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The Royale Paris is the clearest argument for Péquignet as a serious manufacture: a 39.5mm dress watch built around an in-house movement with a 96-hour power reserve, priced well below what Swiss independents charge for comparable horological ambition. France rarely gets mentioned in the same breath as Geneva or Le Sentier, but Morteau has been making watches since the 18th century, and Péquignet is one of the few contemporary French brands to develop a fully proprietary calibre. This is a collector's watch for someone who prefers substance over provenance.
Péquignet was founded in 1973 in Morteau, a watchmaking town in the Doubs department near the Swiss border, a geography that shaped its technical ambitions. The brand spent decades producing quality French watches before embarking on the development of its own movement, the Calibre Royal, which debuted in the early 2010s after years of in-house engineering. That calibre features a double-barrel architecture delivering a 96-hour power reserve, developed entirely within Péquignet's Morteau facilities without outsourcing the core components to a Swiss ébauche supplier.
The Royale Paris is the current expression of that movement in a refined, dressy 39.5mm case designed to wear the calibre without overshadowing it. It is one of the few French-made watches where "in-house" means exactly that.
The Royale Paris is a niche buy, and the secondary market reflects it: resale is thin, pricing is inconsistent, and auction comparables are scarce, so buy-it-right discipline matters more here than with better-known references. Péquignet has had periods of financial difficulty, including a restructuring in the mid-2010s, which introduced uncertainty about long-term parts supply and manufacture continuity. The Calibre Royal is proprietary and not based on a widely-serviced platform, so future service will depend on Péquignet's own network or a watchmaker with direct manufacturer access.
Confirm the dial condition carefully on pre-owned examples: the lacquered finishes on some Royale Paris variants show scratching around subdials that photographs rarely capture well. The 39.5mm case sits in an awkward sweet spot for buyers accustomed to either true dress-watch proportions or modern sport sizing.
New Royale Paris references trade in the 2,000 to 3,500 EUR range depending on configuration, which is realistic for an in-house movement at this level of finishing. Pre-owned pricing is soft relative to the horological content, which makes this an interesting entry point for a buyer willing to sit with an illiquid asset. Demand is strongest in France and among buyers who specifically seek out non-Swiss independents.
Don't expect Swiss-brand resale dynamics here.
Service the Calibre Royal through Péquignet's official service network or a watchmaker with confirmed manufacturer parts access. This is a proprietary movement without a generic ébauche equivalent, so independent servicing without proper parts access carries real risk. Manufacturer-recommended service intervals for the Calibre Royal are typically 5 to 7 years.
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The Calibre Royal power reserve indicator must respond to crown winding; a stationary indicator during winding means a disconnected module.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Power reserve indicator response to winding | Indicator advances toward full during crown winding; recedes during running | Stationary indicator during winding; disconnected indicator module |
| movement | Calibre Royal in-house 96h reserve | Approximately 96h actual run time; consistent with Calibre Royal | Run time substantially below 96h; worn mainspring or regulation issue |
| caseback | Calibre Royal architecture | In-house Calibre Royal visible through caseback; consistent with Pequignet documentation | Non-Calibre-Royal architecture; movement swap |