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The Autavia GMT brings a second time zone to one of TAG Heuer's most purposeful reissues. At 42mm it wears larger than the vintage originals but sits well on most wrists, and the GMT hand gives it a genuine travel utility that the standard Autavia lacks. If you want a modern Heuer with real collector pedigree and practical function, this is the one to consider.
The Autavia name is a portmanteau of Automobile and Aviation, coined by Jack Heuer in the early 1960s for a dashboard-mounted timer before it moved to the wrist. The reissue program began in 2017 after Heuer One fans voted to bring it back, and TAG Heuer has expanded the line steadily since. The GMT variant arrived in 2019, adding a Sellita SW330-based movement with a 24-hour hand to extend the Autavia beyond its chronograph roots.
The case shape draws directly from 1970s references, with a cushion-influenced lug design and the signature rotating bezel that made the original a motorsport fixture. It sits in a comfortable middle ground: historical enough to satisfy collectors who care about lineage, practical enough to actually use.
The Calibre 7 is a Sellita SW330 with TAG Heuer's finishing applied, and that matters for value expectations. Some buyers assume Swiss manufacture movements at this price point; the SW330 is a solid, reliable ébauche but it is not the company's own work, and resale pricing reflects that. The Autavia name commands a premium over comparably specced competitors, so you are partly paying for the heritage story.
Lume plots on some examples have shown uneven application under magnification; worth checking in person or requesting detailed photos if buying remotely. The bezel insert can attract scratches more readily than ceramic alternatives, and replacement costs are non-trivial through authorized service. Finally, the 42mm diameter combined with the tall case stack makes this a thicker watch than its dressy heritage might suggest.
Pre-owned examples trade well below retail, typically in the $1,800 to $2,400 range depending on condition and bracelet presence. The GMT configuration is less common than the standard Autavia Heuer 02 chronograph, which keeps demand reasonably stable without wild speculation. It is not a watch that appreciates, but it also does not collapse at resale the way some mid-tier tool watches do.
The Calibre 7 (Sellita SW330) is a well-documented movement with straightforward service access through both TAG Heuer authorized centers and independent watchmakers familiar with Sellita architecture. Service intervals of five to seven years are standard. Independent servicing is a reasonable option here given the movement's non-proprietary base, and it will cost meaningfully less than the manufacturer route.
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GMT hand must advance in 1-hour increments independently of the main hour hand; verify 24h bezel insert integrity.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | GMT hand operation | GMT hand advances in 1-hour increments independently of main hour hand via crown position 3 | GMT hand moves with main hour hand; GMT hand does not hold position when main hour is set |
| case | 24h bezel insert | Bidirectional 24h bezel insert with legible 24-hour markings; no chips or damage | Damaged or repaired bezel insert; 24h markings worn beyond legibility |
| caseback | Caliber 7 identity | TAG Cal. 7 designation; Sellita SW330-based architecture | Incorrect caliber designation; non-GMT movement installed |