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The Datejust 41 in Oystersteel with the oyster bezel is the utilitarian core of the Datejust family: a 41mm date watch built for daily wear, sized for modern wrists, and priced to be the entry point into the current Rolex lineup. It does exactly what a Datejust is supposed to do, without the cost premium of a fluted bezel or a two-tone bracelet.
Rolex introduced the 126300 in 2016 alongside the broader Datejust 41 family, replacing the 116300 and consolidating the line around the larger case. The reference debuted with the caliber 3235, which brought a higher-beat movement, the Chronergy escapement, and roughly 70 hours of power reserve. Dial options have been extensive from the start: slate, white, black, silver, palm, and fluted options among them, with Rolex rotating availability through the years.
The smooth oyster bezel is the entry configuration; buyers who want a fluted bezel or two-tone case are looking at different references.
Check the dial text carefully: "Datejust" and the date window surround should be clean and consistent; aftermarket dials are common in this segment and some are convincing at a glance. Inspect the bracelet end-links and clasp for play, as stretch on an Oyster bracelet is a sign of heavy use without servicing. Prefer examples where the case chamfers are still sharp, over-polishing flattens the lug profiles and is difficult to reverse.
If a seller claims a specific dial color (palm, slate, champagne), verify it matches the original Rolex reference photos for that configuration; dial swaps do happen. Confirm the serial number range aligns with the stated production year.
The 126300 trades close to retail in most configurations, and grey market prices have softened from their 2021-2022 peaks. Palm dial examples and the slate sunburst dial carry the clearest secondary-market premiums among steel oyster-bezel configurations. Full-set examples with card and box trade meaningfully above watch-only.
The reference is widely traded, so pricing data is reliable, but specific dial variants in unworn or near-mint condition move faster and at better prices than worn examples.
The caliber 3235 is Rolex's current-generation movement and has no known reliability issues in normal service. Rolex recommends service every ten years; independent watchmakers comfortable with modern Rolex movements can service it for considerably less than an authorized dealer. A documented service history adds credibility but is not yet essential for a reference this young.
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.
Jubilee bracelet end link signature and Oysterlock clasp marking are the primary verification points on the current Datejust 41.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| bracelet | Jubilee end link Rolex print | Rolex print visible on end link underside; consistent bracelet finish with no mixing of brushed and polished links out of pattern | Unsigned or poorly engraved end links; inconsistent link finishing pattern indicating bracelet replacement |
| bracelet | Oysterlock clasp marking | Oysterlock signed Rolex on the outer fold surface; deployment mechanism operates smoothly | Unsigned clasp; clasp with different typography than current Rolex production |
| caseback | Cal. 3235 with Chronergy escapement | Cal. 3235 architecture visible; Chronergy escapement confirms current-generation movement | Any caliber other than 3235; older Cal. 3135 architecture indicates movement from earlier production |
