
The Overseas World Time displaying 37 cities with day/night indicator is one of the most complete worldtimer references available; secondary prices are firm because the complication level and finishing standard have no direct equivalent at the same price.
The Overseas World Time is one of the few complications that actually earns its complexity: 37 time zones displayed simultaneously on a city disc, all readable at a glance on a 42.5mm dial that should be a cluttered mess but isn't. White gold and the lacquered dial with its rotating city ring make this a genuine tool watch dressed as a luxury piece. Collectors who travel frequently and distrust phone-checking treat this as a working instrument, not a conversation piece.
Vacheron introduced the Overseas World Time in 2015 as part of the third-generation Overseas family, replacing the earlier 47450 reference that ran on the caliber 2460 WT as well. The 2460 WT is an in-house automatic with world-time display, derived from the wider 2450-series family that Vacheron developed for the Overseas line in the mid-2000s. The reference 47610/000G-9016 denotes white gold case with the blue lacquered dial, the most sought-after configuration at launch.
Vacheron subsequently issued the Overseas World Time in rose gold and stainless steel, with various dial colors including blue, silver, and brown, though the 47610 prefix designates the 42.5mm case shared across metals. The third-generation Overseas introduced the interchangeable bracelet and strap system, which is now considered essential to the line's identity.
The interchangeable strap system uses proprietary spring-bar tools and the deployment clasp is specific to each metal, so confirm the watch comes with at least the original bracelet or understand what replacements cost. Lacquered dials are susceptible to hairline cracking under temperature stress, particularly in older examples stored improperly; inspect under magnification before purchase. The city disc and hour ring are delicate components that shift position if the movement takes a hard knock, so verify the world-time display tracks correctly through a full rotation.
On pre-owned examples, check the case middle and lug surfaces carefully since white gold scratches and shows wear more visibly than steel, and polishing by non-authorized parties tends to round the crisp anglage on the lugs. Confirm service history; Vacheron's Geneva workshops do not always stamp movements after service in ways that are obvious to non-specialists, so a pressure test receipt from a watchmaker is more useful than a stamp.
White gold with the blue lacquered dial commands the highest premiums in this reference, consistently trading above rose gold equivalents at auction and through dealers. Unworn examples with original bracelet, both straps, and the clasp set have sold in the $35,000 to $45,000 range depending on year and condition; worn examples with missing straps can trade considerably lower. The stainless steel sibling (reference 7700V) is more liquid and more accessible, which is worth knowing if your goal is a working traveler's watch rather than a collector position.
Blue-dial white-gold configurations have held value well because blue-and-white-gold is the configuration most photographed and most associated with the reference in the market's memory.
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.
Test the worldtimer crown adjustment; it must advance the 37-city disc in one-hour increments without skipping or binding.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Worldtimer 37-city disc legibility | All 37 cities legible on the rotating disc; disc advances cleanly in one-hour increments via the crown | Any illegible city text; disc skipping or binding during crown adjustment |
| case | Crown operation for worldtimer adjustment | Crown advances the worldtimer disc in precise one-hour increments with positive detent engagement | Crown advancing the disc in fractions of an hour; no positive detent; slipping crown engagement |
| caseback | Cal. 2460 WT movement | Cal. 2460 WT confirmed through caseback; Maltese cross rotor visible | Any caliber other than 2460 WT; no Maltese cross rotor |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
The caliber 2460 WT is a full in-house movement and Vacheron recommends service every five to seven years; factory service in Geneva typically runs $2,000 to $3,500 depending on parts required. Vacheron's authorized service network can service this caliber outside Geneva, but the world-time complication's city disc alignment requires the same care as a factory service, so independent watchmakers with specific experience on this movement are the only reasonable alternative. Budget for strap and bracelet inspection at each service, since the interchangeable system's spring-bars and locking pins wear with use.