Christopher Ward · C63 Sealander

C63 Sealander

Upper $900–1,300

The Christopher Ward C63 Sealander is a Swiss-made direct-to-consumer automatic first launched in 2021 and substantially refreshed in April 2026 with a redesigned Light-catcher case and the brand-new Sellita SW200-2 Power+ movement. Available in 36mm and 39mm, it pairs 150m water resistance, a sapphire exhibition caseback, and a clean dress-sport aesthetic at a notably competitive price.

Compare with another
39mm

Case

150m

Water res.

10.9mm

Thick

45mm

Lug-to-lug

Overview

Brand Christopher Ward
Reference C63-39ADA4-S00W0-VC
Collection C63 Sealander
Category Sports
Released 2021
Price guide Upper · $900–1,300

Full specification

Specs

Case & dial

Diameter 39 mm
Lug-to-lug 45 mm
Thickness 10.9 mm
Lug width 20 mm
Water resistance 150 m
Crystal sapphire
Case material stainless steel
Bezel fixed polished steel
Case back exhibition

Movement & furniture

Type Automatic
Caliber Sellita SW200-2 POWER+ →
Functions Date
Power reserve 65 h
Jewels 26
Lume Super-LumiNova
Strap / bracelet leather strap (steel bracelet available)

Bottom line

A convincing argument that a direct-to-consumer Swiss automatic can punch well above its price: the intricate brushed-and-polished case finishing, a 65-hour power reserve, and the exhibition caseback each warrant a higher number on the dial — and the new iLink bracelet system removes the one practical irritation of the previous generation.

Highlights

  • Sellita SW200-2 Power+ — 65 h reserve
  • Light-catcher case, brushed + polished finishing
  • 150 m WR with screw-down crown
  • Sapphire exhibition caseback
  • iLink tool-free bracelet link adjustment

Who it's for

Buyers with medium-to-larger wrists (roughly 17–19 cm) who want a well-finished Swiss automatic for daily use from desk to dive bar, without paying a heritage-manufacture premium. The 36mm variant (42mm lug-to-lug) suits smaller wrists and reads more dressy; the 39mm skews slightly sportier. Both reward buyers who care about movement quality and case finishing but have no need for a specific complication beyond date.

Who should skip it

Skip it if you want a GMT complication in the base model (that requires the pricier Sealander GMT), prefer a fully brushed tool-watch aesthetic, or specifically need a certified COSC chronometer.

Before you buy

  • Confirm ADA4 reference prefix for the current gen SW200-2 Power+ (65 h); older ADA3 variants use SW200-1 (38 h)
  • Black dial is currently exclusive to the 36mm automatic — 39mm automatics ship in White, Sky Blue, and Pistachio only
  • Several 2026 Gen 4 references are on pre-order; check delivery window before purchase
  • GMT variants (36 / 39 / 42mm, Sellita SW330-2) add roughly $370–500 USD and are a separate buying decision

FAQ

Is the C63 Sealander automatic or quartz?

It runs a automatic movement.

What movement does the C63 Sealander use?

The Sellita SW200-2 POWER+ (Sellita).

Does the C63 Sealander have a date?

Yes.

How water resistant is the C63 Sealander?

It is rated to 150 m.

How big does the C63 Sealander wear?

39 mm wide with a 45 mm lug-to-lug.

How does the C63 Sealander compare to a Seiko Presage or Tissot Powermatic 80 at a similar price?

The Sealander's Light-catcher case finishing is more intricate than either rival, and the SW200-2 Power+'s 65-hour reserve beats both (Presage Sharp-Edged is typically 40–45 h; Powermatic 80 leads at 80 h). The Presage wins on dial artistry at its higher tiers; the Tissot on raw power reserve. The Sealander sits squarely in the middle, tipping in its favor on case quality and 150m water resistance.

What is the practical difference between the Sealander Automatic and the Sealander GMT?

The automatic three-hander is a clean time-and-date watch; the GMT adds a 24-hour hand readable against a bezel-engraved scale for a second time zone, using the Sellita SW330-2 (56 h reserve). The GMT adds roughly $370–500 USD depending on strap choice and is available in 36, 39, and 42mm.

Does Christopher Ward sell through retailers or direct only?

Christopher Ward is almost entirely direct-to-consumer, sold via christopherward.com and one London boutique. This keeps prices competitive versus equivalent Swiss-made rivals at traditional retail, and every purchase includes a 5-year movement guarantee with 60-day free returns worldwide.

Spotted something wrong? Report a correction →