Editorial
The Highlife Perpetual Calendar offers something the watch world rarely delivers: a genuine in-house perpetual calendar movement, built and regulated in Geneva, inside an integrated-bracelet sport case for under $10,000. Frederique Constant developed the FC-775 caliber entirely in-house, which puts this watch in conversation with brands charging two to four times the price. If you want a no-date-correction perpetual on the wrist every day without treating it as a museum piece, this is the most accessible serious option on the market.
Frederique Constant launched its first in-house movement in 2004, a meaningful step for a brand founded in 1988 in Plan-les-Ouates, Geneva. The FC-775 perpetual calendar caliber followed as the pinnacle of their manufacture ambition, offering full perpetual calendar function with moon phase in a movement produced entirely within their facilities. The Highlife collection debuted in 2021 as FC's answer to the sport-integrated-bracelet trend, and marrying that case with the FC-775 in 2022 was a logical pairing of their most accessible aesthetic with their most complex movement.
At launch, the combination represented a genuine value proposition: integrated bracelet construction and perpetual calendar complication at a price bracket that larger maisons simply do not serve. The watch competes on specification with pieces costing far more, which is either the point or a source of skepticism depending on your priors about the brand.
The FC-775 is a capable movement, but its finishing is functional rather than decorative. If you open the caseback expecting Geneva-stripe depth and hand-beveled bridges comparable to what Patek puts in a 5226, you will be disappointed. The Highlife integrated bracelet is well-made for the price tier, but the case proportions and bracelet taper reflect a more mass-market execution than boutique sport watches at the same price.
Perpetual calendar accuracy depends entirely on the watch staying wound; if you rotate the FC-775 through a drawer without a winder and it stops, resetting all four perpetual calendar indications correctly requires patience and the manual. Water resistance is rated at 100 meters, which is reasonable for daily wear but do not treat this as a dive watch. Pre-owned examples need careful dial inspection: the date, day, month, and moon phase subdials can show wear at the hands and indices sooner than the case shows its age.