Editorial
Frederique Constant built the FC-712 in-house, which puts a genuine moonphase automatic at a price most brands reserve for ETA-powered dressers. The 42mm steel case keeps it wearable without tipping into oversized territory, and the dial execution is clean enough to hold up against watches that cost twice as much. For buyers who care about caliber provenance, this is one of the few real deals in the category.
Frederique Constant launched their first in-house movement in 2004, a significant moment for a brand that had built its reputation on accessible Swiss finishing with outsourced movements. The FC-712 moonphase caliber came later as part of a deliberate push to expand the proprietary caliber lineup beyond the core automatic. The Classics Moonphase line has been in continuous production since 2015, giving FC time to sort out early movement reliability questions.
The brand has always positioned itself below Longines and Tissot on price while targeting the same buyer, and the FC-712 is the clearest expression of that strategy working as intended.
Dial printing quality varies across production years, and some earlier examples show uneven lume plots or slightly off-center subdials. The moonphase display requires adjustment roughly every 2.5 years and is not a quick procedure for an inexperienced watchmaker. Used examples with scratched crystals are common since the case uses mineral glass on some references, not sapphire.
Verify the crystal spec before buying pre-owned. The bracelet on steel variants wears loosely out of the box and aftermarket options are limited, so budget for a quality strap if you prefer leather.