
The Fiftysix Self-Winding in steel is Vacheron's most approachable entry point; Hallmark of Geneva finishing at this price point represents genuine value, and secondary prices reflect broad collector appreciation.
The Fiftysix Self-Winding is Vacheron Constantin's answer to the question of how to get into one of the oldest manufacture names in horology without spending six figures. At 40mm in steel with an integrated strap, it wears comfortably and sits at a price point that a serious collector can justify as an entry to the Grand Maison tier, rather than a compromise. It is not a lesser watch; it is a different priority, built around wearability and the 1326 caliber co-developed with JLC.
Vacheron introduced the Fiftysix collection in 2018, taking its name and design cues from the reference 6073 that debuted in 1956, a round, cushion-lugged piece that represented VC's push toward a more modern sensibility mid-century. The reference 4600E/000A-B442 is the core steel automatic in that family, powered by the caliber 1326, a movement developed in collaboration with Jaeger-LeCoultre and finished to Vacheron's standards including the Hallmark of Geneva. The Fiftysix replaced a gap in the lineup that the Patrimony and Historiques could not fill at accessible price points, and it has remained in continuous production since launch with minimal revision.
Variants include a complete calendar, a day-date, and a chronograph, but the base self-winding is the volume seller and the one most likely to be encountered in the secondary market. Dial options have included multiple shades of silver and blue lacquer, with some limited configurations featuring guilloche texture.
Confirm the movement has not been worked on by an unauthorized service center, as the Hallmark of Geneva finishing is irreversible if a non-Geneva-trained watchmaker polishes or handles the movement carelessly. The integrated rubber strap design uses a proprietary attachment system; inspect the strap-to-case interface for wear or cracking, since aftermarket replacements are limited and OEM straps are not cheap. On pre-owned examples, check the sapphire caseback for scratches, which suggests the case was opened, and follow up with a service record request.
The 40mm case is steel, so surface condition matters more than on gold, and polishing hides wear at the cost of edge definition; prefer unpolished examples with original brushed and polished surfaces intact. Water resistance is rated to 30 meters, which is minimal, so ask whether the previous owner wore it in conditions it was not designed for.
New retail sits around $15,000 to $17,000 USD depending on dial and strap configuration, and the secondary market generally runs 15 to 25 percent below that for clean examples, which makes it one of the more fairly priced steel watches from this tier of manufacture. Blue dials command a modest premium over silver on the secondary market, consistent with broad collector preference. The complete calendar variant (4000E) trades meaningfully higher and occupies a different conversation.
The base self-winding in steel is not appreciating; buy it to wear it.
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The Fiftysix uses a JLC base movement, not Geneva Sealed; sellers claiming Hallmark of Geneva on this reference are misleading buyers.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| movement | Cal. 1326 VC finishing and Maltese cross rotor | Maltese cross rotor present; VC-applied finishing on bridges and plates; JLC base architecture with VC additions | Non-Maltese rotor; absent VC finishing; Geneva Seal claimed (Fiftysix is not Geneva Sealed) |
| dial | Fiftysix dial text and indices | Correct Fiftysix text rendering; applied indices with proper depth; consistent with VC quality standards | Flat printed indices; text inconsistencies; incorrect font weight |
| case | Case proportions and finishing | Round 40mm case with correct lug proportions; VC-standard brushed and polished finishing combination |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
The caliber 1326 is a JLC-architecture movement finished and regulated by Vacheron, and service should be performed either by Vacheron Constantin directly or by a watchmaker with documented experience on Geneva Seal movements. Vacheron's in-house service runs roughly $800 to $1,200 USD for a standard service on this caliber, with timing depending on backlog at their service centers. Recommended service interval is every five to seven years under normal wearing conditions.
| Case finishing inconsistent with VC standards; incorrect diameter |