Editorial
The Zürich Weltzeit is Nomos' most technically ambitious watch in regular production, pairing a world-time complication with the typographic restraint the brand is known for. The outer disc rotates to show all 24 time zones simultaneously, with city names and UTC offsets rendered in Nomos' characteristic clean type. It is a serious travel watch that looks like a Bauhaus exercise.
Nomos launched the Zürich in 2011 as its first world-time watch, built around the in-house DUW 5201 movement developed entirely in Glashütte. The complication uses a rotating disc displaying city names and offsets on the outer ring, a design approach that prioritizes legibility over decorative flourish. At 39.9mm, the case sits at a size that works for most wrists without the oversized proportions that plagued travel watches of that era.
The Weltzeit has remained in continuous production since launch, which says something about how well the original design solved the problem. It has not needed reinvention.
The city-ring disc on some early examples can develop slight misalignment with the chapter ring over time; inspect that the disc rotates cleanly and snaps correctly to each position. The DUW 5201 is a complex movement by Nomos standards, and independent service is less straightforward than on simpler Nomos calibers. Dial condition matters enormously on the Weltzeit because the typography is the design; any fading, moisture intrusion, or printing damage on the city ring is expensive to correct.
Early production examples pre-2014 may show slightly different dial printing tolerances than later production. Confirm the correct pusher function before buying: the city-ring correction should advance cleanly without resistance.