Editorial
Greubel Forsey builds some of the most labour-intensive watches alive, and the GMT Sport is the one built to leave the display case. Forty-five millimetres of titanium, 100 metres of water resistance, and a second time zone displayed on a rotating globe showing actual geography at 6 o'clock. This is as close as the brand gets to an everyday tool watch, which still makes it one of the most extraordinary objects in the room.
Greubel Forsey was founded in 2004 by Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey with a singular focus: making movements by hand to a standard that most manufactures abandoned decades ago. Every early reference was a tourbillon study, finished to a level that made Patek look industrial. The GMT Sport arrived in 2019 as a deliberate pivot toward wearability, the first Greubel Forsey to offer meaningful water resistance and a titanium case sized for an active life.
The rotating globe complication was not new to the brand, but pairing it with a sport brief gave it purpose beyond demonstration. Production numbers remain tiny, as they are across the entire line, because the movement work is genuinely done by hand.
Grey market pricing swings hard on this reference because supply is so constrained and the buyer pool is thin but wealthy. Verify that the globe animation is smooth and that the GMT hand tracks correctly at every hour before any purchase. The titanium case scratches easily and most owners do not bother polishing it, so surface condition tells you almost nothing about movement condition.
Greubel Forsey movements are not serviceable by any independent watchmaker with standard tooling; you are buying a watch that must go back to the manufacture or a marque-authorised technician. Ask for service records and, if there are none, budget accordingly.