Live pricing is coming soon. Get notified when it is available for this reference.
The Multifort Patrimony takes one of the oldest names in the Mido catalog and gives it a vintage face worth wearing. A sector dial, dauphine hands, and an 80-hour power reserve in a 40mm case make a strong argument at its price point. This is a watch for someone who wants a genuine dress-casual automatic without paying for a name more famous than the movement inside it.
Mido introduced the Multifort in 1934, positioning it as a robust, water-resistant tool watch at a time when the category barely existed. The line ran through the mid-century era and was revived in the 2000s as Mido leaned into its heritage narrative. The Patrimony variant, introduced in 2018, pulls visual cues from the 1930s and 1940s catalog: the sector dial with its printed chapter-ring, the dauphine hands, and the applied indices are all period-correct in feeling if not in origin.
Mido sits within the Swatch Group alongside ETA, which gives it direct access to movements that independent brands have to buy on the open market at higher cost. That vertical integration is a real advantage and shows up in the price.
The sector dial finish varies across production runs; some examples have a richer sunburst texture and others look flatter in person than in press photography, so inspect before buying. The M040.407.16.060.00 reference uses a hardlex crystal rather than sapphire, which scratches more easily than buyers accustomed to higher price points might expect. The case finishing is mixed: brushed surfaces are well done, but the polished lugs attract scratches and can look tired on a pre-owned example.
The bracelet, where included, is adequate but not a strength of this reference; a leather strap often improves the watch considerably. Dial authenticity is generally not a concern at this price, but verify that the hands and indices are original if buying private-party, as mismatched dauphine hands from other Mido references can look similar at a glance.
New examples sell in the $600-800 range depending on retailer and strap configuration. Pre-owned prices sit reliably below $500 and sometimes below $400 for clean examples, which represents genuine value for an 80-hour automatic with a sector dial. There is no meaningful collector premium on this reference yet, which keeps the entry price honest but also means you are unlikely to recover much on resale if your tastes change.
The Caliber 80, based on the ETA C07.621, is widely supported and straightforward to service. Any watchmaker familiar with ETA-based movements can handle this caliber, and parts availability through Swatch Group channels is reliable. Service intervals are typically 5-7 years under normal wear conditions.
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.
Cushion case with Cal. 80 (ETA C07.621 base); caseback confirms the peripheral-rotor ETA architecture.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Cal. 80 peripheral rotor | ETA C07.621 architecture with peripheral rotor and narrow bridges visible through caseback | Non-ETA architecture; conventional central rotor; movement swap |
| case | Cushion case profile | Correct cushion case shape with Multifort Patrimony proportions | Round case on a Patrimony-labeled watch; wrong Multifort sub-reference |
| dial | Mido branding and indices | Mido text and vintage-inspired indices in correct font and proportion | Non-standard font or incorrect index style; dial replacement |