The Traditionnelle Complete Calendar brings day, date, month, and moon phase to the grand-feu enamel dial format; secondary prices are firm among collectors who value the combination of complications and traditional finishing.
The Traditionnelle Complete Calendar is Vacheron Constantin's answer to the question of how much calendar information you can pack into a dress watch without it feeling cluttered. At 41mm in white gold, it displays day, date, month, and moon phase through a layout that reads cleanly at a glance, and the annual calendar mechanism earns its place by handling every month automatically except February. For a collector who wants a serious perpetual-adjacent complication without the weight of a true perpetual, this is a considered choice from one of the few remaining manufactures that actually justifies the Geneva Seal.
Vacheron introduced the 47300 series Traditionnelle Complete Calendar in the mid-2000s, with the current 41mm white gold configuration running from 2017 forward. The movement inside is the caliber 2460 QCL/1, an in-house automatic built on a base that Vacheron has developed across multiple Traditionnelle complications. The Traditionnelle line itself traces back to the post-war period when Vacheron standardized on classical case proportions that stayed close to their 18th-century roots, and the 47300 numbering sits within that long-running family.
Early generations used modified ébauches; the 2460-series movements represent a genuine in-house effort with Geneva Seal certification, which means hand-finishing is subject to actual third-party scrutiny. Dial variants have included silver, slate, and lacquered options across the production run, with some limited editions featuring meteorite or guilloché work that carry meaningful secondary-market premiums.
Verify the moon phase accuracy and last service date: the 2460 QCL/1 corrects for 30 and 31-day months automatically, but the moon phase requires a manual correction roughly once every few years, and a watch that has been sitting unset will show drift that a seller may not disclose. Check the corrector pushers carefully, as annual calendar mechanisms use recessed pushers around the case that are easy to damage if used incorrectly or with the wrong tool. White gold cases on dress watches accumulate surface scratches that polishing can remove, but aggressive polishing rounds the case edges and destroys the value, so inspect the case lines closely in person or request detailed loupe photos.
Confirm the bracelet or strap is original equipment or properly documented, since Vacheron alligator straps are expensive to replace and aftermarket substitutes affect resale more than buyers expect. Finally, request the full service history: annual calendars that have been run dry or serviced outside the manufacture can develop corrector stiffness or date-setting resistance that is not immediately obvious.
White gold references in this line trade at a meaningful premium to rose gold on the secondary market, driven by the dial contrast and the perception that white metals age more cleanly on a dress watch. The silver dial configuration is the most liquid, but slate and guilloché dials from limited runs consistently attract collector interest above grey-market. Retail pricing sits above $40,000 USD new, and pre-owned examples in excellent condition with box and papers typically hold in the $28,000 to $38,000 range depending on service history and dial variant.
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Confirm the moon disc shows the correct phase and verify all stylus correction holes on the caseback are unobstructed.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Four-aperture complete calendar display | Day, date, month, and moon phase apertures all visible and reading correctly; moon disc in correct phase | Any aperture obstructed, misaligned, or showing incorrect indication |
| caseback | Stylus correction holes | All correction holes for the complete calendar visible and unobstructed; stylus access confirmed | Any blocked correction hole; incorrect caseback machining indicates replacement caseback |
| case | No external pushers on the case | Smooth case sides with no pushers; all calendar correction via caseback stylus holes only | Any external pusher on the case sides; Traditionnelle complete calendar uses only caseback correction |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
This is not a watch that runs away from retail on the secondary market, which means patient buyers find genuine value here compared to brands where dealer allocations distort prices.
The caliber 2460 QCL/1 is a Vacheron manufacture movement, and Vacheron recommends service intervals of approximately five to eight years. Full service through an authorized service center runs roughly $1,500 to $2,500 USD depending on parts required, with the annual calendar module adding complexity and cost compared to a simple three-hand service. Independent watchmakers with Swiss complication experience can service this caliber at lower cost, but the Geneva Seal means Vacheron will want to re-certify finishing if the movement comes back through the manufacture, so keep that in mind if resale to condition-sensitive buyers is a concern.