Cartier replacement parts are expensive.
The satin-brushed surfaces on the case and bracelet show fine scratches with everyday wear; polishing restores them, but the brushing pattern requires proper technique and a careless polish will change the look permanently. Confirm the reference number on the caseback before buying secondhand, as the Santos line includes multiple sizes and both quartz and automatic variants that look similar at a glance.